Publikation: Konferencebidrag › Paper › Forskning › peer review
Industry School Partnerships in Vocational and Academic Training- a Resource Dependency View on the Regional Maritime University in Ghana. / Aryee, Jonas Nii Ayi; Andersen, Torben; van Dyck, George et al.
2020. Paper præsenteret ved Africa Knows.Publikation: Konferencebidrag › Paper › Forskning › peer review
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TY - CONF
T1 - Industry School Partnerships in Vocational and Academic Training- a Resource Dependency View on the Regional Maritime University in Ghana
AU - Aryee, Jonas Nii Ayi
AU - Andersen, Torben
AU - van Dyck, George
AU - Hansen, Annette Skovsted
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - This paper reports on an example of positive industry-university/school partnerships developed over several decades and seen through the lenses of resource dependency theory. It makes references to the specialised training needs of the maritime industry (seafarers, harbour pilots and tugboat crew, and lately professionals in the oil and gas sector), highly essential jobs for the further capacity development for a country like Ghana. In the paper, we address the general challenge of inadequate funding for education and training characterizing many (African) educational institutions. This inadequacy usually leads to frustration, difficulties, politicization and in the end, a fight for survival. However, this can also lead educational institutions to be innovative. Over the years, The Regional Maritime University (RMU) has survived on innovation to sustain its unique combination of academic and vocational training, which is quite usual for Maritime Education and Training (MET) institutions worldwide. The paper addresses the well-known arguments on capacity development through practice-oriented training but also research and development where the educational institutions rely on network- based synergies with external actors. This is illustrated in the newest example in the Oil and Gas industry in Ghana and the maritime industry.
AB - This paper reports on an example of positive industry-university/school partnerships developed over several decades and seen through the lenses of resource dependency theory. It makes references to the specialised training needs of the maritime industry (seafarers, harbour pilots and tugboat crew, and lately professionals in the oil and gas sector), highly essential jobs for the further capacity development for a country like Ghana. In the paper, we address the general challenge of inadequate funding for education and training characterizing many (African) educational institutions. This inadequacy usually leads to frustration, difficulties, politicization and in the end, a fight for survival. However, this can also lead educational institutions to be innovative. Over the years, The Regional Maritime University (RMU) has survived on innovation to sustain its unique combination of academic and vocational training, which is quite usual for Maritime Education and Training (MET) institutions worldwide. The paper addresses the well-known arguments on capacity development through practice-oriented training but also research and development where the educational institutions rely on network- based synergies with external actors. This is illustrated in the newest example in the Oil and Gas industry in Ghana and the maritime industry.
M3 - Paper
Y2 - 2 December 2020 through 2 December 2020
ER -