Tag: Skill acquisition

  • ‘Embrace skill acquisition, self-development’

    ‘Embrace skill acquisition, self-development’

    By Temitope Adejuwon

    Serial entrepreneur, Ms. Uche Chinwe Ann has urged the teeming population of students and youths to embrace skill acquisition to aid financial independence. This,according to her, will curb youth unemployment.

    She is the visionary behind Avyo Food & Drink, a fast-rising food brand; Belzkim World, a fashion powerhouse redefining style and elegance; and Velstand Global, a real estate and facility management company dedicated to providing premium housing and property solutions.

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    According to her,  with passion, creativity, and discipline, Nigerians can thrive in multiple industries and build lasting legacies.

    “Every young Nigerian  must look within, discover their inner strength, and harness it. The reality is that paid jobs are limited, but opportunities through skills are unlimited. A skill today can open doors to financial independence tomorrow. If you want to stand out, invest in yourself by learning a skill,” she said.

    Ms.  Ann who stressed the need for students to acquire skills,  believes that skill acquisition is the surest pathway to empowerment, financial freedom, and nation-building, encouraging  young Nigerians to take bold steps, become innovative, and turn their talents into thriving businesses.

  • Boost to skill acquisition, training

    Boost to skill acquisition, training

    Dr Myles Munroe once said: “When the purpose of a thing is not known, abuse:becomes inevitable.” This is absolutely true seeing that a lot of young people don’t really know their purpose for existence and so they allow themselves to be wrongly influenced and end up living the reversed form of the life God destined for them to live.”

    Handbook for the generation and Impartation of Course-Profession Derived Businesses on Students of Tertiary Institution: A Guide to Rising Successful Graduate Entrepreneurs, by Dr. Benjamin Irikefe, emphasises the quadrant for human growth and development in the area of vocational training and Post-Training empowerment.

    The quadrant of skill acquisition is a framework for actualising holistic skill acquisition training and empowerment programmes.

    It captures the need to delineate the contents, guidelines, and milestones of the Quadrant of Skill Acquisition or Skill Acquisition Matrix to enlighten trainers, trainees, and stakeholders in Human capital development.

    The author noted that implementation of Skill Acquisition Training and Empowerment Programmes can mitigate occurrence, perpetuation, and proliferation of criminal activities among youths. Skill Acquisition Programmes, through short-term, vocational-specific training, provision of starter kits, and  post-training support, can curb undesirable societal trends.

    Irikefe is concerned about the disjointed manner at which Skill Acquisition Training is executed, transforming into channels for “slush funds,,”” favouritism or “cash cows,” thereby neglecting prescribed standards.

    He recommends adoption of the Quadrant of Skill Acquisition or Skill Acquisition Matrix framework to bolster efficacy of Skill Acquisition Training and Empowerment among trainers, who have utilised the template in Handbook of Skill Acquisition Training and Empowerment Programmes, the second edition

    The book notes that  citizens should address escalating unemployment and high cost of living. It lists four components of Quadrant of Skill Acquisition or Skill Acquisition Matrix – vocational-specific training, entrepreneurship development, soft and life skills training, as well as post-training support.

    Vocation specific training has to do with training on specific vocation/enterprise/business/trade or course: welding and fabrication, commercial fish farming, fashion design and tailoring, software engineering, cloud computing, blockchain technology, etc.

    Entrepreneurship development has to do with what has to be done to make money or derive income from the vocation or trade trained on. For example: Identifying business opportunities, effective workplace management, marketing & selling, and so on.

    Read Also: Apapa-Iganmu graduates skill acquisition trainees

    Soft and life skills training is outside vocation-specific training and entrepreneurship development but necessary for success. Soft and life skills are interrelated and intertwined. Soft skills are personality traits, inherent social cues, and communication abilities. They are characterised by how an individual interacts – empathy, altruism, warmth, self-regulation, honesty, humility, and others.

    Life skills are psycho-social abilities for adaptive and positive behaviour. They include critical thinking, decision-making, problem-solving, interpersonal relationships, coping with stress, and others.

    Post-training empowerment or post-training Support has to do with steps to follow up, track, or give support to graduates after training. Some of such support are starter-pack utilisation and application training, in-class practicals and hands-on training, etc.

    Irikefe’s thesis in the main notes that skill acquisition provides relief to societal ills by making youths relevant to their environment. But he recommends an effective management of the process – from training, provision of tools to post-training support.

  • Skill acquisition key to solving Nigeria’s unemployment crisis, says Fed Govt

    Skill acquisition key to solving Nigeria’s unemployment crisis, says Fed Govt

    The federal government has said skills acquisition for young people in the country was key to solving the unemployment crisis in Nigeria.

    The Minister of State for Education, Yusuf Sununu said this when he received a delegation from the Ladi Memorial Foundation (LMF) in Abuja.

    He charged youths in the country to embrace skill training with a commitment of becoming an employer of labour rather than depending on other organisations to be employed.

    “Gone are the days where people looked at skills or tailoring as not a money making venture, we do know that right now, especially among the females that the cost of sewing is higher than the fabric because you can get a cheap fabric but if you have a good designer, putting that fabric together becomes expensive,” he stated.

    He explained that education was meant to help the skilled individual by embracing the advent of innovation and technology as an added advantage that would further strengthen small businesses and increase their productivity.

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    He said: “We all know that there are a lot of young men out there who prior to their tertiary education were involved in one skill or the other, some automobile mechanics, others fashion designers, using these skills to sustain their education but immediately they are handed certificate, stigmatisation comes into play, they now believe that you must have a white collar job to survive not knowing that the education is supposed to provide them with critical thinking to professionalised their skills and expand their businesses.”

    Sununu also received the winner of the 2023 FCT sewing Championship pilot scheme, 18 years old Miss Susan Audu who made a cloth for the minister.

    The minister said he was surprised that the girl could sew a shirt for him in under two hours, adding that with proper support, her shop can produce over 100 shirts in a day.

    Sununu said the ministry would partner with LMF to host the 2024 national Sewing Championship.

    The minister said: “I must commend your efforts in trying to harvest talent and catch them young. If you look at the 8 point Agenda and education priority focus, you will find out that skill is a major thematic area, that is why we are making efforts to review the curriculum so as to reintegrate and focus towards skill acquisition.”

    While presenting the shirt to the Minister, the Executive Director of LMF, Rosemary Osikoye said the NSC – 2024 would produce over 18,000 garments by young people from ages 12 to 22 years.

  • Don to students: prioritise knowledge and skill acquisition

    Don to students: prioritise knowledge and skill acquisition

    Chairman of TopFaith University, Dr Emmanuel Abraham has stressed the need for students to prioritise knowledge and skill acquisition, adding that it was imperative to unlearn and relearn towards boosting personal and national development.

    Delivering a speech entitled:  “21st Century Education Skills and Career Choices,” at the Transition to University Education Summit (TTUES 2024), he emphasised the significance of creativity, collaboration and communication skills in today’s educational ecosystem.

     TopFaith University, in partnership with Standard Mandate International (SMI) and Thomas Abraham Foundation, hosted the summit to expose final year SS3 students to necessary tools and knowledge for a seamless transition to university life. It held last week at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) Akoka, Lagos.

    He said  the summit was a platform to guide  graduating students towards the right universities and empower them to build successful careers.

    Read Also: Hilary Utuke: Expanding the knowledge frontiers of digital economy in Africa 

    The one-day summit with the theme: “Getting it Right,” was aimed at  preparing , and motivating students on various aspects of university education, including admission procedures, mental and psychological preparation for challenges, exposure to the university learning system, and career counseling.

    Proffering solutions to challenges within the Nigerian education system, Abraham called for a shift in mindset while valuing and contributing to the existing educational infrastructure.

    He called for consistent and sustainable policies from the Ministry of Education to boost the standard of education  nationwide.

    Managing Consultant of Standard Mandate International (SMI), Dr Nelson Ayodele stressed the significance of proper and  effective preparation and goal-setting towards moving to university education.

    According to him building a positive mindset has a significant impact on the mental and physical well-being of students, noting that  those with a positive mindset are more likely to succeed academically and enjoy the learning process.

    Ayodele, who listed common transition problems such as psychological hurdles, self-doubt, insecurity, and adjusting to new social environments, enjoined the  students to acquire essential skills such as self-regulated learning, personal development, social and emotional learning, and financial management to tackle the problems effectively.

  • ‘Skill acquisition antidote to unemployment’

    Job creation has since taken the centre stage in the country and everyone is saying skill acquisition is the way forward.

    At an event in Kwara State, scaling back youth unemployment and tackling restiveness were the major issues of discussion.

    At the event, the state Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed and a first class monarch in the state, Olupo of Ajase-Ipo, Oba Sikirullahi Atanda Sanni recommended skills acquisition as the panacea to youth unemployment in Nigeria.

    The duo said this at the first graduation ceremony of the International Vocational, Technical and Entrepreneurship College (IVTEC), Ajase-Ipo, Ifelodun local government area of the state.

    Oba Sanni specifically called on well-to-do individuals and organisations to sponsor youths to acquire skills at the college for overall growth and development of the country.

    This according to the monarch would reduce joblessness and youth restiveness in the country.

    He expressed gratitude to the governor for the establishment of the college Governor Ahmed counseled youths in the country to avoid being used as thugs by politicians.

    He said that youth should shun antisocial behavior and be well guided. No fewer than 291 students graduated from the college after acquiring advanced vocational skills in various technical fields.

    The governor tasked the graduands to use the skills acquired to take advantage of the numerous economic opportunities that abound locally, nationally and regionally.

    He added that “your newly-acquired skills place you in a strong position to take advantage of the extensive business and employment opportunities available to you.

    “Indeed, the quality of the training you have received here at IVTEC was driven by global standards and a curriculum designed in partnership the Nigeria Employers Consultative Association (NECA)”.

    The governor also explained that the skills acquired by the IVTEC class of 2018 give them an edge over others not only to create a livelihood for themselves but to be employers of labour.

    Governor Ahmed also spoke of his government’s resolve to provide the graduands with start-up funds required to set up various businesses and expand existing ones through affordable micro-credit.

    The governor, who underscored the importance of the college, emphasised that IVTEC was established as a way of getting more youths employed and minimized the risk of their involvement in criminal activities, insurgency and other social vices.

    Said he: “Let me start by congratulating you all for completing this intensive training programme in your various specialisations. “The graduating students have acquired modern vocational skills in automotive mechatronics, masonry, furniture and cabinet making, CCTV, web application, system security and networking, Computer hardware, electrical installation and maintenance, catering and culinary service, HVAC, welding and fabrication, building construction, syste security and networking and other vital vocational skills.

    “Your newly-acquired skills also place you in a strong position to take advantage of the extensive business and employment opportunities available to you. Indeed, the quality of the training you have received here at IVTEC was driven by global standards and a curriculum designed in partnership the Nigerian Employers Consultative Association (NECA). These initiatives place you in good stead to secure employment or set up successful businesses of your own.

    “Having equipped you with these skills through IVTEC, the state government also stands ready to provide you with the start-up funds required to set up your various businesses or expand existing ones through affordable micro-credit. However, our job of getting more of you into employment is not over.

    “Today, tertiary and other training institutions produce graduates at an exponentially higher rate than the public, and private sectors can employ. When you add those youths who do not make it past either primary or secondary schools, a vast army of the unemployed confronts us.

    “Being a proactive administration, we recognised the dearth of critical vocational skills and established IVTEC to provided business-relevant training as a reliable pathway out of unemployment

    and a means of economic empowerment. We also offer IVTEC as a way of getting more youths employed and minimising the risk of their involvement in criminal activity, insurgency and other social vices. “In this regard, our government balanced the cost of providing modern vocational skills with the need to expand students’ access regardless of social background with a 70 per cent scholarship at IVTEC.

    “We have also leveraged partnerships with globally renowned institutions to benchmark IVTEC against global standards in vocational and technical skills training as well as lay the foundation for making the state the hub of vocational skills. These institutions include as the World Bank, City and Guilds of London, Alfred University New York, and the University of Wolverhampton, National Directorate of Employment, as well as private sector companies. “Despite these strides, there is still much work to do if Nigeria is to meet the economy’s demand for vocational skills and boost youth employment.

    “I, therefore, call on the Federal Government and other state governments to prioritise technical training as a reliable tool for arresting the worrying scourge of youth unemployment, reducing the prospects of youth enrolment into violent acts such as insurgency and as a means of stimulating the economy through informal sector development. We offer IVTEC and its accomplishments as models that other governments can emulate.”

    Earlier, Rector of the college Dr Adekunle Somide said 170 of the 291 graduates were the direct result of the state government’s commitment to Youth Employment and Social Support Operations (YESSO) programme.

    He added that the graduates, within the three months of their training in various fields, had been exposed to different skills that could make them employers of labour.

    Also, Chairman, Governing Council of the college, Prof Abiodun Adimula urged the graduands to make marks in their workplaces by creating enviable standards.

    He reminded the graduates not to forget their alma mater as “the school is still in its infancy.”

    Prof Adimula added that the college had trained the graduates to become job creators and not job seekers.

    “University graduates have been here to acquire one form of training or the other. University undergraduates have also come here for their industrial training. The college is one of the best in the country. We expect the products to plough back into the college for the overall improvement of the college’s quality,” he said.

    Governor Ahmed later presented prizes to the best graduating students in the various disciplines, including Miss Latifat Ishaq, who emerges best overall graduating student.

  • ‘Skill acquisition solution to youths’ illegal migration’

    The Industrial Training Fund (ITF) has said skill acquisition is the solution to youths’ illegal migration

    Speaking with The Nation, its Director-General, Sir Joseph Ari, said one of the mandates of the ITF was to make Nigerians, especially the youth, self reliant in terms of skills acquisition, but the youths are yet to embrace the concept.

    According to him, many of the youth migrate to Europe and other African countries to eke out a living, subjecting themselves to humiliation and danger.

    He said: “Solution to the rising migration of Nigerian youths lies in skill acquisition. We are disturbed by this ugly trend and reports of mass casualties on the high sea, enslavement and other harrowing misfortunes being experienced by Nigerian youths, seeking to migrate to Europe.

    “The ITF is appealing to stakeholders to collaborate with ITF in order to equip more Nigerians with skills for employability and entrepreneurship.

    “Equipping Nigerians with relevant skills is not only in line with the Federal Government’s efforts to create jobs, but would stem the current wave of migration, especially by the youths that have culminated into loss of lives and enslavement of thousands of productive Nigerians.

    “I keep wondering why the mass migration despite the fact that several surveys by the ITF and other organisations have revealed that skills gaps exist that are being filled by foreigners.”

    Ari said it was with a view to equipping Nigerians with skills to fill existing vacancies that the ITF embarked on a number of initiatives and expanded existing programmes to ensure that more Nigerians are empowered with skills to check unemployment and promote entrepreneurship.

    He listed some of the programmes to include the National Industrial Skills Development Programme (NISDP), Passion to Profession, Training on Wheels Using Mobile Training Units, the Women Skills Empowerment Programme (WOSEP), the Technical Skills Development Project (TSDP) as well as the Vulnerable and Indigent Youth Empowerment Programme (VIYEP) among others.

    Ari said the ITF has trained over 100, 000 Nigerians since it commenced. He said under the current phase ongoing in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), the ITF is training 11,100 with skills in welding and fabrication, tailoring, garment making, plumbing and pipe fitting.

    He said in the last one year alone, over 70, 000 Nigerians benefited from these skills acquisition programmes and all the beneficiaries were given starter packs to start their businesses.

    “About 90 per cent of the beneficiaries are either currently successful entrepreneurs or earning their livelihood as paid employees, according to the monitoring and evaluation of graduates conducted by the ITF. The state governments, for instance, could collaborate with the ITF towards the establishment of Industrial Skill Training Centres (ISTCs), which will be managed by the ITF on their behalf,” Ari said.

  • Skill acquisition, way out of unemployment

    SIR:Guthrie (1952) defines skills as the ability to bring about some end result with maximum certainty and minimum outlays of  energy or of time and energy. Such abilities can be only be made possible through practice. It is the process of developing such abilities through consistent practice that is referred to as skill acquisition.

    The widening gap between the demand and supply of jobs in the labour market has made the acquisition of entrepreneur skills necessary in the 21st century especially in developing countries like Nigeria.

    Joblessness is a serious threat to national security. It may lead to many of our teeming youths being recruited into the rank of oil theft syndicates, armed robbers, kidnappers, militants and insurgents. To create balance between the growing needs for jobs and the availability of it, there is indeed a need for an intervention plan. So far, skill acquisition has proven to be a panacea for insecurity and a sure guarantee for sustainable development particularly for youths as they constitute the larger force within the society that is at the receiving end of the drought in jobs all over Nigeria.

    Skill acquisition is a capital intensive. There is urgent need for our governments (local, state and federal) to channel more resources into skill acquisition programmes.  The Nigerian government led by President Muhammadu Buhari must create more technical and vocational schools as they will serve as effective medium in encouraging the acquisition of skills among our teeming jobless youths.

    It is often said that an idle hand is the devil’s workshop. Nigerian youths must on their own seize every possible opportunity available to develop themselves in one skill or another. Youths must learn to imbibe the virtue of patience and avoid being ruled by the “get quickly and anyhow” syndrome because there is dignity in labour.

    White collar jobs are no longer what they used to be, so it is high time each Nigerian youth folded his/her sleeves and acquire skill(s) aside formal education since many degree holders feel being a graduate automatically gives them instant wealth without sweat or hard labour.

    The latest strategy of fighting unemployment with certificated skill acquisition is a welcome development but it can only yield desired positive result(s) when all the tiers of government see this menace of unemployment as a common enemy that must be forcefully and jointly defeated.

     

    • ‘Deji Adesogan,

    Kaduna.

  • Brainchild gives back with skill acquisition

    Riding on his long held passion for the arts, especially music and movies, and the need to help young talented musicians reach their full potential in the music industry, serial entrepreneur, Ige Babatobi popularly known as BrainChild, in 2015, launched his outfit, BC Entertainment Company which houses BC Records, BC Movies and BC Events..

    The record label BC Records has a slew of young rising stars in its roster; Kelvin Boj, Nonny, Cumbawire and HD Genesis; one of the hottest video directors.

    However, the business savvy Brainchild says that his belief in giving back to the society, has also led him to set up the BC Foundation through which he has touched lives.

    In another move at influencing young Nigerians positively, Brainchild has announced that the Foundation recently partnered with a charity organisation ‘Abigail Outreach’ for a 3-day free Skills Acquisition Training and Entrepreneurship Workshop for women, in beauty, fashion and lifestyle industries.

    Brainchild is an entrepreneur with interests in the entertainment industry; music, movies, and events.

    Born into the prominent Ige family in Osun state, he spent most of his childhood in Jos, Plateau State.

    From there he proceeded to Lagos for his secondary and tertiary education, where he bagged a degree in Business Administration with Second Class Upper Honors from the University of Lagos.

     

     

     

  • Aisha Buhari to present certificates to over one thousand women in Kano

    The wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari, will on Saturday present certificates to over 1,000 women graduates of her skill acquisition programme in Kano.

    The first batch of the women trainees, who rounded up their one month training on May 5, were specialised in fashion designer, interior decoration, spice and condiments, souvenir work, soap and shoe making as well as event management and decoration skills.

    The programme was organised by the “Aisha Buhari Foundation” a pet project of the wife of the President.

    The women were selected from 44 Local Government Areas of the State and trained based on their choice of vocation.

    The Director, Information to the wife of the President Suleiman Haruna, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the beneficiaries were also trained on how to produce cosmetics, household cleaning products and processing of household spices.

    “Because of their number, the women were divided into two groups at different centres: the women centre at Gyadi gyadi and Salfat women centre at Goron Dutse.

    Haruna said that the wife of the president embarked on a similar training programme with the aims of assisting and engaging less privileged families.

    He said that the move would also prevent them from engaging in anti-social vices as a result of unemployment.

    He explained that Mrs Buhari had performed similar empowerment programme in Lagos, Katsina as well as medical outreach programme in Enugu, Kogi, Benue, Ibadan, Nasarawa, Imo among others.

  • ‘Skill acquisition vital to economic recovery’

    ‘Skill acquisition vital to economic recovery’

    Mrs Janet Jolaoso is the President/Chairman of Council, Nigerian Institute of Training & Development (NITAD). In this interview, she says no organisation can grow without continuous training of workers. She speaks with Assistant Editor Okwy Iroegbu-Chikezie

    What does Nigerian Institute of Training & Development (NITAD) have to offer to industries in these days of recession?

    The institute has a vision, which is to be a world-class body in learning, training, facilitation and development. Our main focus is to develop and maintain best practices in these four areas by providing mandatory, continuous professional education to our members, so that they can  deliver effectively when they have clients. I believe knowledge is light.When they deliver effectively, there will be increase in productivity and we will also be able to influence our environment through this positively. It is about ensuring that people change for better, so that the economy can improve.

    When you talk of ensuring best practices, is it in the private or the public sector?

    It is for both the public and private sectors. Training and development cut across everything in life. After your education in the university, nobody actually gather people to teach them management. You begin as a professional medical doctor, engineer or whatsoever your field is. But as time goes on and you acquire more experience and prove yourself to be good, you begin to manage people. So, NITAD is to ensure that you have effective management of people, so that they can deliver.

    You have talked about increasing productivity and the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). In practical terms, how can you achieve this?

    In this age and time, people need to look inwards to see what they can do. We come in by helping to see how attitudes, skills and knowledge can increase.The more knowledgeable you are about a certain job, the better you become in doing it and when you sharpen your skills, it helps in cost reduction. Money and jobs are scarce in the country but improving skill and attitude can go a long way to being cost effective and   affording people the opportunity to afford a particular product against its competitors. All these can curb recession. The idea is that if your price does not increase much and the value that people are getting from your products on the other hand is increasing, no matter how bad the recession period may look, you will still keep being in business. So, these are the areas we come in to improve the skills, knowledge and attitude of people through effective training packages.

    How do you structure your training to fight poverty? Does it include those in the lower rung of the ladder?

    We have postgraduate diploma in various courses that can help to upscale people, especially in lower management cadre and we have also developed what we call a finishing school. So, if one has a School Leaving Certificate, for instance, and is seeking admission and may be without money to do anything for yourself, we will be able to help you look inwards for what you can do. Many young people roaming the streets find it difficult to articulate their thoughts and see where their passion lies. When I was in secondary school in Mayflower, we had different societies – shoe making, wrist watch repairing, and catering. We were taught how to repair shoes, wrist watches, change bulbs, etc. Some who couldn’t get admission into tertiary institutions for one reason or the other went into these businesses and some of them are very successful cobblers today. Our desire is to help to pursue their passion; our belief is that it is not a university degree that can make one successful. We not only train people on lucrative skills but also help them raise funds and expose them to markets. And for the young graduates, a lot of them don’t really understand what etiquette is all about. For instance, you want to go for interview, how do you prepare yourself for people to see you as the preferred candidate above and among others? So, we prepare them in terms of dressing, approach, mannerisms. Some people fail interview because of their mannerisms, dressing; when you see green on red, you wonder where to start. All these are things we are packaging because it is a big market and it is a large gap from coming out of the university. That’s why we say education does not make a man. It is not only in character alone, it is also in your appearance and mannerisms.

    Most organisations lack the basic rudiments of ethics.Does your institute  address these?

    We organise learners’ forum at least once in a year and we look for a topic that is germane to situations in the country. Corruption is endemic and is not allergic to any sector, people tend to see corruption as a public sector thing but l disagree. The only difference is that in the private sector, the likelihood of the owners of a business challenging a manager, for instance, is high unlike in the public service. Due to bureaucracy and nepotism, people are not held responsible for whatever job they are given. To tackle corruption in Nigeria, we need to attack the mind-set. Once we can address the inner man to start thinking differently, they will behave differently.

    As the president of the institute, what are your achievements?

    When we came on board, we set up an eight-point agenda. One of them is to complete our chartered status processing.  Currently, our Bill has gone through the first and second readings in the House of Representatives and public hearing. We will be at the Senate in a few weeks. This is very significant because if we are not backed by law, we will not be able to regulate training, development, facilitation and learning in the country. When we are chartered, before anybody can engage in consultancy or training as a means of reward profession, he must register with us. For example, if a woman wants to cook, there are some steps you must take. If you don’t take those steps, the result will not be the same. If you want to be a trainer, there are steps you must take and there are certain principles you must know to effectively deliver the value that the client is expecting. Aside from the fact that we regulate that, and make sure that when you are buying into anybody’s services, you ask for evidence of being a member of NITAD because any member of NITAD must have gone through training the trainer. We also produce the membership directory and categorise our members as part of the agenda. The other thing is to also improve the soft skill areas of training. Whether you are working in a company or you are manager, you need management skills to manage your people effectively. What happens is that some people are promoted but this intervention is not there so when they become executive directors for instance, they will lack managerial skills. In that situation what you see is a executive managing the job instead of managing the people who will manage the job. In most cases, you will see some bosses go over their immediate subordinates because nobody taught them to manage the people, but only trained to manage the job.Another achievement is that we have raised our acceptance index. We now see people calling us, obtaining out forms at very high profile level. We have people from the National Assembly, director-generals and Heads of Service that are willing to join us.

    What is your advice to the government in terms of job creation?

    The government needs to come up with a policy, including creating a body that will look into skill acquisition and implementation. There must be a body, an independent agency, that should be dedicated to skill acquisition and full implementation. Furthermore, when people have acquired the needed skill, avenues must be created to empower them until they practise what they have learnt. Many youths are frustrated because they have gone ahead to acquire skills without funding for them. Our proposition to the government is to come up with an interest-free loan with less stringent conditions. This will help create entrepreneurs who will be employers.

    What role is NITAD playing to regulate learning and development?

    We are kick-starting our mandatory continuous professional examination this month for our members. And, invariably, when you are chartered, if you want to be a training consultant, you must be our member. Not only that, you will go through training the trainer course, but you also have to have this mandatory continuous examina-tion. You must know what is going on in other countries and you must know the best way to deliver the value that your clients are expecting from you. We keep upgrading our knowledge and we also want to pass this on to our members.

    Who are these members?

    We have various members, such as those training for reward in the administrative sector and those heading training departments. Our members cut across all professions but mainly those who are into training and development either for reward or for where they are working as leaders. We also have student members. They go through the PostGraduate Diploma (PGD). In addition we are also collaborating with the University of Ibadan (UI), where people can come for our course and use it to obtain a degree.