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The evaluation of skills development facilitation in Gauteng public further education and training (FET) colleges

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dc.contributor.advisor Steinmann, C. F.
dc.contributor.author Matea, Marobane John
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-07T08:33:16Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-07T08:33:16Z
dc.date.issued 2013-11
dc.identifier.citation Matea, Marobane John (2013) The evaluation of skills development facilitation in Gauteng public further education and training (FET) colleges, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/14625> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/14625
dc.description.abstract South Africa is a developing country that contends with a serious skills deficit that hampers its economic growth prospects. To address this skills deficit particularly at intermediate level, the government identified the public Further Education and Training (FET) College sector to serve as a medium to counter the challenge. Subsequent to the aforementioned decision by the government, political and financial support was pledged to the sector. Legislation that is attributed to the sector was also enacted and amended to capacitate the sector to perform optimally. The focus of this research was the capability of the public FET College sector in the province of Gauteng to respond credibly and qualitatively to the skills needs of the province‟s labour markets. Thus, the primary purpose was to evaluate the role that the sector in the province plays to address the skills shortage. The research design for the study was triangulation in nature, encompassing qualitative and quantitative methods. Nine public FET colleges, six companies and the Indlela Training Centre were sampled for gathering information regarding the responsiveness, articulation and efficiency of the province‟s public FET College sector. Students, lecturers, HODs and company‟s skills development managers were interviewed and sampled for the completion of questionnaires. Some significant differences in perceptions relating to the role played by the province‟s public FET college sector in addressing the skills shortage were found. Findings indicated that the massive financial and political support pledged to the sector by the government did not translate into efficiency, credibility and responsiveness nor capacitate the sector. In terms of the findings employers are skeptical about the quality of graduates that the province‟s public FET colleges ect or produces. Further, it was found that the sector‟s lecturers are inappropriately qualified and this contributes to the inefficiency of the sector in performing optimally. The lack of a formal skills development partnership between the sector and the labour markets hampers the articulation and the responsiveness of the sector to the skills needs of labour market. However, the current development whereby all the skills development institutions have been placed under one department has the potential to add value to the skills development landscape, particularly the public FET College sector. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvii, 372 leaves) : color illustrations en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Articulation en
dc.subject Labour markets en
dc.subject Lecturer en
dc.subject Public FET college en
dc.subject Responsiveness en
dc.subject Skills development en
dc.subject.ddc 374.96822
dc.subject.lcsh Continuing education -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Occupational training -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Technical education -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Adult education -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Administration -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Adult education and state -- South Africa -- Gauteng en
dc.title The evaluation of skills development facilitation in Gauteng public further education and training (FET) colleges en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Educational Leadership and Management en
dc.description.degree D. Ed. (Educational Management)


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