Advertisement

40% of students in universities are pursuing obsolete courses – Cofek survey shows

40% of students in universities are pursuing obsolete courses – Cofek survey shows
The back image of the graduates wearing a yellow tassel hat. PHOTO/Pexels

You could be pursuing a university course which is irrelevant, a new survey by the Consumers Federation of Kenya (Cofek) has revealed.

According to the report unveiled on July 3, more than 300 university courses are affected with a majority of the programmes being offered in public universities.

“More than 300 courses approved by the Commission on University Education (CUE) either attract nil or few students – yet they have all never used or underutilized lecturers,” the survey found.

The survey further revealed that at least 4 in every 10, translating to 40 per cent of students in universities, are affected by the programmes introduced a long time ago or their job market has since been saturated.

Cofek conducted the survey in conjunction with the Elimika Mashinani Trust. This was a phone interview survey conducted between June 2 and June 15. The study involved 250 graduate respondents spread across 25 counties.

It further revealed that 8 out of 10 students who take such courses did not receive any form of career advice either from school or their parents. The priority for such students is about securing any form of ‘available degree’ certification.

“Such courses are costing both the government and parents a collective fortune yet they do not attract interest from the market. They equally offer no skills for the graduates to opt for meaningful self-employment,” the final report reads in part.

60 per cent blame the Kenya Universities Placement Service for retaining on the admission menu courses that are ‘stale’, 30 per cent blamed the CUE while 10 per cent blamed students for falling for ‘any available’ degree course.

Some of the courses mentioned in the study are the Bachelor of Arts in Japanese, Bachelor of Arts (History, Bachelor of Arts (Kiswahili), Bachelor of Arts (Cultural Studies), Bachelor of Science in Earth Science and Bachelor of Science in Zoology.

Others are Bachelor of Arts in Church Music and Theology, Bachelor of Music Theory and Composition, Bachelor of Science in Forestry, Bachelor of Science in Sugar Technology, Bachelor of Science (Events and Convention Management), Bachelor of Range Management among others.

A few days ago, Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua warned university graduates that the government does not have employment opportunities for them.

Speaking on June 30 during a graduation ceremony at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology, Gachagua said the graduates will benefit from Housing Fund, which will create jobs.

“I am an honest man, I don’t want to sit here and lie to you that we have jobs for you, these jobs we are going to create together with you,” Gachagua said.

Author

For these and more credible stories, join our revamped Telegram and WhatsApp channels.
Advertisement