Type | Journal Article - Journal of Development Studies |
Title | University Education for Youth Entrepreneurship: The Case of Midlands State University, Zimbabwe |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 3 |
Issue | 2 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
Page numbers | 215-227 |
Abstract | Prior to the political independence of Zimbabwe, education for entrepreneurship was a preserve of the White minority at the expense of the Black majority. An attempt to introduce entrepreneurship in education for the Black youths was when in the 1960s the Native Education Department introduced a ‘watered down’ vocational education curriculum called F2 system, which taught woodwork, metalwork, fashion and fabrics in urban secondary schools and agriculture, home economics and building in rural secondary schools. In 1980, Robert Mugabe’s political administration replaced the F2 system with a purely academic curricular. Not all the youths were able to get employment upon leaving school; the economy did not create enough job opportunities for the school leavers. The need for entrepreneurial education became a matter of concern in the country. The study investigates how Midlands State University (MSU) has re-engineered its curriculum to produce entrepreneurs. |
» | Uganda - National Household Survey 2009-2010 |