dc.description.abstract |
There seems to be an annual recurrence of the challenge of placing every
university student for practical internship programme in most technical
universities in Ghana. In addressing this challenge, this study evaluated
students' internship programmes in selected Technical Universities in Ghana.
The pragmatism philosophical paradigm specifically concurrent triangulation
mixed methods approach was utilised. In the quantitative phase, data was
solicited from third-year students, lecturers and administrators of technical
universities with the help of pre-tested semi-structured questionnaires. Multistage
sampling technique was utilised. Data was analysed using mean and
standard deviation. The study found weak technical university-industry
linkages, and unclear legal and regulatory framework governing internship.
Again, no internship training plan was formulated by technical universities for
each intern after the placement had been agreed upon. However, a memorandum
of understanding was reached and signed by both the intern and the employer.
Internship offered countless benefits to students, including greater sense of
responsibility, as well as development of one's career. Among others, the
challenges facing the successful implementation of internship programmes were
poor integration among relevant stakeholders, competition from other education
institutions, lack of stipend for interns, and weak business relationship with
employers. To address the challenges, some of the strategies recommended
were technical universities must target multi-nationa.1 corporations that can take
on multiple interns; site visits by university supervisors should be used to
monitor compliance; and interns should be encouraged to bring to the fore their
concerns. |
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