促进乌干达学生性别平等的技术、职业教育和培训资助途径探索

A. T. Nganda, Francis Kirimi, S. Nyambura
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引用次数: 1

摘要

通过教育和培训实现性别平等已引起全球和国家的注意。尽管在职业技术教育和培训(TVET)中实现性别平等有多种策略,但研究表明,资金挑战继续阻碍其在TVET机构中的实现。因此,本研究探索了促进乌干达职业技术教育学院学生性别平等的职业技术教育资助途径。采用定量和定性方法的描述性调查设计来收集、分析和呈现研究结果。包括机构领导、教师、学生、地区领导、部委官员和民间社会性别倡导者在内的260名举报人参与了这项研究。在选择研究对象时,采用了有目的、方便和分层随机抽样技术。采用问卷调查和访谈指南收集所需数据。对定量数据进行清洗、编码,并输入社会科学统计软件包(SPSS)软件版本21进行分析。采用百分比、平均值和标准偏差来表示定量数据。专题法和逐字报告法分别用于分析和呈现定性数据。结果显示:职业技术教育私有化、增加职业技术教育预算、及时和充足的政府补助、及时和充足的员工薪酬、助学金和奖学金、公私伙伴关系、平权战略和提高家长收入,促进了学生的性别平等。该研究建议为职业技术教育学生设立支持性贷款计划,增加每名学生的基本补助金,为女性提供略高的数额,以满足她们的卫生需求,向职业技术教育学院提供的基本补助金应在新学期开始前发放,在分配助学金和奖学金时考虑性别因素,鼓励制定政策,并在学院和行业之间签署谅解备忘录。与其他机构建立联系,并寻求组织的捐助资金。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An Exploration of Funding Avenues in Technical, Vocational Education and Training That Promote Gender Equity of Students in Uganda
The realisation of gender equity through education and training has captured global and national attention. Despite the multiple strategies for achieving gender equity in Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET), studies have revealed that funding challenges continue to hamper its realisation in TVET institutes. Thus, this study explored funding avenues in TVET that promote gender equity of students in TVET institutes in Uganda. A descriptive survey design with quantitative and qualitative approaches was used to collect, analyse and present study findings. 260 informants including institutional leaders, instructors, students, district leaders, ministry officials, and civil society gender advocates participated in this study. Purposive, convenient, and stratified random sampling techniques were used in selecting the study informants. Questionnaire and interview guides were used to collect the desired data. The quantitative data was cleaned, coded, and entered into Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) software version 21 for analysis. Percentage, mean, and standard deviations were used to present the quantitative data. Thematic method and verbatim reporting were used to analyse and present qualitative data respectively. The results revealed that: privatisation of TVET access, increasing TVET budgets, timely and adequate government grants, timely and adequate staff remunerations, bursaries and scholarships, public-private partnerships, affirmative strategies, and boosting parents’ income, promote gender equity of students. The study recommended that supportive loan schemes for TVET students be instated, capital grants per student need to be increased, with a slightly higher amount for females to meet their sanitary needs, capital grants to TVET institutes should be dispatched before the start of new terms/semesters, incorporation of the gender lens in the allocation of bursaries and scholarships, encouraging policy formulation and memoranda of understanding between institutes and industries, building linkages with other institutions and seeking donor funding from organisations.
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