Insight

Women empowerment: Why vocational training is ideal replacement for kitchen smoke

THE negative perception that Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) is for failure’s is as old as the invent of formal education in Africa. But even more astonishing, it was a taboo for a woman to embrace vocational skills. “During our time, there was no way a woman could be seen on top of a building driving a nail into the roof or even enrol for apprenticeship as a mechanic. How could a woman roll in dust and oil to fix a car,” asks 70-year-old Rutayisire a retired civil servant. However fast forward 2013, TVET has not only become the future of development but women are also taking on what many still perceive as a male domain. 
Mu00e9diatrice Mukansanga displays a repaired electric motor. The New Times/Doreen Umutesi
Mu00e9diatrice Mukansanga displays a repaired electric motor. The New Times/Doreen Umutesi
Doreen Umutesi