Abstract

The purpose of this study was to assess the socio cultural factors that prevent females from accessing Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) in Rwanda. Females have been sensitized on the availability and benefits of TVET, to meet the required qualifications in order to be enrolled and yet the uptake of females to TVET remains low. The specific objectives of the study were to determine the socio-cultural factors that prevent girls from enrolling in TVET and establish the level of awareness of girls and parents about TVET and its benefits. The study answered why females are not embracing TVET as a promising avenue of education. The study used a case study strategy and applied both qualitative and quantitative approach (triangulation) at levels of data collection and analysis. The study used questionnaires, Focus Group Discussions (FGDs), Interviews and secondary data as data sources. The respondents included 400 females, parents and local leaders, TVET and integrated Polytechnic Regional Centers (IPRCs) staff for the Key Informant Interviews (KIIs). The research performed a simple linear regression analysis to find out predictor factors to enroll in TVET hence access to TVET that supplemented the correlation analysis. The findings of the study revealed social and cultural factors that prevent girls from enrolling in TVET include the belief that males have greater innate technical capacity than females and are thus predisposed to excel at programs with sciences and Mathematics backgrounds. Male Inheritance defined as investing in male for the continuity of the family, parent’s belief of females’ ineptitude at TVET labeled as male reserved areas, physical infrastructure variables such as distance from home to Training centers and female boarding facilities are additional factors which indicated a statistical significance with p <0.001. The study results indicated that the higher level of education of parents, the lower the enrolment of females in TVET Education. Many educated parents believe that TVET was for the failures and poor families. The study indicated that there was a discrepancy between the high expectations of enrolling in TVET prior to enrolling rated at 90%, 91.5%, 61.5 %, 84.5 %, 79 % compared to the actual benefits after enrolling rated at 32%, 37%, 50.5%, 62.0%, 54.5%. The study showed the lack of information and underestimation of the value of TVET however increased access to information among females and parents led to increased enrolment of females in TVET schools.

Highlights

  • For four decades, the song of women empowerment has been repeated since the 1980s, yet the journey is still long to go

  • Michelle Obama (2014) revealed to 500 participants in President Barack Obama‘s Mandela Fellowship for Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) summit about girls education that 62 million girls worldwide were not in school including 30 million girls in sub-Saharan Africa the issue was not focusing on the lack of resources needed in Africa and throughout the world to facilitate better schooling, the only concrete dialogue to have is on the attitudes parents and societies have about girls and women

  • The research examined factors mostly social termed as Independent Variables assumed to affect females’ enrolment in Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) education termed the dependent variable access to TVET skills in Rwanda

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Summary

Introduction

The song of women empowerment has been repeated since the 1980s, yet the journey is still long to go. Michelle Obama (2014) revealed to 500 participants in President Barack Obama‘s Mandela Fellowship for Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) summit about girls education that 62 million girls worldwide were not in school including 30 million girls in sub-Saharan Africa the issue was not focusing on the lack of resources needed in Africa and throughout the world to facilitate better schooling, the only concrete dialogue to have is on the attitudes parents and societies have about girls and women. This becomes a stumbling block to the females’ enrolment in formal, technical and vocational education

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