Hai Duong Vocational College was asked to strengthen association and work out curricula meeting domestic and foreign businesses’ demand for human resources.
Hai Duong Vocational College is one of units playing an important role in training, supplying, and developing human resources for production and business activities of enterprises in the province and the country, affirmed Vice Chairman of the provincial People's Committee Nguyen Minh Hung.
Hung, who is also Head of the Steering Board for the Project “Developing human resources to meet production and business requirements, contributing to turning Hai Duong into a modern industrial province by 2030”, made the remark while inspecting the project implementation at Hai Duong Vocational College on November 1.
The vice chairman of the provincial People's Committee suggested that in the coming time, Hai Duong Vocational College take the initiative in coordinating with investors to accomplish the college development project under the Government's socio-economic recovery and development program with a total budget of 70 billion VND.
He also asked the college to do a good job of recruitment and balance training quotas to match manpower needs in the future.
The school should actively collaborate with affiliated enterprises to work out curricula meeting domestic and foreign businesses’ demand for human resources, Hung recommended.
“It is necessary to clearly understand students’ needs during training to proactively spend on equipment and machinery to better serve teaching and learning, helping students access modern machinery and not be like a fish out of water at work,” said Hung.
The vice chairman required the Department of Labor, Invalids, and Social Affairs to review vocational teachers who wish to improve their qualifications abroad to request a specific incentive mechanism from the provincial authorities.
Hai Duong Vocational College is training eight college-level occupations and seven intermediate-level ones.
It regularly cooperates with more than 30 enterprises inside and outside the province to serve vocational training.
80% of the college’s students in mechatronics, industrial electricity, industrial electronics, fashion sewing, metal cutting, welding, information technology, and refrigeration equipment operation and repair get a job shortly after graduation.
The college had enrolled 542 students, including 422 intermediate and 120 college ones, by the end of October.
LAN ANH