Ghana Communication Technology University just pushed out over 2,100 graduates, with most of them coming from the computing and IT programs. Vice-Chancellor Emmanuel Afoakwa talked up the school's expansion plans, which include an eight-story lecture complex dropping before the year ends and a six-story graduate building finishing up early next year. They're also launching some innovation lab meant to help students build startups and link up with companies.
The university is tackling its housing crisis through a public-private partnership for new dorms, and they're planning to demolish the old engineering building to put up a modern replacement with fancy labs. Deputy Education Minister Clement Apak showed up and went on about how the Mahama government is pumping money into digital infrastructure for rural areas, pushing AI and tech adoption across the country. He told graduates to focus on local solutions for sustainability rather than just copying what works elsewhere.
The university is tackling its housing crisis through a public-private partnership for new dorms, and they're planning to demolish the old engineering building to put up a modern replacement with fancy labs. Deputy Education Minister Clement Apak showed up and went on about how the Mahama government is pumping money into digital infrastructure for rural areas, pushing AI and tech adoption across the country. He told graduates to focus on local solutions for sustainability rather than just copying what works elsewhere.