make for self reliance. However, the secondary
school education has failed in this area of skill
acquisition (vocation) partly because the reasons for
its inclusion in the curriculum have been forgotten
or because of ignorance of its benefits
(news24Nigeria, 2012). The geometric increase of
youth unemployment in the country, which includes
to a large extent, male and female secondary leavers,
attests to the fact that this aim is not being achieved.
To reduce youth unemployment in the nation,
viable entrepreneurship education should be
incorporated into the curricula of secondary and
tertiary schools. Doing this will also turn the
graduates into job -creators and not job-seekers. This
will help to curb the trend of graduates seeking the
elusive white-collars jobs (Adebayo, 2013).
One viable area where entrepreneurship
education can be focused on for empowering our
youths for gainful and self employment is the area of
Information and Communication Technology (ICT).
ICT is an umbrella term that includes any
communication device or application,
encompassing: radio, television, cellular phones,
computer and network hardware and software,
satellite systems and so on, as well as the various
services and applications associated with them, such
as videoconferencing and distance learning (Rouse,
2005). ICT refers to technologies that provide access
to information through telecommunications. It
focuses primarily on communication technologies
which includes the Internet, wireless networks, cell
phones, and other communication mediums.
ICT skills are those related to the use of
computers and then the ability to transmit stored
information through fixed line networks or through
wireless phone networks. It has to do with the
knowledge of and ability to use communications
technology such as telephony hardware, computers,
etc. Today, ICTs are transforming the world of
work, creating new job opportunities and making
labor markets more innovative, inclusive, and
global. According to Vein (2013), ICTs are
influencing employment both as an industry that
creates jobs and as a tool that empowers workers to
access new forms of work, in new and more flexible
ways. The emerging ICT-enabled employment
opportunities matter because countries around the
world are looking to create more good jobs, which
have positive social and economic sustainability for
workers and for society.
According to Tatum (2014), economic
sustainability is the term used to identify various
strategies that make it possible to use available
resources to their best advantage. The idea is to
promote the use of those resources in a way that is
both efficient and responsible, and likely to provide
long-term benefits. The goal is to establish
profitability over the long term.
ICTs are providing new avenues for sustainable
economy and job creation that could help tackle
global unemployment. ICTs connect people to jobs.
Online employment marketplaces are helping an
estimated 12 million people worldwide find work by
connecting them with employers globally (Vein,
2013). There are job search services using internet-
based and mobile tools and such services empower
workers by making labour markets more transparent
and inclusive.
For young people ICT offer a way into more
formal careers, as well as providing supplementary
income. The future of ICT is therefore secure with
the coming generations and that is why Olatunde in
Aminu (2013), appealed to the federal and state
governments of Nigeria to empower the youth with
necessary ICT skills to make them self-employed.
He emphasized that ICT is one of the sectors
through which, the Nigerian youth could be
empowered without necessarily depending on
government for white collar jobs or waiting for any
assistance to meet daily upkeep. Aminu (2013)
further reported that ICT will ensure that many
unemployed youths are responsible to themselves
and also contribute their quota to the country’s
Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This is because,
according to Olatunde, there are still software and
the hardware sub-sectors of ICT with diverse
opportunities yet to be fully exploited.
Consequently, since the secondary school leavers
in Nigeria are within the age bracket of youths that
are vulnerable and may become a source of unrest
and instability in the country if not usefully engaged,
this study is focused on identifying their ICT skills
needs in order to integrate them into the school
curriculum or youth economic empowerment
programmes organized in the country, to ensure
economic sustainability and peaceful co-existence.
To address this issue, the study specifically
identified:
1. Basic Computer skill needs of Nigerian
secondary school leavers for sustainable
economy and peaceful co-existence.
2. Software development skill needs of Nigerian
secondary school leavers for sustainable
economy and peaceful co-existence.
3. Hardware Maintenance skill needs of Nigerian
secondary school leavers for sustainable
economy and peaceful co-existence.
ICTSkillNeedsofNigerianSecondarySchoolLeaversTowardsSustainableEconomyandPeacefulCo-existence
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