Yes, UJ look to tackle SA’s youth unemployment crisis

University of Johannesburg and Youth Employment Service in Rosebank are jointly creating a broader 4IR training programme to enable youth to possess the necessary digital skills and insights for the modern workplace.

Private sector jobs engine, the Youth Employment Service (Yes), in Rosebank, and the University of Johannesburg have committed to working together on a range of initiatives to provide skills, training, and entrepreneurship programmes for South Africa’s youth.

Through the University of Johannesburg’s (UJ) Johannesburg Business School Centre for Entrepreneurship and Institute for Intelligent Systems, Yes youth will have access to UJ’s portfolio of massive open online courses in the fields of entrepreneurship and artificial intelligence. They are also jointly establishing start-up incubation programmes for youth who have successfully completed the Yes Siyazakhela Entrepreneurship training programme.

Currently, all Yes youth have access to the Siyazakhela accredited training through the zero-rated Yes phone. Beneficiaries of this partnership will include all active Yes youth as well as Yes alumni who have completed their employment term through Yes.

In addition to enabling Yes Youth to access to UJ’s online AI training courses, UJ and Yes are jointly creating a broader Fourth Industrial Revolution training programme to ensure that youth possess the necessary digital skills and insights they need to thrive in the modern workplace. The programme will include an entrepreneurship stream that supports enterprising Yes youth to leverage AI technologies to build innovative and resilient businesses based on the latest technologies and business models.

Professor Letlhokwa George Mpedi and Yes CEO Ravi Naidoo sign a memorandum of understanding.

Speaking at the signing of the memorandum of understanding, UJ vice-chancellor Professor Letlhokwa George Mpedi said the two bodies were already actively exploring ways to collaborate to achieve their respective mandates and objectives.

“As a university, we don’t only want to graduate job seekers. We want to graduate job creators. UJ is ranked first in South Africa in terms of our impact and second in Africa’s higher education rankings, so entrepreneurship is extremely important to us. We look forward to working with Yes to confront one of the biggest challenges facing our country right now,” said Mpedi.

Ravi Naidoo, the CEO of Yes, said the two parties shared a common purpose of societal impact, and the partnership would provide ‘significant synergies’ in the drive to increase youth employment levels in South Africa.

“One of the most important foundations for our country’s future is the youth and the biggest endowment we can give them is skills, training and experience that are not only already in demand today, but that will also serve them well into the future,” said Naidoo.

“What makes this partnership important is that both institutions want to make an impact on South Africa’s ongoing youth unemployment crisis. Critically, we believe this partnership will contribute to creating jobs that have a multiplier effect down the line, by turning one job into 10, or more.”

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