This initiative uses an entertaining-yet-educational show, broadcast on TV, to explore the theme of craftsmanship and to promote vocational training. The show aims to dispel the stigma associated with vocational education and training by influencing the opinions of young people and their parents, guardians, and teachers, as well as career counsellors. It hopes to do this by creating role models in the drama series that the audience can look up to.
Specifically, the show is about Veronica, a young attractive metalworker, who needs premises (land and a structure) to set up a workshop. "Hand in Hand" highlights her struggles and her path to success in establishing her workshop. Some of the specific topics explored in the series include:
The initiative runs parallel to KfW Entwicklungsbank’s vocational training programmes, which promote the establishment and further development of vocational schools, teacher training institutions, and certification centres.
"Hand in Hand" is backed up by an extensive marketing campaign with short films about successful manual tradesmen and newspaper adverts. Six companies, including Coca-Cola and Uganda Telecom, are sponsoring the series. According to the organisers, the show has been a huge success and the actors are already household names in Uganda. Surveys are currently being carried out to assess its impact on the image of vocational training.
Economic Development, Youth.
The initiative was prompted by what organisers identify as the shortage of qualified workers and the lack of employment opportunities for the growing number of school-leavers. The exodus from subsistence farming, they claim, is making the problem of unemployment worse. However, most young people do not really see vocational training as a way of finding a job, and Ugandan youth are seen to only enrol for vocational education and training courses as a last resort. However, organisers claim that experience indicates that not only are graduates from these institutions able to co-exist with those from the formal sector, but they can also make a good living.
In short, the producers hope the series will send a message that craftsmanship does not have to be an alternative career as many people take it to be. "It is a career like any other. If one takes their work seriously they will be very successful in whatever they chose to do."
German Development Bank (KfW)/lcon Institute, the German Development Cooperation (GTZ), and the Ministry of Education and Sports (MOES), Great Lakes Film Productions.
Hand in Hand website on May 8 2006.