Thursday, December 5, 2024

UDS Now A Preferred Place For Higher Education – President Akufo-Addo

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has praised the University for Development Studies (UDS) for producing quality human resource for national development.

He said UDS is no longer a university of last resort but a preferred place for higher education in the country.

He said the current dignified status of the University was as result of hard work on the part of Management, teaching and non-teaching staff, and all stakeholders, commending them for “transforming the UDS to what it is today.”

President Akufo-Addo was speaking at the 21st Congregation of UDS in Tamale on Saturday where a total of 4,683 students graduated with various undergraduate and graduate degrees.

The graduands comprised 1,195 diploma students, 2,673 bachelors’ degree students and 173 graduate students of which six were PhDs.

However, in line with the COVID-19 safety protocols, only graduating students, who obtained First Class, numbering 95, and graduate students, were physically present for the congregation. The rest would visit the University later for their certificates.

Incidentally, Former President Jerry John Rawlings, who passed on last week, played a crucial role in the establishment of the school when he used his prize money from World Food Prize of $50,000 as seed money for its founding.

The UDS was established in 1992 as the premier tertiary facility in the northern part of the country, and it had, so far, graduated more than 50,000 students, rendering critical services for national development.

“Ghana is proud of your achievements. Let me assure you of my government’s continued support for the work you are doing to ensure the growth and development of our country,” President Akufo-Addo told Management.

He touched on the issue of naming UDS after the late President Jerry John Rawlings, saying even though Mr Rawlings declined the suggestion in 2017, “at this point when he is no more, it would be up to the Ghanaian people to decide whether or not the University should be named after him.”

Professor Gabriel Ayum Teye, Vice Chancellor of UDS, said the University constituted a Committee with the mandate to realign its programmes and academic staff to give further meaning to its collective resolve to introduce market driven programmes to address the critical human needs of the country.

He advised graduates to put into practice the knowledge acquired, create their own jobs and opportunities, and be diligent in all endeavors for the development of the country.

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