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The Ministry of Education (MOE) is a department of the Namibian government. Established at Namibian independence in 1990, the first Namibian education minister was Nahas Angula. Between 1995 and 2005, and since 2015, its responsibility is only primary and secondary education, while vocational and university education fall under the Ministry of ...
An education ministry is a national or subnational government agency politically responsible for education. Various other names are commonly used to identify such agencies, such as Ministry of Education, Department of Education, and Ministry of Public Education, and the head of such an agency may be a minister of education or secretary of education.
The Ministry of Higher Education is a department of the Namibian government. It was established in 1995 under the name Ministry of Higher Education and Vocational Education as a split-off from the Ministry of Education (MOE) and existed in this form until 2005 when its portfolio fell back to the MOE.
Before Namibia's independence, the country's education system was designed to reinforce apartheid rather than provide the necessary human resource base to promote equitable social and economic development. It was fragmented along racial and ethnic lines, with vast disparities in both the allocation of resources and the quality of education offered.
A. Shipena Secondary School, Katutura, Windhoek, Khomas Region [5]; A. A. Denk Memorial School, Kalkrand, Hardap Region Acacia High School, Windhoek; Academia ...
In her role, she was tasked with assisting in leading public communication on preventative steps against Namibia's COVID-19 pandemic. [10] At the time of cabinet appointment, Theophilus was 23 and one of Africa's youngest cabinet ministers. [10] She is also a board member of the National Council of Higher Education. [11]
The University Centre for Studies In Namibia (TUCSIN) is a tertiary educational institution in Namibia. It is based in the Khomasdal suburb of the capital Windhoek and has campuses in Rehoboth, Rundu and Oshakati. [1] TUCSIN was co-founded by Beatrice Sandelowsky on 15 June 1978. [2]
The Polytechnic of Namibia was de jure not a university as no provision was made in the Act by which it was created (Act 33 / 1994) [2] to carry this name. A motion for name change into Namibia's University of Science and Technology was rejected by cabinet in August 2010, [ 3 ] but approved by the same body in December 2012.