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The Harare Institute of Technology (HIT) was established in 1988 as a National Vocational Training Centre (NVTC). Over time, it evolved into a Technical College offering courses in automotive, electrical, and mechanical engineering, producing artisans capable of operating and maintaining machinery in industry with little or no research or generation of new technology related knowledge.
This is a list of universities in Zimbabwe. Africa University (AU) Arrupe Jesuit University (AJU) Bindura University of Science Education (BUSE) Catholic University in Zimbabwe (CUZ) Chinhoyi University of Technology (CUT) Great Zimbabwe University, formerly Masvingo State University; Gwanda State University (GSU) Harare Institute of Technology ...
Council room of the University of Zimbabwe. Portraits of former Vice-Chancellors from left to right: Robert Craig, Leonard Lewis, Walter Kamba and Gordon Chavunduka. In 1945, Manfred Hodson (after whom a residence hall is now named) formed the Rhodesia University Association, inspired by the promise of £20,000 by Robert Jeffrey Freeman for establishing such a university. [8]
The National University of Science and Technology (NUST) is the second largest public research university in Zimbabwe, located in Bulawayo.It was established in 1991. [1] On 8 April 1991, NUST opened for the first time with 270 students in three faculties.
Harare Polytechnic College, formerly Salisbury Polytechnic and commonly referred to as Harare Polytechnic, [1] is a technical, public research university in Causeway, Harare.
Midlands State University is a government owned university in Zimbabwe. The university has 9 faculties (Agriculture, Arts, Commerce, Education, Engineering, Law, Science, Social Sciences and Medicine) offering a wide variety of courses and many specialist programmes.
The Zimbabwe Open University is a multidisciplinary and inter-faculty institution. [4] It offers both degree courses and non-degree courses. [ 4 ] The university has six faculties: the Faculty of Science and technology, the Faculty of Arts and Education, the Faculty of Commerce and Law, Faculty of Applied Social Sciences, Faculty Agriculture ...
The name was changed to Great Zimbabwe University two years later. The university offers degree and diploma programmes at undergraduate and postgraduate levels in the arts, commerce, education and the sciences. The programmes are designed to be responsive to the needs of the job market in Zimbabwe's ever-changing economy.