Health Sciences and Education graduate urged to keep a global mind-set

By
Julius K. Satsi, GNA

Accra, July 22, GNA-
The University of Ghana has conferred degrees on 341 students from the Colleges
of Heath Sciences and Education with a call on graduates to keep a global
mind-set in order to remain competitive.

Mrs Mansa Nettey,
the Chief Executive Officer of the Standard Chartered Bank, Ghana who made the
call told the graduates to be abreast with the changing trends in the world,
which had become a global village.

She said, “It is
incumbent on us to know the current trends and their implications for our
contribution and progression, because we live and work in the global space in a
global era”.

She urged the
graduates to use their free periods to step back and figure they really were,
and what impact they wanted to have saying, “dig deep into your life and your
values… Life can happen and may happen but your ability to draw your inner values
will make you a real difference.”

Mrs Nettey told
graduates to find time, ‘put your phones away, step away from social media and
spend some time thinking, reflecting, and discovering ‘the self’ in them.’

She urged the
graduates to invest in themselves for future opportunities saying that life
abounded with so many opportunities and that it behoved on every individual to
attain the necessary requirements to help capitalise on the opportunities.

She said, there was
the need to look out for the skills that would be relevant in the future and
seek to prepare for them.

“Take full advantage
of online programmes and gain knowledge and skills needed for progression in
your career and the delivery of high quality service to your clients and
humanity in general,” she said.

She said life had no
entitlements, graduates should not enter the real world with their degrees,
holding unreasonably high expectations about what they were entitled to adding
that in real life, everything was earned and that nothing would be given out on
a silver platter.

Mrs Nettey indicated
that life was not a sprint but a marathon saying, “Whereas sprinters run at top
speed to reach their finish line, running a marathon requires discipline,
perseverance, endurance and training to complete the given task over a long
period of time”.

She asked the
graduates to keep a positive attitude to succeed, adding that there was the
need to eschew indiscipline, laziness, selfishness and perform with maximum
effort and skills and admonished to treat every job they landed after
graduation as theirs, by forging healthy relationships with supervisors,
colleagues and clients.

Professor Ebenezer
Oduro Owusu, the Vice Chancellor said, this year, a total of 3,184 students
would be graduating at various levels from the University’s four colleges,
thus, Colleges of Health Sciences, Humanities, Education, and Basic and Applied
Sciences.

He noted that the
University’s admission process reflected the diverse nature of student
population saying, during the 2017/2018 admission cycle, a total of 14,128
students, made up of 11,707 undergraduates and 2,421 graduate students accepted
offers and enrolled in various programmes run on various campuses.

He noted that the
University awarded scholarship to a total of 614 students out of 920 applicants
representing 66.7 per cent adding that “the 614 scholarship awardees comprised
424 males representing 69.1 per cent and 190 females representing 30.9 per
cent.

Mr Marvin
Ofosu-Boateng, who graduated with Final Grade Point Average of 3.68 in Pharmacy
delivering the valedictory address commended parents, lecturers and all
stakeholders who invested in their academic pursuit.

He said they had no
doubt that the University had equipped them with the necessary tools to solve
societal problems adding that, “wherever we find ourselves, I urge us to tackle
challenges, achieve greater heights and impact a positive change in our dear
motherland, Ghana”.

GNA 

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