= Poe Aung =
The
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has entered
into a partnership with U.S.-based corporation, the National Instruments
(NI), to provide hands-on training to aspiring young scientists and
engineers in the five member states including Myanmar of the Lower
Mekong sub-region and to empower them with technical skills to help
enhance the region’s workforce both in quality and quantity.
Over
the next five years, USAID and NI will work together to create learning
centers at universities and vocational colleges to enable students and
professionals of the sub-region get access to NI’s embedded and
measurement devices, including software, hardware, training and
technical support.
They can also acquire practical science and technology skills and use them to build solutions and, potentially, new companies.
This
partnership involves developing curricula, training instructors and
supplying lab equipment to these schools, start-ups and small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
Contributing
$4.5 million inkind to the partnership, NI commits to provide access to
its software and hardware technology platforms, product training
materials, virtual and in-country support for multiple regional
projects, including the USAID Connecting the Mekong Through Education
and Training (USAID COMET) project and the USAID ASEAN Connectivity
Through Trade and Investment (USAID ACTI) project.
NI
and USAID previously collaborated through the USAID’s Partnerships for
Enhanced Engagement in Research (PEER) science program to support
scientists in developing countries. Since announcing the partnership in
2013, both organizations have worked together to bring scientific
equipment, training and support to several research projects, which have
also translated into knowledge transfer, patents and establishing new
start-ups. “Access to technical skills and flexible tools combined with
the ideas of the young population in this region will enable them to
leverage this talent and generate the local solutions needed to ensure
the sustainable development of their countries.
This
partnership has been made possible through the Planet NI, a program
with a mission of empowering engineers and scientists in emerging
countries to achieve sustainable prosperity by providing increased
access to NI technology,” said Victor Mieres,NI vice president of sales
and marketing, emerging markets.
Two
U.S. government projects – USAID COMET and USAID ACTI – will coordinate
this partnership. Launched as one of the programs affiliated with the
Young Southeast Asia Leadership Initiative (YSEALI) by President Obama
in Myanmar in November 2014, USAID COMET plans to help 100 universities
and vocational centers increase the number of skilled workers in
ASEAN-targeted fields.
Under
USAID ACTI, this partnership will focus on providing information and
skills development training to SMEs. Emphasis will be on greater
economic inclusion of women and young entrepreneurs to advance regional
economic growth in the Mekong sub-region.
#Themyawadydaily
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