Chief Executive Officer of the
Universal Merchant Bank (UMB), Nana Dwemoh Benneh, has urged graduates of the
University of Ghana to take advantage of the benefits of digital tools to
establish themselves as entrepreneurs.
Nana Dwemoh
Benneh made these comments at the 75th congregation ceremony of the
College of Education where he was the guest speaker. The ceremony saw the
graduation of 11,711 students drawn from the constituent schools of the college
namely School of Continuing and Distance Education, School of Information and
Communication Studies and the School of Education and Leadership.
The Provost
of the College of Education Prof. Samuel Nii Ardey Codjoe in his opening
remarks noted that the graduating class had students from over 50 other
countries amongst the cohort, once more cementing the University of Ghana’s
place as the premiere University in Ghana.
In her
remarks read for her by the Pro Vice–Chancellor Prof. Felix A. Asante, the Vice–Chancellor of the University noted some key successes chalked by the University
for the year under review. Key highlights here included the Vice–Chancellor’s
Student Digitization Initiative to allow for synchronous and asynchronous
virtual learning. She also noted that
the University of Ghana had taken pride of place in Ghana as the top ranked
school in the Webometrics/ Alper Doger school rankings.
In her
speech prior to confirming the conferment of degrees on the presented
candidates, the chancellor of the University Mrs. Mary Chinery–Hesse,
represented by Ms. Doris Kisiwa Ansah and Mrs. Yvette Adounvo Atekpe, members
of the University Council congratulated the management for continuing efforts to
ensure that the university returns to full and normal operations post the Covid
pandemic.
She also
commended the management for innovative efforts to resource the university and also
to ensure best management practices including being the first university in
Ghana to institute a gender policy statement.
Nana Dwemoh
Benneh, the CEO of the Universal Merchant Bank in his speech reiterated his
pride in being an alumnus of the University, graduating some 23 years ago. He
painted a vivid picture of a contrast between the world he graduated into and
the world of today. He noted that the key differentiator was how much digital
tools had transformed the world, especially the world of work.
He noted for
instance that unlike in 1996, his year of graduation, new music albums could
top the chart without a CD or a cassette being produced. He used this example
to establish the point that the world we find ourselves in is the age of the
digital entrepreneur and admonished graduating students to follow the examples
of other successful entrepreneurs in and out of Ghana and seek to establish
their enterprises. “Opportunities
exist for the diligent who apply themselves to exploiting the digital world and
creating different kinds of work relevant to the emerging society.”
The College
of Education is made up of the following schools: the School of Information and
Communication Studies, the School of Education and Leadership, and the School of
Continuing and Distance Education and is one of the colleges of the University
of Ghana. The University of Ghana was founded in 1948 as a university college
of the Gold Coast. This year’s congregation marks the 75th
congregation of the university.