Project Approaches and Principles

A supply and demand driven approach

Since the very beginning, PROMOST has been focusing both on supply and demand: supply-side initiatives have included improving access for example through building and equipping vocational education institutions, developing training curricula that reflect the needs of the labour market, training of vocational school trainers, and in certain cases equipping partner companies and renovating their workshops as well as institutional capacity building.

On the demand side, the project addresses young people’s need for relevant technical skills, abilities, and employability, in order to facilitate viable self-employment, while improving their livelihoods. Studies are conducted for the project to ensure that each training course is market-focused.

To maintain a sound balance between the activities on the supply side and results on the demand side, from the very start of the project, Swisscontact worked with the private sector to offer short-term trainings and organise internships and apprenticeships. This was done to achieve tangible training results as quickly as possible and generate employment.

 

Principles of project implementation

PROMOST applies a systemic approach to vocational education and labour market integration. The purpose is to embed capacity-building initiatives within a legally, institutionally, and financially beneficial system from the ground up. Market-based and private sector solutions for vocational education and labour market integration are the programme’s main priorities.

  • Swisscontact acts primarily as a facilitator of change, relying to the extent possible on local actors and platforms, who over the long term will be the main stakeholders in the vocational education systems of Rwanda, Burundi, and the DRC.
  • Capacity building and the enhancement of existing vocational education programmes are of key importance.
  • Gender equity and social inclusion are a further priority for the PROMOST Project. For this reason, social issues from the point of view of gender equity and social inclusion are viewed as intersectional themes on every project level.
  • In all phases of project implementation, close attention is paid to conflict sensitivity as an intersectional theme.
  • Likewise, coordination with national and local policies and strategies is uniquely important in the quest to ensure appropriate public action and alignment between vocational education approaches, labour market integration, and local economic development.
  • PROMOST strives for “intelligent synergies” with ongoing country-specific TVET programmes and other SDC projects.
  • Regional collaboration within the Economic Community of the Great Lakes Countries (CEPGL) and East African Community (EAC) is actively promoted, particularly in training of trainers, curriculum development, promotion of qualification accreditation, and on other levels of vocational education and training, as well as in the exchange of knowledge and best practices.

Stories from the field

Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
04.05.2020
Strong Women get Things Done
When we think of welding, naturally, our first thought is that it is a male-centred trade; not one for a lady like Charlotte Ingabire. Yet today, she is one of the professionals in the field owing to the training she received from Swisscontact’s project Promoting Market-Oriented Skills Training (PROMOST) in the Great Lakes Region.
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
04.05.2020
“I am Proud of what I am Building”
Benelde Umuhoza is a 27-year-old tailor who runs a successful business that she started on a rented sewing machine. Swisscontact’s Promoting Market-Oriented Skills Training (PROMOST) in the Great Lakes Region was her first steppingstone in the right direction.
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
05.05.2020
Things Worked out Because of the Support I got
“Berwa means looking good or good looking”. That is what 35-year-old Aloysie Muhawenimana named her salon, a business that she built from the bottom up. The wife and mother of two tells her story of how the project ‘Promoting Market-Oriented Skills Training (PROMOST) in the Great Lakes Region, implemented by Swisscontact and funded by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), has helped her achieve some of her life goals. 
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
05.05.2020
Designing the Life You Want
We meet 26-year-old Evodie Mukandayisenga and 27-year-old Epimaque Gashirande, two leatherworkers who operate from an agakiriro in the Western Province of Rwanda. The term agakiriro is derived from a Kinyarwanda word gukira which means ‘getting rich’. Agakiriro can thus be literary translated as a place where one can get rich. It is a government-supported initiative that provides a safe space for youth to earn a living. As they sit in their workshop, they tell us their story of how the project Promoting Market-Oriented Skills Training (PROMOST) in the Great Lakes Region changed their lives for the better.
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
05.05.2020
I now Comfortably Provide for my Family
Together with another apprentice, Jean began training to be a carpenter. “I learnt a lot and was very impressed with the approach used in training. It was practical and very interactive. The trainer was always present and ready to guide us and teach us the tricks of the trade. We didn’t have to travel far to access the workshop where the training was conducted, and they provided us with a lunch allowance.”
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
05.05.2020
Building a Life with Your Own Hands
Jean wasn’t so lucky during his first attempt at pursuing this line of work. “I put the idea of becoming a carpenter aside and instead pursued something within my reach. I began assisting farmers in my village; cultivating their land for a small fee. One day, my friend informed me of fully catered for training sessions that were about to begin and advised me to apply.”
Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo
Labour market insertion
05.05.2020
I Teach how to Love what You Do
Christine’s first motivational success was her own journey. She finished primary school but could not proceed to high school due to lack of resources. She decided to take her future into her own hands and enrolled for a subsidised tailoring course in a nearby training centre. In 2005, she graduated and was fortunate to be able to go to neighbouring DR Congo to venture further with her education.