President John Dramani Mahama Visits Singapore Institute of Technology and Biopolis During Three-Day State Visit

President John Dramani Mahama recently visited the Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) and Biopolis, a premier biomedical research hub, during his three-day state visit to Singapore. The visit aimed to strengthen bilateral cooperation, expand trade and investment, and advance partnerships in education, science, innovation, urban solutions, agribusiness, and the digital economy.

President Mahama emphasized the need to make graduates more work-ready and future-ready through stronger university-industry ties.
He highlighted the importance of internships and programs tied to national priorities.

President Mahama stressed the need for partnerships in life sciences and biotechnology to drive innovation and economic growth.
He emphasized the importance of research that creates jobs and improves lives.
In a Facebook post, the president stated;

“After delivering my opening keynote at the Africa Singapore Business Forum on Tuesday, I visited the Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) to learn from their applied-learning model and strong university–industry partnerships.
SIT integrates work and study, collaborates closely with industry, and focuses on applied research that delivers business impact. Their new campus within the Punggol Digital District exemplifies how academia, industry and the community can be tightly integrated to prepare students for the future of work.

I also toured Biopolis, a premier biomedical research hub. Biopolis brings leading public and private institutions together across the full life-sciences R&D value chain, from basic discovery to clinical development and medical technology. It also showcases how coordinated public–private collaboration can drive innovation and economic growth.
Key takeaways for me were the need to deepen university–industry collaboration to make graduates more work-ready and future-ready. Vice President Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, then Minister for Education, initiated the process of understanding the needs of our institutions and industry, and this effort must be continued; the need to encourage applied learning, internships, and programmes tied to national priorities; strengthen public–private partnerships in life sciences and biotechnology; and focus research on solutions that create jobs and improve lives.

We are grateful to our hosts at SIT and Biopolis for the insightful exchanges. We look forward to building partnerships that will help accelerate Ghana’s progress in higher education, innovation and healthcare.”
By DeStoryNews