By | Destiny Young
Choosing a university programme is one of the most important decisions an undergraduate applicant will make. It can shape your career direction, earning potential, professional relevance and ability to adapt to future changes in the labour market.

Many applicants make this decision under pressure. Some accept any available programme because they are afraid of losing time. Others choose a course because their friends have gained admission, their parents prefer it or society considers it prestigious. These reasons may influence your decision, but they should not determine it.
The labour market is changing rapidly. Technology now affects almost every profession, including banking, healthcare, education, agriculture, engineering, law, communication, logistics, public administration and business management. Artificial intelligence, automation, cloud computing, data analytics, cybersecurity and digital platforms are changing how organisations work and the skills they expect from graduates.

This does not mean that every student must study Computer Science, Information Technology or Engineering. It means that every applicant should choose a programme with clear relevance, transferable skills and the capacity to evolve with technological change.
A future bearing course should prepare you to solve real problems. It should help you develop analytical thinking, communication, digital competence, creativity and practical skills. It should also provide opportunities for specialisation, professional certification, entrepreneurship or further study.

Before accepting a programme, study its curriculum. Do not rely only on the course title. Find out what you will learn, the industries that employ its graduates and the skills employers currently demand. Speak with professionals, lecturers, career advisers and graduates already working in the field.
You should also assess your strengths and interests honestly. A course may have strong career prospects, but it may still be unsuitable if it does not align with your abilities or long term goals. Career success usually comes from combining opportunity with competence, discipline and genuine interest.

Applicants should also avoid measuring their progress against that of friends. Someone gaining admission before you does not mean that you are behind. Rushing into the wrong programme may cost you more time than waiting to make a sound decision.
Parents and guardians also have an important role. They should guide applicants without forcing them into professions that no longer match their interests or the realities of the modern economy. Career guidance should consider both personal capability and labour market direction.
Universities must also review their programmes regularly. Some courses still operate with outdated curricula that do not adequately prepare students for digital workplaces. Institutions should embed digital literacy, data skills, entrepreneurship, innovation and industry exposure across different disciplines.
A degree alone no longer guarantees employment. Employers increasingly look for graduates who can apply knowledge, use modern tools, solve problems and adapt quickly. Your university programme should therefore serve as a foundation for continuous learning, not as the final stage of your development.
Do not enter university simply because you want to become an undergraduate. Enter with purpose. Choose a course that can remain useful, adaptable and relevant in an economy shaped by rapid technological evolution.
Your decision should reflect where the world is going, what you are capable of doing and the value you hope to create.
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