National Institute of Technology
Technically, Biotechnology (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) is the use of biological systems found in organisms or the use of the living organisms themselves to make technological advances and adapt those technologies to various fields. Biotechnology harnesses cellular and bio-molecular processes to develop technologies and products that help improve our lives and the health of our planet
NIT qualifications in Biotechnology (Medical, food and Pharmaceutical) were designed to meet the industrial revolution 4.0. They are for the industry and are taught, assessed and verified by local and international industry experts. They are career specific and are aimed at ensuring that the NIT students graduate as Vibrant, Skilled, Competent, and Work-prepared Entrepreneurial Technicians, Technologists, and Professionals to handle and confront the changing and demanding job roles within the Biotechnological industry.
Biotechnology (Medical, food and Pharmaceutical) qualifications are for career goal minded individual who would appreciate the career specific and practical fascinating insight of the NIT programs. With a qualification in Biotechnology (Medical, food and Pharmaceutical), you’ll have many career options. What you choose depends on what most interests you.
The qualification level has broader coverage of knowledge and practical skills required for the vocational sector. The qualification has the potential to prepare learners for progression to Professional Bachelor degree in Biotechnology (Medical, food and Pharmaceutical) (Level 8).
Biotechnologist (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) are critical for the current generation and industry 4.0. Biotechnology (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) is a field that revolves around utilizing the biological systems with technology to develop a product or a process.
The sphere of biotechnology includes medical biotechnology, pharmaceutical biotechnology, plant biotechnology, cellular biotechnology, fermentation biotechnology, food biotechnology, environmental biotechnology, and bioinformatics. With about 30% of theoretical learning, there will typically be much more of action, hands-on, practical learning to ensure that you are adequately prepared for biotechnological work when you graduate.
The Diploma in Biotechnologist (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) (Level 6) is an ideal qualification for anyone who works in any of the below-listed fields and seeks to develop career-specific skills and gain a solid qualification in Biotechnologist (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) to support his/her position and anyone who wants to enter into or has just started a career in any of the following career areas:
Medical Biotechnology implies the application of biotechnology in the field of healthcare sector. The Healthcare sector is powered by biotechnology companies that always play a major role, be it in developing diagnostic kits, vaccines, biologics, drugs or medical machinery. The domains of biotechnology like molecular biology, cell biology, recombinant technology, and immunotherapeutic succored in the evolution of the medical sector.
There are many career opportunities available in Research and Development, Pharmaceutical Companies, Hospitals, Diagnostic Centres, Manufacturing Sector of Biotechnology, Academic Sector for students who want to make a career in Medical Biotechnology:
The increasing human population is proportional to the demand of food. Food biotechnology surmounts the difficulties in food production, food processing and food preservation. Biotechnology brings out the alternate sources of food. The best examples are the single cell proteins derived from various microorganisms and development of value-added food products. Biotechnology always helps in introducing technology which aims to enhance the production, processing, packaging and preservation of food. The scope of biotechnology in this field is limitless.
Earlier this field only dealt with discovering and developing small molecules (drug) but time has witnessed the evolution of this industry. The horizon of this sector widened. Emergence of Biopharmaceutics has brought a new dimension. Biotechnology was always a part of drug development and discovery, but biologics as therapeutic elements resulted in the surge of biotech companies involved in the pharmaceutical industry. Cell-based therapies, monoclonal antibodies, vaccines and other therapeutics are a few examples to start with.
The National Institute of Technology (NIT) is one of the world’s most successful and best-preferred applied (hands-on) learning brand. The National Institute of Technology qualifications place greater emphasis on self-employment and employer engagement and work readiness. The NIT-Namibia provides 70% practical and 30% theory teaching and learning methodologies coupled with various practical learning-focused activities that fully engage our students. The NIT programs in Mechanical Engineering are work-related qualifications for students taking their first steps into employment, or for those already in employment and seeking career development opportunities.
At the National Institute of Technology (NIT), we know how important it is for career ambitious people to get the right education to start and further develop their careers.
With today’s industry and employers demanding so much more than just a qualification to contain the effects of global competition and to attain a competitive edge, here are the main six (6) reasons why you must choose to study at NIT:
NIT courses will give you real hands on experience in pursuing your education. It is what is called learning by doing it or action learning. Based on a 70% practical (action learning, action research, projects, reflective thinking, critical thinking, etc.) and 30% theory teaching and learning and assessments methodologies, all the NIT students become work ready (prepared) during their first year of study and graduate with strong work ethics, analytical, problem solving, communication and entrepreneurial skills which are the major factors that employers are looking for in their new recruits.
NIT’s higher vocational, technical and professional courses prepare students for employment and self-employment. The NIT courses develop a student’s employability skills as they offer the experience of real-life practical tasks and work placements. NIT’s qualifications are generally well-regarded by employers as the courses enable students to develop useful hands-on skills in respective fields of study and in critical areas such as problem solving, time management, entrepreneurial, communication, work behavior, visionary and focus minded, team work, and project planning, execution to evaluation. The knowledge and skills you get from NIT programs will make you be sought after by employers locally and globally. NIT helps students to gain strong knowledge and skills that are essential to start and successfully run their own businesses and/or to be appreciated competent and productive employees that every employer would like to hire.
NIT courses are designed and developed with the help of the employers, industrial experts, professional bodies, higher education experts and lecturers. This keeps the NIT curriculum to be industry driven and relevant for today and the future’s job market and self-employment. NIT’s qualifications provide students with industry-specific knowledge, skills and competencies which make graduates’ work outputs to be relevant to their employers’ missions, visions and goals.
The NIT’s teaching and learning is based on the seven (7) major principles teaching and learning through which theory knowledge is practically applied into various practical teaching and learning methods including action learning, projects supported by verifiable tangible evidences (outcomes), critical reflective thinking, case scenarios, job placements, industrial site visits, public lectures led by industrial experts, etc.
The assessment for NIT courses is largely based on regular coursework and work experience, which makes them an ideal option for those who crumble under the pressure of exams.
All the NIT programs are assessed through objective and rigor-based assignments and projects for which origination is examined through the Turnitin IT Application to ensure that each student submits his/her own true work. The outcome of these assignments must be in an implementable practical and quality standard.
Employers value NIT’s qualifications as the courses are industry-centered and directed. In other words, unlike academic programs, the NIT courses give students the industry-specific knowledge and skills which makes them readily employable. This, combined with the problem solving, time management, entrepreneurial, communication, work behavior, visionary and focus minded, team work, and project planning skills they gained throughout their learning process give the NIT graduates a strong competitive edge to progress in senior job positions and to further pursue their postgraduate professional degrees such as Masters to Professional Doctorate Degree programs at various reputable higher education institutions/universities.
Upon completion from the Bachelor of Technology in Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) (Level 7), graduates will be able to:
The NIT tutors/lecturers are equipped with various traditional teaching methods which are all used to create and develop Vibrant, Skilled, Competent, and Work-prepared Entrepreneurial Technicians, Technologists, and Professionals. The teaching and learning practices involve 70% practical and 30% theory methodologies by applying a wide range of action learning techniques stipulated in the course specification.
You will study a combination of theory, applied theory, and practical subjects across a broad range of units.
To succeed, your effective time management and focus are both very critical. You will cover eleven (13) units.
For each unit, you will do a main test, assignment, and examination in addition to an integrated project. These assessments do not include the informal tests, homework, and assignments that your lecturers will require you to do in each learning outcome.
To pass this applied qualification, it is critical that constantly monitor, formalize yourself with and operate alongside developments taking place within the Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) field by regularly visiting different Biotechnological related projects and/or organizations, reading news and articles, etc.
The NIT programs are assessed using a combination of:
Informal assessments are conducted by lecturers on each covered component of the unit outcome to weigh knowledge created into his/her students so that necessary teaching practices adjustments can be made as appropriate.
Formal Assessments are further classified into two parts:
Learners who have achieved the Bachelor of Technology in Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) (Level 7) can progress on to the Professional (Honor)’s Degree in Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) (Level 8) qualification. They can also competently serve in any of the below-listed job areas.
The credit transfers from other programs offered by other institutions or other NIT programs will be dealt with according to NIT rules and regulations on Recognition of Prior Learning. Provided that an applicant has qualification accredited by NQA and verifiable through the NQF, the NIT rules provide for course by course credits as well as credit transfer by volume under certain conditions. Maximum credits that can be granted from none technical (hands-on) programs are 15% of the credits for a qualification. Maximum credits that can be granted from the technical (hands-on) programs of similar standards with those of NIT are 50% of the credits for a qualification.
The Bachelor of Technology in Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) (Level 7) is an ideal qualification for anyone who works in any of the below-listed fields and seeks to develop career-specific skills and gain a solid qualification in Mechanical Engineering to support his/her position and anyone who wants to enter into or has just started a career in any of the following career areas:
Our fees include:
For more information about our fees, please contact any of our Call Centre at any of our Campuses or the Marketing and Public Relationships Department.
There are many funding options for the NIT’s accredited programs. Most of our students have over the past years been funded by their employers while others finance their studies on their own. Students can also apply for study loans with Namibia Students Financial Assistance Fund. NIT also provides scholarships and bursaries to students who meet requirements as stipulated in our annual prospectus.
Any cancellations/withdraw or refunds are executed as per the NIT policies. For more details, refer to the Students Registration Agreement and the Withdraw Policy.
The Bachelor of Technology in Biotechnology (Medical, Food & Pharmaceutical) (Level 7) is made up of twelve units.
It is structured to be studied for one year through Distance Learning, Online, Virtual Campus, Part-Time, Full-Time, Or Blended Learning.
The following is a compressive list of course units/modules you will cover in this program:
Students enrolled on Bachelor of Technology in Biotechnology (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) (Level 7) will be required to undertake and successfully complete a mandatory Biotechnology (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) Professional Work Practice unit for not less than 400 hours in order to be awarded this qualification.
The unit requires students to carry work processes that require a command of highly specialized technical and professional skills which involve the full range of procedures in major field including planning, resourcing and managing processes and being accountable for evaluating and achieving personal and group performance outcomes.
You can either apply online or simply download and complete the Student’s Enrolment Agreement (SEA) form or obtain one from our Call Centre at any of our Campuses, print and complete it and submit it with proof of payment for the stipulated registration fees together to any of our Campuses before the stipulated application deadlines to avoid paying late application/registration fees. To be considered for approval, the completed enrolment agreement form must be accompanied by certified copies of documents as stipulated on the Student’s Enrolment Agreement (SEA) form.
NIT has a whole year circle of accepting new applications from students from all over the world. However, please take note that applications for the First Semester which starts in January/February each year are only considered up to March of each year. This period includes late registration. Unsuccessful applications for First Semester and applications that are received late are considered for the Second Semester which starts in July each year.
The following are two (2) annual teaching and learning intakes for students to register to study on this program at NIT:
Applications must be made in-time to avoid late registration fees and to be disappointed if spaces are allocated to earlier applicants.
The entry to this qualification shall be based on:
The applicant must meet the NIT’s minimum General Admission Requirements. Specifically, applicants must have passed 80% or all the courses (Units) work for Diploma in Biotechnology (Medical, Food and Pharmaceutical) (Level 6).
Qualifications obtained from other higher education institutions will be considered for entry to this program on subject to subject similarity and comparability basis and in terms of the NIT regulations.