Audio By Carbonatix
Spokesperson for Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, Yaw Opoku Mensah, has strongly criticised the Ghana Education Service (GES) following its recent press release on the 2025 WASSCE results, describing the statement as “a shameful political attempt to cover up leadership failure.”
According to him, instead of accepting responsibility for the poor outcomes, the GES has chosen to defend what he describes as unacceptable examination results that have left thousands of parents deeply disappointed.
He argues that key interventions that previously contributed to strong WASSCE performances have been abandoned, creating the foundation for the drop in results.
There is a lack of sense of urgency among GES management, resulting in inadequate preparation by the leadership of the Ghana Education Service. It is unacceptable to toy with the future of these young students through your inertia, resulting in this mass failure.
“Academic Intervention grant disbursed to schools to provide extra academic interventions in senior high schools has been cancelled.
WAEC subject-teacher training has been cancelled. All these deliberate interventions boosted earlier performances. The results should not surprise anyone.”
Yaw Opoku Mensah insists that Point 7 of the GES statement, which claimed that heightened invigilation and increased malpractice arrests led to the outcomes, is only an attempt to shift attention away from deeper systemic failures within the current management of education.
Malpractice Figures Disprove GES Claims
He further argues that WAEC’s own statistics show that exam monitoring has not changed drastically from previous years, proving that 2025 is not a unique case of heightened supervision as GES suggests.
Data from 2021 to 2025 show that irregularities and sanctions have been consistent across the years, meaning the 2025 WASSCE results cannot be explained away by “tight invigilation.”
Instead, he says the trend reflects deteriorating educational systems, not improved monitoring.
Call for Accountability
Yaw Opoku Mensah insists that the government must be held responsible for the declining academic outcomes and must immediately outline clear measures to prepare students ahead of the 2026 WASSCE.
“Parents deserve an apology. Students deserve better preparation. And the GES must take responsibility rather than hide behind press statements.”
He concludes that the GES must stop politicising the situation and confront the real issues, lack of interventions, weakened teacher support, collapsing preparation structures, and inadequate leadership at the top.
Latest Stories
-
You don’t need to incur GH¢15.6bn loss to stabilise the economy – Dr Boako tells gov’t
2 minutes -
Video: Dr Gideon Boako explains why he thinks BoG’s 2025 losses is more than GH¢15.6bn
6 minutes -
The Bank of Ghana has not made any losses that should be a topic for discussion — Sammy Gyamfi
36 minutes -
AMA to reintroduce Town Councils to enhance sanitation enforcement
54 minutes -
Central bank’s inflation fight since 2022 came at a cost – Prof Turkson
55 minutes -
If BoG isn’t a profit-making institution, it also can’t be a loss-making one – Kofi Bentil
2 hours -
Rethinking intelligence in the age of Artificial Intelligence
2 hours -
‘Every day is about survival’ – Workers demand action beyond May Day celebrations
2 hours -
Clear leadership demonstrated in managing recent power crisis – Dr Theo Acheampong
2 hours -
Accountability is defective in the energy sector – Ben Boakye
2 hours -
From detection to creation: Why education must move beyond AI plagiarism
2 hours -
Ghanaians keep paying for inefficiencies in the power sector – Prof Bokpin
2 hours -
Ghana’s power system not robust, outages inevitable – Ben Boakye
2 hours -
Beyond insults: The I.D.E.M playbook for political parties in the age of the ‘social media minister’
2 hours -
Germany backs Moroccan sovereignty in Sahara dispute
3 hours