Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Secretary of the National Teaching Council (NTC), Christian Addai-Poku, has said about 25 per cent of newly trained teachers are not qualified to be in the classroom.
This comes as a result of the average pass rate in the past three Ghana Teacher Licensure Examinations (GLTE) written by the newly trained teachers hovering around 75 per cent.
“This is an issue we, as a nation, cannot just gloss over,” Mr Addai-Poku said and has, therefore, called for a concerted effort by stakeholders to address the challenge.
He was speaking at a day's briefing session of stakeholders on the 2019 licensure examination in Accra last week.
The meeting brought together principals of colleges of education, lecturers from universities that offer education, staff of the Ministry of Education, the Ghana Education Service (GES) and the NTC.
The workshop which was on the theme, "Improving teacher education through Ghana Teacher Licensure Examination,” was to elicit ideas to help improve the GTLE and to further appreciate the realities of students’ performance, as well as discuss ways to improve the GTLE.
They were also to come up with recommendations to improve candidates’ performance in the GTLE to ensure quality in the classroom.
According to Mr Addai-Poku, this was necessary for learners to develop the requisite skills to compete favourably within the global village.
“We need teachers who are equipped with the right skills set that is more interactive, agile and student-centred,” he said.
He said teachers are the most important school resource who influence students’ outcomes.
“Teachers must be knowledgeable in what they do; that means our teachers must live up to the required set of professional standards of practice and values, and that means our teachers must be 21st-century skills compliant,” he said.
The NTC Executive Secretary said the strategic plan of the country was to deliver quality education for all, adding that “the NTC believes that a well-prepared, well-equipped, well-motivated and a well-accountable teacher will lead us there.”
Per NTC regulations, a person can only teach in a classroom after writing and passing a licensure exam.
The Board Chairman of the NTC, Prof. Eric Nyarko-Sampson, said the GTLE had come to stay, for which reason stakeholders must find ways to make the system better.
Latest Stories
-
Imprisonment should be rehabilitative, not punitive – Ghana Prisons boss at UNGA
1 minute -
Ga Adangbe traditional priests petition Mahama over McDan aviation licence revocation
12 minutes -
Anti-LGBTQ Bill: NDC’s arrogance is worrying – Hassan Tampuli
23 minutes -
Let’s give OSP time to mature, not to scrap it – Hassan Tampuli
27 minutes -
Nigeria convicts 386 Islamist militants in mass trials
32 minutes -
Djibouti president wins election with 97.8% of vote, state media saysÂ
36 minutes -
We don’t have mandate to deduct tax from rent allowance of security services personnel – Interior Ministry clarifies
51 minutes -
Ablakwa receives Presidential Special Envoy on Reparations to advance global agenda
1 hour -
Christina Koch becomes first woman to travel around the moon on Artemis II
1 hour -
Epstein survivors’ calls to meet King Charles and Queen harder to ignore as US visit approaches
1 hour -
UN Secretary-General names Ghana’s Anita Kiki Gbeho as South Sudan envoy
1 hour -
Mali withdraws recognition of Sahrawi Republic, backs Morocco’s autonomy plan
2 hours -
Gov’t distributes over 8,500 laptops to One Million Coders project
2 hours -
Julius Debrah, ‘man to beat’ as NDC’s James Agbey dismisses Musah Dankwah’s polls
2 hours -
GPRTU in Savannah Region to protest alleged eviction in Damongo
2 hours