Audio By Carbonatix
The National Teaching Council (NTC) has released the results of the maiden teacher licensure examination.
Out of the 28,757 teachers who wrote the examination, 21,297, representing 74 per cent, passed, while 7,472 failed.
The results of 26 candidates have also been withheld pending the completion of Investigations into their alleged involvement to examination malpractice, while 12 have had their entire results cancelled.
The results have been posted on the council's online portal for candidates to access them from Thursday, February 28.
Details of results
Giving details of the results in an interview in Accra on Wednesday, the Executive secretary of the NTC, Dr Mrs Evelyn Owusu Oduro, asked all those who sat for the examination to check their results from the NTC online portal at www.exams.ntc.gov.gh, using their personal identification numbers (PINs) and the serial numbers used during the registration for the examination.
“Candidates can also obtain their results at the colleges of education where they sat for the examination,” she directed.
She said even though there were failures, the outcome of the examination was encouraging, particularly co when it was the maiden edition.
Statistics
Giving statistics of the results, Dr Ms Oduro said out of the 13,110 females who sat for the examination, 3,938 failed while out of the 15,647 males who wrote the exams, 3,532 failed.
She explained that those who failed would be required to join the next batch to write the examination in March this year.
She said the licensure examination had come to stay and that these without the licence would not be allowed to enter classrooms to teach, be it in public or private schools.
Targeted candidates
Dr Mrs Oduro explained that the targeted candidates were those who completed colleges of education this year or those who read Education in the various universities and colleges who were desirous of seeking employment with the GES.
The executive secretary explained that all newly trained diploma students from the various colleges of education who wanted to teach would be required to write the examination in their respective colleges.
She explained that those who were already teaching, both in public and private schools, would not be required to write the examination but would undertake a number of in-service professional training programmes to upgrade themselves to enable them to obtain the licence.
She, therefore, asked teachers already in the classroom to disregard social media reports that those already teaching would be sacked because they did not have the licence.
Read the full story in Thursday's edition of the Daily Graphic newspaper
Latest Stories
-
Cedi remains under pressure despite BoG’s intervention; one dollar going for GH¢12.40 at forex bureaus
2 minutes -
Richard Lawson on why black people must tell their own stories in digital age
6 minutes -
Violence against nurses threatens healthcare delivery — GNMTA raises alarm after Tema assault
25 minutes -
Men now “topping chart” in fertility issues as sperm quality declines – Urologist warns
28 minutes -
Mahama must demand quarterly KPI reports from all institutions
43 minutes -
New mining bill seeks to transfer licence approval powers to district committees
47 minutes -
Why treat us like we stole the land? – Tema Community 25 resident laments demolition after court order
47 minutes -
Patients stranded at KATH as doctors and nurses protest CEO suspension
50 minutes -
 24-hour market initiative to become most successful government programme – Local Gov’t MinisterÂ
55 minutes -
Photos: President Mahama welcomed by President Lukashenko in Belarus
59 minutes -
Ghana touted as a dynamic healthcare & pharmaceutical market in West Africa
1 hour -
29 companies paid GHS44.9m to NLA, compared to KGL’s GHS 173m for 2025 financial year
1 hour -
A bill into broken ground: Why Ghana’s local governance reform needs more than a new law
1 hour -
Birim North DCE calls for responsible mining to protect communities and the environment
1 hour -
Power outage at Adum Central Business area due to transformer fault – ECG
1 hour