Audio By Carbonatix
The Education Ministry in partnership with the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) and Ghana Education Service (GES) has held a 3-day Ministerial Technical Advisory Committee (MTAC) workshop in Accra.
This was to discuss assessment proposals and make recommendations to guide the comprehensive review of the Junior High School (JHS) and Senior High School (SHS) curriculum.
The workshop sought to create a forum to discuss issues regarding the alignment of the new school curriculum and assessment framework and make recommendations on learner progression and placement from the JHS to SHS.
Education Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh in his opening remarks, spoke about the need for secondary education to prepare learners for skills, training, field of work and lifelong learning.
He stressed the need to make the country’s capacity building agenda sustainable through the review of the JHS and SHS curriculum.
This review process is expected to stimulate curriculum change at the universities by aligning the university entry requirements with the secondary education curriculum.
The end result is to make all courses accessible to all students irrespective of a student’s background or socio-economic status.
The new curriculum is engineered to reinforce the knowledge and skills acquired during basic education and provide a diversified curriculum to cater for different aptitudes, abilities, interest, and skills.
It will also provide an opportunity for further education and training and introduce students to a variety of relevant occupational skills necessary for national human resource development.
Students would better understand the environment and the need for its sustainability and develop an interest in lifelong learning.
On his part, the Executive Secretary of NaCCA stressed that a holistic application of the Free SHS policy and other reforms would require the adoption of an innovative and inclusive curriculum and assessment standards including teaching methodologies that would account for variations in learning abilities of students at every level of the school system.
The workshop was chaired by Professor Dominic Fobih, a former Minister of Education, in attendance was the Honourable Deputy Minister of Education (TVET) as well as Council Chairs, Heads of various agencies of the Ministry of Education,and experts from Universities, Colleges of Education as well as eminent educationists.
Education Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh in his opening remarks, spoke about the need for secondary education to prepare learners for skills, training, field of work and lifelong learning.
He stressed the need to make the country’s capacity building agenda sustainable through the review of the JHS and SHS curriculum.
This review process is expected to stimulate curriculum change at the universities by aligning the university entry requirements with the secondary education curriculum.
The end result is to make all courses accessible to all students irrespective of a student’s background or socio-economic status.
The new curriculum is engineered to reinforce the knowledge and skills acquired during basic education and provide a diversified curriculum to cater for different aptitudes, abilities, interest, and skills.
It will also provide an opportunity for further education and training and introduce students to a variety of relevant occupational skills necessary for national human resource development.
Students would better understand the environment and the need for its sustainability and develop an interest in lifelong learning.
On his part, the Executive Secretary of NaCCA stressed that a holistic application of the Free SHS policy and other reforms would require the adoption of an innovative and inclusive curriculum and assessment standards including teaching methodologies that would account for variations in learning abilities of students at every level of the school system.
The workshop was chaired by Professor Dominic Fobih, a former Minister of Education, in attendance was the Honourable Deputy Minister of Education (TVET) as well as Council Chairs, Heads of various agencies of the Ministry of Education,and experts from Universities, Colleges of Education as well as eminent educationists.DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Amakye Dede, Reggie Rockstone and Amapiano Invasion to headline SOHO’s December shows
42 minutes -
‘I couldn’t stay silent’ – Nicki Minaj speaks out on attacks on Christians in Nigeria
3 hours -
Liverpool striker Isak suffers broken leg
3 hours -
CRC proposes new petition-led process for removal of Chief Justice
3 hours -
Foreign Minister Ablakwa takes Nana Agyei Ahyia case to Latvia, vows full accountability
4 hours -
AFCON 2025: Salah seals late win for Egypt over Zimbabwe
4 hours -
Carney names ex-Blackrock executive as new US ambassador
4 hours -
CRC proposes 10-year single term and new removal process for Chief Justice
4 hours -
Salah scores late winner as Egypt come from behind to beat Zimbabwe
4 hours -
France rushes emergency budget law to avert shutdown after talks collapse
5 hours -
US conducting surveillance flights over Nigeria after Trump intervention threat
5 hours -
Ecuador soldiers sentenced to decades in prison over disappearance of murdered boys
5 hours -
Trump pulls 30 envoys in ‘America First’ push, critics say it weakens US abroad
5 hours -
The 17-hour miracle: Black Sherif beats logistical marathon to pull off historic Zaama Disco 2025
6 hours -
NPP Primaries: Electoral area coordinators in Ada, Sege declare support for Bawumia
6 hours
