Audio By Carbonatix
The National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) has reiterated that it has not yet approved any textbook for the new curriculum.
Dr Prince Armah, Executive Secretary of the Council in a press statement issued on Thursday said, “The approval processes are still ongoing, in accordance with previous curriculum reforms.”
He reminded publishers and writers “that all textbooks and other supplementary materials must be assessed and approved by NaCCA before they are sold to schools and the general public, as per the Education Act, 2008 (Act 778).”
His comment follows the release on the market of some textbooks and other supplementary learning materials purported to have been approved by NaCCA for the new Standards-Based Curriculum (KG-B6).
“All stakeholders in the book industry are respectfully requested to comply with this directive,” the NaCCA boss advised.
Below is the press release:
UNAPPROVED TEXTBOOKS AND OTHER SUPPLEMENTARY LEARNING MATERIALS
It has come to the attention of the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) that some Publishers are selling textbooks and other supplementary learning materials to schools and the general public purported to have been approved by NaCCA for the new Standards-Based Curriculum (KG-B6).
We wish to inform all heads of schools, parents and the general public that NaCCA has not yet approved any textbook for the new curriculum.
The approval processes are still ongoing, in accordance with previous curriculum reforms.
Publishers and Writers are hereby reminded that all textbooks and other supplementary materials must be assessed and approved by NaCCA before they are sold to schools and the general public, as per the Education Act, 2008 (Act 778).
All stakeholders in the book industry are respectfully requested to comply with this directive.
PRINCE HAMID ARMAH, PhD
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY (AG.)
He reminded publishers and writers “that all textbooks and other supplementary materials must be assessed and approved by NaCCA before they are sold to schools and the general public, as per the Education Act, 2008 (Act 778).”
His comment follows the release on the market of some textbooks and other supplementary learning materials purported to have been approved by NaCCA for the new Standards-Based Curriculum (KG-B6).
“All stakeholders in the book industry are respectfully requested to comply with this directive,” the NaCCA boss advised.
Below is the press release:
UNAPPROVED TEXTBOOKS AND OTHER SUPPLEMENTARY LEARNING MATERIALS
It has come to the attention of the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) that some Publishers are selling textbooks and other supplementary learning materials to schools and the general public purported to have been approved by NaCCA for the new Standards-Based Curriculum (KG-B6).
We wish to inform all heads of schools, parents and the general public that NaCCA has not yet approved any textbook for the new curriculum.
The approval processes are still ongoing, in accordance with previous curriculum reforms.
Publishers and Writers are hereby reminded that all textbooks and other supplementary materials must be assessed and approved by NaCCA before they are sold to schools and the general public, as per the Education Act, 2008 (Act 778).
All stakeholders in the book industry are respectfully requested to comply with this directive.
PRINCE HAMID ARMAH, PhD
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY (AG.)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
-
Bridging traditional banking and emerging fintech ecosystems across Africa
8 minutes -
CSIR-SARI bemoans low demand for locally developed seedlings amid imported alternatives
12 minutes -
Cracks emerge on Tema Motorway Interchange as motorists raise durability concerns
16 minutes -
Chief Imam Sheikh Sharubutu warns against rising drug abuse ahead of 2026 World Drug Day
22 minutes -
Bed shortages push nearly 3000 patients into corridor care in UK
32 minutes -
MP confirms arrest of two midwives over missing baby at Salaga Government Hospital
1 hour -
Deputy Transport Minister praises MPS investment at Tema Port
1 hour -
Nearly 3,000 patients a day face corridor care in NHS
1 hour -
US dismantles West African birth tourism network, revokes over 100 visas
2 hours -
Author urges Ghanaians to reconnect with their roots at launch of Amane Adesa: Of Monsters and Gods
2 hours -
Afoko donates 400 bags of cement, GH¢30,000 towards completion of Volta NPP head office
2 hours -
Health Ministry backs conviction of man who assaulted midwife at Tema Community 22 Polyclinic
2 hours -
Greater Accra REGSEC lists flood-prone areas as GMet forecasts 100–150mm rainfall in June
2 hours -
Suppliers to picket Education Ministry over GH¢50m Free SHS debt
2 hours -
Fisheries Minister cracks down on premix fuel overpricing and mismanagement of community funds
2 hours