Audio By Carbonatix
Deputy Director-General for Quality & Access, Ghana Education Service (GES), Dr. Kwabena Bempah Tandoh has refuted claims that students under the CSSPS are deliberately denied admission into senior high schools of their choice.
Speaking on Joy FM's Super Morning Show, he categorically stated that CSSPS is merit-based.
“It is totally merit-based; first by school choice, it is merit-based by programme and by residential preference of the student,” he said and further explained that “the system picks all students and ranks them by performance - first by aggregates and when there is a tie, they rank them by raw score, then choice of course, and then the residential preference of the student.”
His statement was in response to concerns by parents in relation to the Computerized School Selection and Placement System (CSSPS).
Dr. Bempah Tandoh explained that students may not have gained admission or were displaced due to a number of reasons. Apart from not meeting the criteria (with regards to grades), Dr. Bempah Tandoh stated other factors including the residential preference of the student contribute to this.
He said there have been instances when students did not gain admission, not because they got bad grades but because of their residential preference. Clarifying his statement, he noted that though there may be admission slots in a school, a student would not be placed because his residential preference is boarding, while the remaining slots are for day students only.
He cited for instance, “in a situation where three students who want to pursue the same course are competing for space in the same school with boarding as their residential preference, the students will be ranked in order of performance – first by aggregates - and where there is a tie in aggregates, it will be ranked by raw score and even though there were 2,000 students that chose science, Prempeh college has space for only 200 spaces for science students.
"Out of those 200 spaces, 150 of those spaces are boarding. This means the 2,000 people that chose Prempeh are only competing for 150 spaces and those who don’t qualify are moved to their second choice and there they go through the same cycle to compete for space."
He said another factor affecting student placement is the fact that students bank all their hopes on their first-choice schools.
He noted that though there are other equally good schools, students get fixated on their first choices, thus when they don’t meet the criteria and are not selected, it becomes a challenge.
“What we realise is that everyone is focused on their first choice. After that, they don’t think anything else apart from what they selected, but since 2017, we have gradually moved from 3 choices to 4, 5, and 6, but what we consistently see is that people bank all of their hopes on their first choice,” he said.
He, thus, cautioned students against this practice in order not to feel disappointed.
Latest Stories
-
Matthew McConaughey trademarks iconic phrase to stop AI misuse
3 hours -
Song banned from Swedish charts for being AI creation
3 hours -
Barcelona reach Copa del Rey quarter-finals
3 hours -
Players need social skills for World Cup – Tuchel
3 hours -
Labubu toy manufacturer exploited workers, labour group claims
3 hours -
Lawerh Foundation, AyaPrep to introduce Dangme-language maths module
4 hours -
US forces seize a sixth Venezuela-linked oil tanker in Caribbean Sea
4 hours -
Votes being counted in Uganda election as opposition alleges rigging
4 hours -
Ntim Fordjour accuses government of deliberate LGBT push in schools
4 hours -
National security task force storms ‘trotro’ terminals to halt illegal fare hikes
4 hours -
U.S. visa restriction development for Ghana concerning – Samuel Jinapor
4 hours -
Uganda election chief says he has had threats over results declaration
4 hours -
Quality control lapses allowed LGBT content into teachers’ manual – IFEST
4 hours -
Akufo-Addo’s name will be “written in gold” in Ghana’s history in the fullness of time – Jinapor
4 hours -
Tread cautiously about financial hedging – US-based Associate Professor to BoG
4 hours
