Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the Institute for Education Studies (IFEST), Dr. Peter Anti Partey says government does not have the plan to solve basic educational infrastructure problems.
According to him, each year his outfit provides the Ministry of Education with the statistics of schools in dire need of infrastructural development, yet nothing has been done.
This, he said proves the system is not designed to solve infrastructural problems in the various basic public schools.
“This variable I am talking about is all captured every year and sent to the Ministry of Education, so if you still have schools in a such deplorable state, if you have district directors that are complaining about the lack of chairs and the lack of desks and the lack of teachers in a particular school what it simply means is our system has not been designed to solve these basic problems in our basic school system,” he said.
He was reacting to a recent documentary by JoyNews titled. "Ghana’s Schools of shame" which highlighted the poor infrastructure conditions of schools where students sit on floors in some schools to study.
Speaking in an interview on JoyNews Today, he explained that data his outfit carries out each year highlights the similar problem in the documentary, but the Ministry has since not taken any action.
He added that the Education Ministry is aware of all the happenings on the ground.
“ If anybody tells you that the Ministry or any official is not aware of the state of our educational infrastructure across the country, that person is not telling you the truth because every year we collect a lot of data on school infrastructure.
“That data is school-based data, what that means is that every year, we know the number of desks in each classroom, in every basic school in this country,” he stressed.
Dr. Anti then quizzed what the government is doing to solve the situation.
“What pragmatic steps have you put in place to ensure that this district, this is the nature of infrastructure in this district? infrastructure does not necessarily mean the state of a school building, it looks into human resource base in that particular school, operation equipment, electricity because we are doing ICT, internet and places of convenience,” he said.
The educational expert commended the Multimedia Group for the documentary which highlights the infrastructural problems in the education sector.
Latest Stories
-
Embassy of Ghana confirms ICE detention of Ken Ofori-Atta
2 seconds -
Nadji Abdul Salem Kanawetey
4 hours -
‘Hounded and harassed’: The former pop star taking on Uganda’s long-time president
8 hours -
V/R: 90-year-old man allegedly murdered
9 hours -
Semenyo named Man of the Match in flawless Manchester City debut performance
9 hours -
‘Humble’ Antoine Semenyo steals show in FA Cup mauling
9 hours -
Deputy AG confirms US authorities have helped Ghana to arrest one fugitive
9 hours -
US military strikes Islamic State group targets in Syria, officials say
10 hours -
Bob Weir, Grateful Dead co-founder, dies aged 78
10 hours -
Author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s family accuse hospital of negligence over son’s death
10 hours -
Blockbuster AFCON semi-finals confirmed as Morocco face Nigeria, Senegal play Egypt
11 hours -
Ofori-Atta could be in Ghana sooner than expected – Deputy AG reveals
11 hours -
IMANI’s Franklin Cudjoe credits Mahama-Forson duo for fiscal reset
12 hours -
Prof. Asuming credits Mahama administration with restoring national optimism
13 hours -
‘No time for kenkey parties’: COPEC boss warns against economic complacency despite recovery
14 hours
