Audio By Carbonatix
Ghanaian economist Dr Sa-ad Iddrisu has criticized the Free Senior High School (SHS) programme, stating that it is producing high school leavers in their quantity without quality.
According to him, the long-term outcome of the programme will not benefit the nation, but instead will create a generation of “dummies.”
He said, “In ten to fifteen years, excuse me to say, we are going to have a generation of dummies.”
Dr Iddrisu explained, “Akufo-Addo would have gone down in history as the best president with Free SHS. Honestly, it is a brilliant policy because if you educate human resources, then you have a growing generation. However, the Free SHS has ended up producing quantity instead of quality.”
He added, “To the point that people get into universities and cannot do basic arithmetic. I am not the one saying it; university professors have come out and said it.”
Speaking on the Joy News AM Show on Monday, the economist further argued that Ghana’s future is at risk. “You wouldn’t let your mother, daughter, or son be treated by such a nurse (a beneficiary of Free SHS); that is what Free SHS is doing to our generation,” he said.
Dr Iddrisu also argued that the generation of students who paid for secondary education will be better equipped than those who benefited from the Free SHS programme. “You and I, who paid for quality education, our generation will be better off than the next generation that will come,” he said.
He further claimed that the policy has not contributed to a significant increase in literacy among Ghanaian children, stating, “Free SHS has not improved literacy at all.”
The Free SHS programme, introduced by President Nana Akufo-Addo in 2017, was designed to make senior high school education accessible to all Ghanaian children, regardless of their economic backgrounds.
In November 2024, the outgoing president claimed that over 5.7 million students have benefited from the policy since its launch, although that figure has been disputed.
The African Education Watch for instance puts the figure at 3.1 million beneficiaries referencing official figures from the Ministry of Education.
Latest Stories
-
Fact-based response to misleading narratives on JG Resources Ltd’s gold trade dispute
49 seconds -
Hindsight: Garbage in, garbage out
21 minutes -
Gender Ministry condemns alleged digital sexual exploitation by foreign national, vows legal action
39 minutes -
‘We realised the mess left behind’ – Asiedu Nketia blames Akufo-Addo gov’t for cocoa crisis
49 minutes -
Suspect in Zebilla police robbery and murder arrested
52 minutes -
‘I am safe and recovering well’ – Mohammed Sukparu reassures public after accident
58 minutes -
Bawumia thanks liaisons nationwide
1 hour -
Africa must industrialise through green transition – AGN Chair
1 hour -
Ghana’s economy still vulnerable to commodity swings and global tightening – PwC warns
1 hour -
GCAA asked to prioritise airspace safety
1 hour -
CPC welcomes 50% local cocoa processing directive
1 hour -
AU Summit: Mahama, UN Chief discuss African security
1 hour -
DOPASS students eat in an open shed
1 hour -
NPA raises price floor for Feb. 16 window; petrol up to GH¢10.24, diesel pegged at GH¢11.34
1 hour -
Police foil massive narcotics smuggling, reject GH¢80k bribe, seven arrested
1 hour
