Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang has urged Ghanaian students to see leadership and academic excellence as intentional disciplines rooted in strong values, integrity and service to society.
She made the remarks during her engagement with students at the PENSA (Pentecost Students and Associates) Ghana Conference held at Gomoa Fetteh, which brought together thousands of students from tertiary institutions across the country.
Speaking on the theme “Achieving Leadership and Academic Excellence,” the Vice President stressed that excellence does not happen by chance.

“Leadership and academic excellence are not accidental outcomes but the result of intentional cultivation rooted in strong values,” she said.
Prof Opoku-Agyemang explained that intellectual struggle and uncertainty are critical to personal growth, urging students not to shy away from difficult moments in their academic journeys.
She also warned against academic dishonesty, describing it as a serious threat to personal and national development.
“Academic dishonesty is not a minor issue; it is an early warning sign of declining standards. What students practice in private often determines how they act in public life,” she cautioned.

Touching on leadership, the Vice President reminded student leaders to remain conscious of their responsibility to society.
“Leadership must always prioritise the collective good, with special attention to the vulnerable,” she said, urging students to use their education to uplift others, including persons with disabilities.
Prof Opoku-Agyemang further encouraged the youth to embrace entrepreneurship and innovation, noting that Ghana’s development would depend on more than academic credentials alone.

Addressing young women at the conference, she encouraged them to remain confident and grounded in their values.
“Your presence in leadership spaces is earned and essential. Stay confident in your abilities, even when faced with uneven expectations,” she said.
She reminded students that nation-building begins long before graduation.
“The future is not something that begins after school; it is being created now. Academic excellence is a discipline, not a performance, and the Ghana we aspire to build will require integrity, responsibility and service from all of us.”
Latest Stories
-
VAT cut puts GH¢6.5bn back in shoppers’ pockets as prices fall, says GRA
19 minutes -
Selina Beb unveils ‘the timeless collection’, an Egyptian leather bag line inspired by Fathia Nkrumah
37 minutes -
MyHelp-YourHelp Foundation marks 7th anniversary with ¢70K lifeline for needy patients
50 minutes -
Canal+ and Warner Bros. Discovery strengthen strategic partnership internationally
1 hour -
Mahama marks one year in office with national thanksgiving at Jubilee House
1 hour -
Money still decides primaries, and that reality isn’t changing soon – CDD Fellow Osae-Kwapong
1 hour -
Open primaries could break grip of money politics – Osae-Kwapong
2 hours -
Expert cautions campaigns and training alone won’t attract youth to agriculture
2 hours -
Mineworkers’ Union calls for urgent review of labour laws to protect employees
2 hours -
Validation failures at heart of nurses and midwives’ pay crisis – Austin Gamey
2 hours -
UK learner drivers may have to wait six months before taking test
3 hours -
UK police told wrong family teen had died in crash
3 hours -
Trump says Venezuela will be ‘turning over’ up to 50m barrels of oil to US
3 hours -
Trump’s Venezuela raid has created chaos – and that is a risk for China
3 hours -
Tsitsipas considered retirement in injury-hit 2025
3 hours
