
Audio By Carbonatix
The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has released the provisional results for the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for Private Candidates, Second Series, withholding hundreds of results over suspected examination malpractice.
In a press release issued on February 26, 2026, the Council said a total of 41,767 candidates sat the examination.
The figure comprises 20,036 males and 24,501 females, and includes 16 visually impaired and seven hearing impaired candidates. WAEC further disclosed that 2,422 registered candidates were absent.
However, the Council withheld the entire results of 348 candidates and subject results of 469 others pending investigations into alleged breaches of examination regulations.
The offences cited include collusion, impersonation, possession of foreign materials in examination halls and seeking external assistance.
“The withheld results of candidates will be released or cancelled based on the outcome of investigations into their cases,” the statement said.
WAEC indicated that affected candidates may check the status of their results on the Council’s irregularities portal, where details of the alleged infractions and the required procedures have been outlined.
An analysis of performance in the four core subjects reflects mixed outcomes.
In English Language, 67.43 per cent of candidates obtained grades A1 to C6, while 11.04 per cent recorded F9.
For Core Mathematics, 49.84 per cent achieved passes, while 27.69 per cent failed.
Integrated Science recorded comparatively weaker performance, with 35.00 per cent obtaining passes and 32.00 per cent failing.
Social Studies registered the strongest performance, as 81.21 per cent of candidates secured grades A1 to C6, while 10.42 per cent failed.
WAEC also cautioned the public to remain vigilant against fraudsters who take advantage of the results period to exploit candidates.
“The Council wishes to caution members of the public to be wary of scammers who contact candidates and promise to upgrade their results for a fee payable through mobile money transfers,” the statement said.
The Council stressed that its results database remains secure and that all results can be authenticated through official verification channels.
Candidates may access their results online via the WAEC website, while educational institutions have been advised to rely on the Council’s verification system to confirm the authenticity of certificates presented to them.
Latest Stories
-
NPP North East Regional Secretary Declares bid for chairman position, says he’s tried and tested
1 minute -
Bus fares, rent, and school fees push Ghana’s inflation to 5.3% in June
6 minutes -
WANEP urges stronger youth inclusion in West Africa’s political decision-making
8 minutes -
GES debunks viral claim that floodwaters destroyed WASSCE papers
10 minutes -
Mindful Governance brings Karl George MBE’s AI Wake-Up Call to Ghana’s boards
14 minutes -
Solomon Owusu accuses South African government of backing attacks on Ghanaians
24 minutes -
Finance Ministry releases GH¢350 million for flood relief and mitigation following Mahama directive
56 minutes -
Flood-hit Ghana Digital Centres says staff not dismissed, contracts only temporarily suspended
1 hour -
No severe rainfall expected today, but showers likely over weekend – GMet
1 hour -
Today’s front pages: Thursday, July 2, 2026
2 hours -
Finance Ministry credits GH¢350m to flood relief and mitigation accounts
2 hours -
GMTF advances rollout of Medicines List to improve access to specialised treatment
2 hours -
Mahama rallies traditional leaders for Free Primary Healthcare policy
2 hours -
We are losing huge capital, amidst debts and hypertension – Takoradi market traders lament
2 hours -
Fair Wages Commission pledges 90% reduction in strikes
2 hours