Audio By Carbonatix
For the trauma students are going through after an unprecedented leakage of exam papers in the BECE, the West Africa Examinations Council says it is sorry.
"It is unfortunate that papers have been cancelled....this is rather disheartening for everybody, we are sorry about the trauma in which some of the students might be" Director of Public Affairs at WAEC, Agnes Teye Cudjoe said on Joy FM's Ghana Connect.
She is pleading with parents, students and teachers to bear with the exam administration institution as it prepares to organize a re-sit of five papers after they leaked on Wednesday.
The affected papers are English paper two, Mathematics Paper two, Integrated Science, Religious and Moral Education (RME) paper two and social studies.
The five-day examinations will now go into extra time on the 29th and 30th June 2015.
Over 438,000 students will now be expected to re-take the five papers in two days.
A student expressed fears that two days for five papers is too short. But the Director of Public Affairs explained, the Council kept it short because it didn’t want to prolong the stress students have already gone through.
She said WAEC wanted to get the process done with before July 1 which is a public holiday.
While WAEC goes through a difficult period, Agnes Teye Cudjoe wants all the affected stakeholders to “remain calm” and “support” WAEC.
She encouraged parents and teachers to psyche their students up to show determination and prepare for the re-sit.
"At this point, we would please ask all parents, all school authorities to encourage the candidates to please spend a few more hours, a few more days behind their books to revise for the cancelled papers to enable them pass", she pleaded.
Patricia, a student in the studio responded ' I will try".
National Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT's) Angel Carbonu criticized WAEC for failing to put in place standardised procedures to guide the selection supervisors and invigilators.
"There is no special selection as to who becomes an invigilator. One assumes that when you are a teacher in your school, it is your responsibility to invigilate. The selection of who becomes an invigilator will become a contributory factor in these acts of malfeasance," he stated.
But Agnes Cudjoe believes if a teacher who teaches is unfit to also invigilate "then....we have a bigger problem than we think".
She believes NAGRAT should move away from assigning blame because teachers are also culpable in the exam leakages.
She explained that WAEC does not select invigilators for exams. It is the Ghana Education Service, she said.
Latest Stories
-
Afari Hospital: Only $500,000 in arrears needed for completion; demand for $85m criminal—Minority
2 minutes -
Mahama gov’t paying itself while Akufo-Addo staff remain unpaid – Kow Essuman
6 minutes -
Kow Essuman accuses Kwakye Ofosu of misleading public on Presidential salaries
9 minutes -
BoG urges banks to support agriculture and productive sectors
10 minutes -
2026 World Cup: Chief Imam urges national prayers for Black Stars ahead of Panama opener
11 minutes -
Ofori-Atta yet to be notified of any criminal charges in Ghana – Frank Davies
13 minutes -
Chief Imam calls for national prayers and support for Black Stars at the FIFA World Cup 2026
15 minutes -
Ashanti Regional Minister inspects flood hotspots at KNUST, vows crackdown on encroachment
17 minutes -
GPRTU eyes cashless transport system to curb armed robbery attacks on drivers
24 minutes -
Green Card decision does not invalidate charges against Ofori-Atta — OSP
33 minutes -
Minority blames NDC for delays in Afari Military Hospital project
38 minutes -
Gov’t processing UTAG book and research allowance payments, no strike expected – Haruna Iddrisu
40 minutes -
‘It’s up to Ghanaian authorities to explore options’ – Ofori-Atta’s lawyer says after US residency
42 minutes -
Banking sector strong but credit risks remain – BoG Governor warns
42 minutes -
BoG warns bank staff against collusion in collateral fraud
50 minutes