Audio By Carbonatix
The authorities of the University of Ghana, Legon, have said the university has not agreed on any percentage allocation of residential facilities to students.
They, therefore, said the "In-Out-Out-Out" residential policy to be implemented from 2007/08 academic year would go ahead as announced.
That is contrary to a statement by the Students Representative Council (SRC) that the Residence Board of the University had decided on allocating approximately 60 per cent of residential facilities in the traditional halls to fresh students and 40 per cent to final-year students in a new residential policy.
It said the decision was taken at the maiden meeting of the residence board of the university, which was attended by the SRC President, Ms Louise Carol Serwaa Donkor, last week.
However, the Daily Graphic reported that the Dean of Students of the University of Ghana, Dr Bruce Banoeng-Yakubo, said "the meeting never agreed on any percentage allocation of residential facilities to students."
"What the SRC has said is misleading, deceitful and full of mischief. The meeting reaffirmed the university's policy of giving preference to freshers," he stated.
With the In-Out-Out-Out policy, priority is to be given to freshmen and women in the allocation of rooms to enable new students to get settled in their new environment comfortably.
Dr Banoeng-Yakubo noted that in spite of the policy, some Level 400 (final-year) students would get accommodation, adding that after the above allocation had been done, rooms that remained would be given to Level 400 students with preference to those who had never had accommodation since they entered the university.
He said the In-Out-Out-Out policy did not just spring up, and that it had been something discussed since 2003 at a residence board meeting, which culminated in a gradualist approach that ushered in the policy.
He explained that the gradualist approach was followed based on an appeal by the then student leaders, who said that at the time the issue was being discussed there were continuing students and called for the adoption of such approach to phase out the Level 200 and Level 300 students.
Credit: Daily Graphic
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Tony Elumelu appointed chairman of Seplat Energy
12 minutes -
Education Minister raises alarm over indiscipline in SHSs, announces national reform conference
14 minutes -
Lom Ahlijah advocates tech-based monitoring in schools after assault case
18 minutes -
UTAG threatens nationwide strike over delay in book and research allowance rate
26 minutes -
Boundary Commission urges border residents to protect boundary pillars and support national security
29 minutes -
Ghana to grow at 5.0% GDP in 2026, but faces huge investment financing gap – AfDB
30 minutes -
Deputy AG, 14 CSOs appear at Supreme Court for hearing on challenge to OSP’s prosecutorial powers
35 minutes -
Minority MPs meet Ghana High Commissioner to Canada to discuss diaspora welfare and bilateral relations
44 minutes -
GNAT threatens WASSCE boycott over detained Nyinahin SHS teacher
51 minutes -
Free SHS: Education Minister hails end of school food shortages
56 minutes -
NLA Director-General calls for a concerted effort in fight against illegal gambling
57 minutes -
74% of returned Ghanaians had overstayed visas – South Africa’s Int’l Relations Minister
1 hour -
Ghana’s National Vaccine Institute joins WHO-backed Global Clinical Trials Forum
1 hour -
World Bank set to approve US$300m for expansion of Ghana’s school infrastructure
1 hour -
South Africa says investigations ongoing, no decision yet on compensation for returned Ghanaians
1 hour