Audio By Carbonatix
As voters prepare to go to the polls in December, education has become a central issue of the upcoming election. Both parties have endorsed plans for the future of students, teachers and institutions.
The NPP has promised free universal secondary schooling as a principal part of their platform. Their proposal has an estimated price-tag of 140 million Ghana cedis, and the design has many wondering if free is really the most effective answer.
“Free is not always the best answer. We need to improve the quality,” said the Deputy Minister of Education, Mahama Ayariga. “Access to schools isn’t the problem. Assuring students receive an education worth attending is our focus.”
Mr. Ayariga addressing the gathering said many social factors converge to ensure a quality education, and some of these begin at home. “If a student has eaten breakfast: if teachers show up and engage the classroom.”
The Deputy Minister says teacher accountability encourages quality and cannot be overlooked when crafting an effective education policy.
However, for many, access was a critical part of the discourse. “Students who have been accepted into schools should be able to attend. Right now, many can’t because the school in their area is full and it is too far to travel to one with room,” said Leslie Tettey of the Ghana National education coalition. Many students who are accepted to SHS programmes are unable to continue their education due to the cost or unavailability of schools in their area.
Many Ghanaian classrooms are strained by student density, lack of resources and crumbling infrastructure. Many teachers have more than 45 students in their class every day. This far exceeds international standard (25-30 students per teacher) and may damage the quality of education for all. These factors have sent many running from Ghana’s public education system. Public JHS has an enrollment rate near 70%, but enrollment in SHS is estimated at a dismally low 20%.
“We have many serious problems we need to address. Access to schools and quality being critical,” says Kofi Twum-Barimah, a retired financial executive and concerned grandparent. “We need to get the children selling pure water off the street and into the classroom.”
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
-
District 418 Ghana of Lions Clubs International renews commitment to service as new leaders emerge
4 minutes -
Supreme Court set to rule on Noah Adamtey’s challenge to OSP prosecutorial powers on July 29
7 minutes -
KATH OPD crowded as normal services resume after doctors suspended strike
24 minutes -
Yuno partners with Onafriq to unlock Pan-African payments for global merchants
28 minutes -
Malian musician Fatoumata Diawara is Spotify’s EQUAL Africa artiste for June
30 minutes -
Government secures free-to-air broadcast of 2026 FIFA World Cup for Ghanaians
32 minutes -
Government pays GH¢13bn towards inherited road projects – Roads Minister
38 minutes -
Rev. Wengam concludes ministry at Zimbabwe Assemblies of God National Conference
40 minutes -
DVLA warns against fake SMS traffic fines and fraudulent payment links
1 hour -
Asafo Market traders, drivers appeal to KMA over recurring flooding
1 hour -
Mahama approval rating drops 9.1 points from 68% to 58.9% but majority of Ghanaians still back him — IEA poll
1 hour -
Veep welcomes Mahama home after UK, Belarus visits
1 hour -
Tribute book “IMPRESSIONS” launched in honour of KNUST’s Prof. Ibok Oduro
1 hour -
Joy Prime TV to broadcast World Cup 2026 matches
1 hour -
Northern Region leaders back Ghana vaccine production plan but raise quality and access concerns
2 hours