Audio By Carbonatix
The Public Relations Officer (PRO) of the Education Ministry says there is no financial burden placed on parents with regard to the registration of their wards for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE).
According to Kwasi Kwarteng, the government has taken up the entire cost of the BECE examination for students in the public schools.
He clarified that, unlike students in private institutions, students enrolled in the public JHS are not required to pay any registration fees for the exams.

The Education Ministry PRO's assertion comes after some final-year students of Buduatta Junior High School in the Gomoa East District were left stranded at the start of the BECE on Monday after their headteacher allegedly squandered money meant for registration fees.
Headmaster of BuduAtta allegedly spends registration fees, fails to register students for BECE
Source: @adom1063fm #TheUltimateExperience pic.twitter.com/d5C8E0E6qF— Joy Prime (@JoyPrimeTV) August 7, 2023
The students, who could not partake in the exam were seen crying bitterly over the situation.
Speaking to the media, some aggrieved parents who gathered at the school premises on Monday expressed their frustration about the development.
A parent stated that her ward informed her that her name and index number did not appear on the center’s list, and thus she was denied the opportunity to take the exam.
Another parent agreed that putting the students in such a situation after all of their preparations for the exam was unjust.
“Your ward is going to write exam and has prepared only to be told at the last minute that their name is not included. How would you feel if they were your ward? It is painful to enroll your child in school for such a thing to happen,” he said.
To this end, Mr Kwarteng said that the "allegation of the headmaster squandering registration fees should not apply to public Junior High Schools, as there is no financial burden placed on the students or their parents for the BECE registration.”
He, however, encouraged parents and guardians to verify information and seek accurate details “regarding matters related to education to avoid any misconception.”
Latest Stories
-
Adongo defends BoG recapitalisation plan amid growing debate over GH¢93.82bn negative equity
6 minutes -
Ghana petitions AU over xenophobic attacks on African nationals in South Africa
15 minutes -
Shocking and perplexing – Godfred Dame slams gov’t attempts to weaken OSP
17 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Medeama drop points as GoldStars keep title hopes alive
17 minutes -
Irresponsible court reporting erodes public trust in judiciary – CHRAJ Director warns
26 minutes -
Expose young people to courts and prisons to curb crime – Judge advocates
31 minutes -
Suame MP slams ORAL initiative as ‘illegal’ and driven by haste
35 minutes -
Gideon Boako accuses BoG of ‘accounting gimmick’ over solvency position
40 minutes -
Minority raises alarm over BoG losses, says concerns are in national interest
43 minutes -
Economic stability achieved, focus now shifts to production – Isaac Adongo
46 minutes -
Youth disillusionment poses greatest threat to Ghana’s stability – UNDP
49 minutes -
John Darko urges Mahama to complete Agenda 111 projects instead of starting new ones
52 minutes -
Ghana needs $22.6bn to tackle climate challenges – Seidu Issifu
55 minutes -
Cocoa smuggling: Fiapre Circuit Court grants GH¢10k bail each to four suspects
59 minutes -
African media criticised for weak geopolitical coverage
1 hour