Stakeholders in education are worried about the continuous decline in the performance of pupils and students at the basic and senior high school levels in Teshie, Ledzokuku Municipality.
This, they attributed to the nonchalance of parents towards the education of their wards who were mostly found loitering during contact hours or running errands for their parents.
The stakeholders, including; officials of the Ghana Education Service (GES), National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly, traditional authorities, persons with disabilities and identifiable youth groups, collectively named amongst other causes, the irregularity of pupils to class as a result of poor parental supervision, as a major cause of the poor performance.
This came to light during a Social Auditing Forum organized by the NCCE under its Accountability, Rule of Law and Anti-corruption Programme (ARAP) with sponsorship from the European Union.
ARAP is aimed at promoting good governance, community ownership of development projects and policies by reducing corruption and improving accountability and compliance of local government authorities.
Victor Noye Tawiah, Municipal Director of Education, Ledzokuku Municipality, in an interview said, one of the major issues the education directorate was grappling with was parental irresponsibility which had mainly led to the poor performance of pupils in the municipality over the years.
“Some parents are unassertive and not wholly responsibility towards their children’s education which makes them feel relatively independent thereby resulting to indiscipline, and this further affects their punctuality and regularity at school” he said.
He mentioned inadequate infrastructure, high enrollment coupled with the shift system, inadequate teaching and learning materials and poor security on school compounds as some challenges and constraints hindering quality education in the municipality.
He said as part of measures to mitigate these challenges, the GES was engaging parents through faith and community-based organisations, traditional authorities and the municipal assembly to sensitise them on the need to keeo their wards in the classroom.
He further informed that the municipality had 78 public schools and an enrollment of 21,067 in kindergarten, primary, Junior and Senior High Schools, and Technical Vocational Education Training (TVET), with a teaching and non-teaching staff population of 781.
“In 2017, there was a 58.60 per cent pass rate at the Basic Education Certificate Examination whiles in 2018, 67.26 per cent was obtained with a decline in 2019 where 63.90 per cent was recorded.”
As education management body, Noye Tawiah said the GES was playing its role in providing inclusive and equitable quality formal education to local pupils and students since education was the major tool for national development.
According to the Education Director, with the medium-to-long term solutions put in place with an even intensified supervision and monitoring in schools, the municipality envisioned a high pass rate in the coming years.
Nicholas Tetteh Atiogbe, Municipal Director, NCCE, Ledzokuku Municipality said the Social Auditing Forum was aimed at empowering the citizenry to demand accountability from duty bearers and also influence policy-making implementation and evaluation.
Inaugurating a seven-member Social Auditing Committee, comprising representatives from various stakeholder groups, he called on them to prioritise education, health and sanitation in their undertakings as emphasized during a needs assessment.
Confidence Logo, an Assistant Director, Ledzokuku Municipal Assembly, said attitudinal and behavioural change by the community and the collective effort of all was needed to take the Teshie child in the classroom.
She said the assembly was unrelenting in its efforts in the provision of infrastructure and a safer environment for education at all levels.
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