Audio By Carbonatix
An educationist I.K. Gyasi is urging caution in the implementation of a new education policy that will make local languages the medium of instruction at kindergarten and primaries one to three.
He believes the move will not serve the best interest of the children and wants the Education Ministry to be sure it has carefully considered all the implications of the policy first.
The Education Ministry believes children can better appreciate what they are taught if the teaching is done in local dialects.
But like other educationists, Mr. Gyasi believes the approach might worsen standards especially in the use of English as the lingua franca.
“Are we going to wait until the Ghanaian child is nine years old before he is introduced to a language which is the official language of this count,” he questioned in contributing to the debate on Joy FM's Newsnite programme on Tuesday.
“I do not think it will help the Ghanaian child to wait until nine years before he is introduced to English.”
Mr Gyasi however stated that “if the programme is such that apart from the Ghanaian language, the child will also be introduced to English as a subject,” he does not have problems with it.
The announcement of the programme has generated a lot of commentary with opinions divided on the appropriateness of the direction.
Government however appears bent on implementing the programme as its designers cite what they say has been its track record in South Africa.
Myjoyonline.com/Ghana
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
-
UTAG threatens nationwide strike over delay in book and research allowance rate
4 minutes -
Boundary Commission urges border residents to protect boundary pillars and support national security
7 minutes -
Ghana to grow at 5.0% GDP in 2026, but faces huge investment financing gap – AfDB
8 minutes -
Deputy AG, 14 CSOs appear at Supreme Court for hearing on challenge to OSP’s prosecutorial powers
13 minutes -
Minority MPs meet Ghana High Commissioner to Canada to discuss diaspora welfare and bilateral relations
22 minutes -
GNAT threatens WASSCE boycott over detained Nyinahin SHS teacher
30 minutes -
Free SHS: Education Minister hails end of school food shortages
34 minutes -
NLA Director-General calls for a concerted effort in fight against illegal gambling
35 minutes -
74% of returned Ghanaians had overstayed visas – South Africa’s Int’l Relations Minister
39 minutes -
Ghana’s National Vaccine Institute joins WHO-backed Global Clinical Trials Forum
44 minutes -
World Bank set to approve US$300m for expansion of Ghana’s school infrastructure
45 minutes -
South Africa says investigations ongoing, no decision yet on compensation for returned Ghanaians
53 minutes -
BECE to be extended from 5 to 8 days under proposed exam timetable reform—Education Minister
56 minutes -
Betway Ghana celebrates its 10th Birthday with “IT’S YOUR TEN” campaign
1 hour -
Discussions on xenophobia must be based on verified facts, not rumours – Lamola
1 hour