
Audio By Carbonatix
Dr Yaw Osei-Adutwum, the Minister of Education, has refuted an assertion that the Free Senior High School (FSHS) Policy is being administered from the Jubilee House, the seat of government.
Addressing the media in Accra on Sunday, Dr Osei-Adutwum said the Free SHS Policy since its inception in 2017, had been managed by the Ministry of Education, through the Free Senior High School Secretariat.
He said, so far, government had spent GHC7.7 billion in implementing the flagship policy since its roll-out, which had benefitted more than 1.2 million students at the secondary education level.
He said, for instance, an amount of GHC480 million was spent on the Policy in 2017, GHC1.3 billion in 2018, GHC1.6 billion in 2019, GHC2.4 billion in 2020, while GHC1.9 billion would be spent this year.
The Minister said government had made giant strides in providing teaching and learning materials and expanded physical infrastructure like classroom blocks, dormitories, science and library laboratories, among others, to second cycle educational institutions across the country even though some elements in the society had tried to downplay Government’s efforts.
"We may not have the best education system in the world, but we had made giant strides over the past four years," Dr Osei-Adutwum stressed.
He reiterated the Akufo-Addo-led government's determination to providing free, compulsory and quality education to every Ghanaian school going-child in the quest of "making Ghana the education hub of Africa".
The Minister said government was committed to building a robust education system that could compete with international best practices.
Dr Osei-Adutwum said Government's goal in implementing the Free SHS Policy was to transform the education system and making it play a pivotal role in socio-economic development of the country.
"For education to be fit-for-purpose, we should have students who are creative and critical thinkers, especially in this Fourth Industrial Revolution to navigate the world," Dr Osei-Adutwum added.
The Minister mentioned three key areas government was focused on addressing in the country's education system- access, quality and relevance so that Ghana could make progress in transforming its economy in the near future.
Dr Osei-Adutwum said government was determined to improve its Gross Tertiary Enrollment Ratio from the current figure of 18.8 per cent to 40 per cent by 2030.
Latest Stories
-
Beyond the festivities: Gomoa must turn visibility into development
1 minute -
DVLA clarifies it is not responsible for Toyota Voxy commercial operations
3 minutes -
Calls for Ofori-Atta’s return a non-issue if trial proceeds in absentia – Pius Hadzide
5 minutes -
France names Ghana first beneficiary of newly established National Health Compact
11 minutes -
US Immigration, extradition outcomes likely to influence each other in Ofori-Atta case – Amanda Clinton
14 minutes -
29-year-old woman rescued after hiding in drain to escape attackers
27 minutes -
Gramps Morgan names Ghanaian business leader Monalisa Effah as Ghana-Jamaica Homecoming Ambassador
1 hour -
CAF President urges faith in African football despite AFCON 2025 issues
1 hour -
AFCON U-17: Black Starlets’ aim is to win trophy – Head Coach Prosper Ogum
1 hour -
ENFA expands access to global capital for Ghanaian SMEs
2 hours -
Beyond security: Why mobile payment fraud has become a customer experience crisis
2 hours -
Former Effia MP demands full disclosure of Truedare AI deal, warns of ‘hidden risks’
2 hours -
Joseph Cudjoe raises alarm over potential revenue loss in Truedare AI Customs deal
2 hours -
Video: Awoshie-Anyaa Highway: Years of fatal crashes caused by faulty traffic lights
2 hours -
No financial transactions with Ghana Card yet, says NIA
2 hours