Audio By Carbonatix
Reverend Kofi Amofa Odaatu, the Northern Regional Examinations Officer of Ghana Education Service (GES), has expressed worry over continuous falling standards of Basic Education Certificate Examinations (BECE) in public schools in the region.
He said for the past ten years, public basic schools in the Northern Region with North East and Savannah Regions inclusive, have not performed up to 50 per cent pass rate in the BECE.
The persistent poor performance was blamed on early registration of students, wholesale promotion, inadequate supervision, insufficient parental control and growing indiscipline on the part of students, teachers and parents.
Rev Odaatu made this known during a presentation on BECE performance from 2014 to 2018 at a stakeholder accountability forum on education on Monday in Tamale.
The meeting was organized by Youth Empowerment for Life (YEfL) in collaboration with the Northern Regional Youth Network and funded by OXFAM.
Students, youth networks and groups, staff of GES and several other stakeholders participated in the session that aimed at eliciting ideas on how to help improve falling standards of education in the Northern Region.
From 2014 to 2018, the Region performed below the national average, recording 19.56 per cent pass in 2015 and 37.24 per cent pass in 2018, as the lowest and highest performance within the periods.
According to the statistics presented by Rev Odaatu, in 2015, out of 36,536 students who sat for the examination, only 7,147, representing, 19.56 per cent passed within aggregate 6 to 30.
In 2018, with 42,623 students who sat for the BECE, only 15,874 representing 37.24 per cent passed within aggregate 6 to 30.
Rev Odaatu urged parents to help monitor their children’s education, ensure improved supervision and provide capacity building support for staff and establish effective collaboration with stakeholders.
Alhaji Mohammed Seidu Issah Abah, the Regional Deputy Director of GES in charge of Human Resource Management and Development, said strategic monitoring systems were being put in place to help improve education quality and performance in schools.
He urged headmasters, teachers and District Education Directorates to effectively perform their duties in accordance with the dictates of the national and district Annual District Operational Plans (ADOPs).
He urged parents to be responsible for monitoring their children’s education and encouraged the school children to be disciplined and committed to their studies.
Madam Jawol Vera Magan, the YEfL called for collective efforts to help beef up the quality of education, invest and safeguard the future of Ghanaian children.
She said young people who lacked literacy were generally likely to make bad decisions and also become irresponsible in future.
The participants advised students to change their attitude towards studies and urged parents and teachers among other stakeholders to help monitor activities of students in a bid to curb falling standards of education in the regions.
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.
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
-
Ghana Month: Fading Voices; Are Ghana’s local languages fading?
7 minutes -
Newmont pays GH¢12.8bn in taxes to gov’t in 2025
2 hours -
I pray against geopolitics – NPA boss warns of crude price shocks
2 hours -
Aspiring female Zambian politicians were asked for sexual favours, official says
2 hours -
Belgium orders ex-diplomat to stand trial for 1961 murder of Congo’s Lumumba
3 hours -
Suicide bombings show resilience of Nigerian jihadists despite years of war
3 hours -
Zelensky calls for Trump and Starmer to meet and find common ground
3 hours -
Nigeria president begins first UK state visit in 37 years
3 hours -
Death of Ali Larijani deepens crisis at heart of Iran’s leadership
3 hours -
Engineering, science, and technology have strong roles in Ghana’s development – Ing Ludwig Annang Hesse
4 hours -
Fuel price crisis may trigger presidential intervention – NPA boss
4 hours -
At $120, we act – NPA draws red line on global oil prices
4 hours -
We’re still studying the market – NPA on rising fuel costs
5 hours -
Ashanti South Police arrest three suspects in Asawase Kusasi chief murder case
5 hours -
Man held over alleged police uniform, pistol theft, robberyÂ
5 hours
