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Shedding more light on the ongoing reforms in the education sector, Vice President Bawumia indicated, “We are introducing reforms to teacher education and training because the teacher is at the centre of any education reforms.
“We have also introduced the teacher licensure regime aimed at professionalizing teaching and bringing it in line with international best practices.
“Further, having completed a review of the KG and primary curriculum and having rolled the new curriculum out in September 2019, government is in the process of reviewing the JHS and SHS curricula, with a view to ensuring that our teaching and learning methods and content reflect the realities of the 21st century.

“In addition to this, we have introduced intervention programmes in our senior high school to enable teachers support the final year students in their subject areas as they prepare for the WASSCE.
“In 2019 we spent GHS 56m on this and we intend to repeat same this year. Indeed, senior high school teachers are currently undergoing training at workshops in selected centres across the country particularly for subjects that are generally considered as ‘difficult’.
Already some of the teachers are currently undergoing training workshops in subjects that are considered difficult. Dr Bawumia made these remarks at a ceremony to award best Junior High School graduates of the 2018/2019 academic year.He presented awards to 36 deserving students from across the country who emerged as the best Junior High School graduates of the 2018/19 academic year.

The Awardees, including two hearing-impaired and two visually-impaired students, were presented with medals, certificates and cash prizes for their sterling performances at the President’s Independence Day Awards ceremony held in Accra on Monday.
The President’s Independence Day Awards, since its inception in 1993, continues to provide scholarships each year to young brilliant students between the ages of 14 and 19 (male and female) from all the regions of Ghana. The awardees are selected based on raw scores obtained at the BECE.
Vice President Bawumia, who represented President Nana Akufo-Addo, reiterated the policy of Government to ensure that free education broadens the gates of opportunities to every Ghanaian child, regardless of his or her family's economic status.
“It is our unwavering belief in education as key to national development that informs our resolve to implement one of our flagship policies as a government, the free Senior High School Policy.

“This policy is grounded in the firm belief of President Nana Addo-Dankwa Akufo-Addo that it is wholly unacceptable for any child in this country to be denied the opportunity of a senior high school education for the sole reason that his or her family cannot afford it.
“To ignore such children is to plant a crisis on our hands. Planting a bomb is a recipe for an explosion in the future. A confident, educated, skilled citizens is vital to any nation’s development prospects.”
Vice President Bawumia recalled that every year between 2013 and 2016, an average of 100,000 children who passed the BECE and were placed in SHS did not take up their place. “That translated to about 30-32% of all BECE candidates. The evidence suggests that financial barriers were key in these worrying statistics.
“Our Free SHS policy, which President Akufo-Addo launched in September 2017, was primarily to remove such barriers by providing every Ghanaian child with the opportunity of an SHS education.
“In the first year of the Free SHS policy, the rate of students who did not enrol after being placed fell to about 17% from the annual average of 30%. This is a huge improvement by any standard,” he emphasised.

“With the introduction of the Free SHS programme, the total number of students enrolled in our senior high schools is projected to be 1.2 million children. We have therefore witnessed a phenomenal rise of over 400,000 more students accessing senior high school education.”
Vice President urged the award winners “to recognize your achievement as the first step in a life of excellence and to realize that your achievement today is no guarantee of excellence in your senior high education. You will have to continue to work hard to remain on top.
“Remember that a life of academic brilliance without good character is not a worthy life. Discipline, courage, perseverance and believing in whatsoever things are true are keys to your future.”
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