Some Junior High School (JHS) students have expressed fear that their preparation for the upcoming Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) may not be adequate due to the ongoing industrial action by their teachers.
On March 20, the three teacher unions namely, the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT), Ghana National Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT), and the Coalition of Concerned Teachers Ghana (CCT-GH) declared an official strike due to unsatisfactory conditions of service.
According to the unions, the government had failed to renew its collective agreement, among other concerns, following its expiration in 2023.
They argued that since all efforts to get the government to the negotiation table have proven futile, laying down their tools was their last resort.
However, students who are at the receiving end of the impasse between the government and their teachers have been sharing their concerns with JoyNews.
A third-year student at St. Paul RC Basic School at Caprice, Accra, Samuel, said that without the guidance of his teachers, he might not be adequately prepared for the upcoming BECE examination.
"We have only three months left to write our BECE, and if there are no teachers, how are we going to write our BECE? So we need teachers to come and help us learn to pass our BECE examination," he said.
Meanwhile, Samuel said that he has joined a study group to make good use of his time.
"We have to learn on our own. We teach ourselves sometimes and find someone who understands other subjects to take over and teach us for us to cope", he explained.
Another student of the same school added that schools now close earlier than usual, while students have been advised to study on their own.
"We are going home because of the strike, and we were told to learn on our own. Our seniors in JHS three came to watch over us while we study, and we are coming to write exams soon. If we don’t learn too, we will fail," she claimed.
The students are calling on the government to promptly address the teachers' concerns to ensure that teaching and learning can resume, and to prevent mass exam failures.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama blames previous gov’t for ‘toxic environment’ in oil sector, vows to restore investor confidence
4 minutes -
ActionAid Ghana to convene National Civil Society Dialogue to demand fair financing for development
15 minutes -
I don’t want to talk about Stonebwoy’s congratulatory message – King Promise
16 minutes -
Ghana Railways workers strike over seven months of unpaid salaries
19 minutes -
Richmond Rockson appointed Spokesperson and Head of Communications, Energy Ministry
22 minutes -
Pregnant out of Rape: 15-year-old calls for help over health complications
24 minutes -
Yango Ghana honours mothers, wives of its partner drivers in celebration of Mother’s Day
28 minutes -
Court grants Daniel Owusu Koranteng bail in Ahmed Suale murder case
29 minutes -
MDF administrator demands transparency and tangible benefits for mining communities
31 minutes -
Fisheries Commission Governing Council commissioned with a charge to scale up enforcement
41 minutes -
“We need to stop seeing each other as competition” – King Promise
48 minutes -
Caveman hosts GEPA as part of efforts to strengthen Ghana’s export drive
48 minutes -
Adu-Boahene ready to reveal classified information to defend himself – Atta Akyea
53 minutes -
‘No one is calling Sammy Gyamfi a thief’ – Effia MP
56 minutes -
Mahama’s code of conduct is useless if he fails to act on Sammy Gyamfi – Nana Boakye
1 hour