The National Communications Officer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Sammy Gyamfi says the party is not against licensing teachers but the approach the ruling party adopted to accomplish this.
According to him, the law mandates that all teachers be licensed before they can practice, however, making an examination the sole way to fulfill this Act is the problem.
Speaking on the Pulse on JoyNews, he said “Licensing is not the same as licensure examination. Section 12 and Section 13 of the Education Act 2008, Act 778 is clear. Teachers ought to be licensed and registered before they can practice as teachers in Ghana. We support that, we fully support the licensing and registration of teachers. President Mahama supports it, the NDC supports this. However, we are against the use of a licensure examination as the sole basis for licensing teachers.”
Juxtaposing the modus operandi of licensing lawyers to that of teachers, Mr Gyamfi said when he and his learned colleagues were called to the bar, automatically they were licensed to practice yet teachers are expected to take another test.
This, he said was wrong.
The vociferous legal practitioner said “Currently, teacher trainees are undertaking a four-year degree programme, very intensive. During these four years, they studied almost 50 to 60 courses, six courses, seven courses, four courses, five courses, and all that. The curriculum for every semester, they do want is called STS-supporting teaching in school- so you are not only going to be sitting in a classroom and being taught but once in a while there is an allotted time on your timetable for you to go the field and actually engage in practical teaching under mentors.
"When you get to level 400 semester you engage in the full semester fieldwork, they call it internship or mentee ship, where you are assigned to a mentor who then guides you on the practical aspect of teaching. You are required to prepare lesson notes and you go to school with your report and you are accessed again."
He stressed that after many years in school and training, the government insisted that they must undertake the licensure exam which is “an exam that has no active guide…an examination without any formula, you don’t even know the marking scheme they use, you are not told the pass mark."
Mr Gyamfi said the examination was a plot since the number who failed the examination depended on the number of people the government wanted to deny employment.
"You see this whole thing is a scam... the Akufo-Addo, Bawumia government does not have the financial capacity to employ," he added.
He added that when the NDC comes into power in 2024 they would change this and make the system better.
Latest Stories
-
Open Letter to the President: Galamsey is dead; what we face now is environmental terrorism, crash it now
52 seconds -
Inaki Williams defends brother Nico after fans erase image from mural amid Barcelona transfer rumours
9 minutes -
Next Joy Business Economic Forum comes off on June 25, 2025
30 minutes -
Scars of Hooliganism: Club officials know their hooligans – Eric Alagidede
42 minutes -
Cybersecurity must be core to financial governance – BoG First Deputy Governor
58 minutes -
Scars of Hooliganism: Violence drives away sponsors for the league – Kwesi Nyantakyi
1 hour -
Kumasi Airport City project takes off – Asantehene calls for policies to attract local private capital
1 hour -
Borderless Africa key to SME growth and economic independence – Prof Evans Gyasi
1 hour -
Scars of Hooliganism: Identifying hooligans in big crowd is challenging – Ghana Police
1 hour -
Trade Growth Network launched to empower Ghanaian SMEs and promote intra-African trade
1 hour -
‘We could have scored seven’ – Black Queens coach happy with friendly win over Malawi
1 hour -
Rebecca Ekpe shares vision as she targets GJA Vice President position
1 hour -
Ghana stun Uganda in opening game of 2025 Rugby Africa Men’s 7s in Mauritius
2 hours -
Declaring state of emergency over illegal mining premature – Mustapha Gbande
2 hours -
Iran cannot unilaterally shut Strait of Hormuz – NPA boss
2 hours