Audio By Carbonatix
The Education Ministry in partnership with the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA) and Ghana Education Service (GES) has held a 3-day Ministerial Technical Advisory Committee (MTAC) workshop in Accra.
This was to discuss assessment proposals and make recommendations to guide the comprehensive review of the Junior High School (JHS) and Senior High School (SHS) curriculum.
The workshop sought to create a forum to discuss issues regarding the alignment of the new school curriculum and assessment framework and make recommendations on learner progression and placement from the JHS to SHS.
Education Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh in his opening remarks, spoke about the need for secondary education to prepare learners for skills, training, field of work and lifelong learning.
He stressed the need to make the country’s capacity building agenda sustainable through the review of the JHS and SHS curriculum.
This review process is expected to stimulate curriculum change at the universities by aligning the university entry requirements with the secondary education curriculum.
The end result is to make all courses accessible to all students irrespective of a student’s background or socio-economic status.
The new curriculum is engineered to reinforce the knowledge and skills acquired during basic education and provide a diversified curriculum to cater for different aptitudes, abilities, interest, and skills.
It will also provide an opportunity for further education and training and introduce students to a variety of relevant occupational skills necessary for national human resource development.
Students would better understand the environment and the need for its sustainability and develop an interest in lifelong learning.
On his part, the Executive Secretary of NaCCA stressed that a holistic application of the Free SHS policy and other reforms would require the adoption of an innovative and inclusive curriculum and assessment standards including teaching methodologies that would account for variations in learning abilities of students at every level of the school system.
The workshop was chaired by Professor Dominic Fobih, a former Minister of Education, in attendance was the Honourable Deputy Minister of Education (TVET) as well as Council Chairs, Heads of various agencies of the Ministry of Education,and experts from Universities, Colleges of Education as well as eminent educationists.
Education Minister, Dr Matthew Opoku Prempeh in his opening remarks, spoke about the need for secondary education to prepare learners for skills, training, field of work and lifelong learning.
He stressed the need to make the country’s capacity building agenda sustainable through the review of the JHS and SHS curriculum.
This review process is expected to stimulate curriculum change at the universities by aligning the university entry requirements with the secondary education curriculum.
The end result is to make all courses accessible to all students irrespective of a student’s background or socio-economic status.
The new curriculum is engineered to reinforce the knowledge and skills acquired during basic education and provide a diversified curriculum to cater for different aptitudes, abilities, interest, and skills.
It will also provide an opportunity for further education and training and introduce students to a variety of relevant occupational skills necessary for national human resource development.
Students would better understand the environment and the need for its sustainability and develop an interest in lifelong learning.
On his part, the Executive Secretary of NaCCA stressed that a holistic application of the Free SHS policy and other reforms would require the adoption of an innovative and inclusive curriculum and assessment standards including teaching methodologies that would account for variations in learning abilities of students at every level of the school system.
The workshop was chaired by Professor Dominic Fobih, a former Minister of Education, in attendance was the Honourable Deputy Minister of Education (TVET) as well as Council Chairs, Heads of various agencies of the Ministry of Education,and experts from Universities, Colleges of Education as well as eminent educationists.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
-
Otumfuo–Newmont AI for youth center launched in Sankore, Ahafo Region
1 minute -
Trump to unveil $12bn farm aid package
16 minutes -
Israel’s PM says second phase of Gaza peace plan is close
17 minutes -
We have players who can stand any challenge – John Painstil backs Ghana ahead of 2026 WC
43 minutes -
Celebrating Kufuor at 87: Arthur Kennedy hails statesman’s legacy
46 minutes -
Africa launches a landmark cultural institution for fashion, art & creative sovereignty
50 minutes -
Parliament notifies EC over vacant Kpandai seat following court re-run order
53 minutes -
Salah left out by Liverpool for Inter Milan game
54 minutes -
Gov’t lifts curfew in Sawla-Tuna-Kalba after security improves
60 minutes -
More than 100 people killed in attack on hospital in Sudan, WHO chief says
1 hour -
West Africa’s Coup Season Should Alarm Ghana: Politics Turns On Moments, Not Models
1 hour -
Police arrest 3 suspected kidnappers after fierce gun battle
1 hour -
GEA terminates contracts of 218 BizBox District Coordinators
2 hours -
We’ll resist any tariff increase that will erode the meagre 9% wage adjustment – TUC
2 hours -
Dzodze-Penyi SHS Headmaster threatened me for refusing an abortion – Victim alleges
2 hours
