
Audio By Carbonatix
St. John's Grammar Senior High School from the Greater Accra Region has been adjudged the overall best senior high school at the 2025 School Farm Awards, organised by Kosmos Innovation Centre (KIC) in partnership with the Mastercard Foundation and Blue Skies Foundation.
In the junior high school category, Gbulahagu D/A Junior High School took the top honour at the awards event held in Kumasi.
With the theme “Rethinking Agriculture – Growing Young Minds to Feed Ghana’s Future,” this year’s competition aimed to change how young Ghanaians view agriculture—not as a laborious chore, but as a profitable, STEM-driven enterprise.
Participating schools were provided with seeds, fertilisers, basic tools, and expert mentorship, and tasked not only with growing vegetables but also with developing viable business plans.
This year saw participation from over 700 schools across all 16 regions, up from about 450 in 2024, highlighting the growing enthusiasm among Ghanaian youth for agribusiness.
Board Chairman of KIC, Nana Joe Mensah, described the School Farm program as one of Ghana’s “most transformative youth initiatives,” noting the collaboration between government, private sector, and schools in fostering practical education, leadership, and sustainability.
According to KIC, judging went beyond crop yield. Schools were assessed on consistent good farming practices, innovation in cultivation, and the strength of their business plans, with the aim of turning school farms into sustainable, income-generating enterprises.
Speaking to Luv FM, David, a student of Gbulahagu D/A JHS, urged his peers to embrace agriculture. “I encourage all my colleagues and the youth to take agriculture seriously and learn the skills involved because it is very important,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mohammed Abdul-Rashid, a teacher and award recipient, reflected on the challenges behind their recognition. “It hasn’t been an easy journey, but with encouragement from our fellow teachers and students, we have been able to achieve this great reward,” he noted, appealing to educators and young people to view agriculture not merely as a school subject, but as “a solution” to many community challenges.
The event brought together students, teachers, government officials, and development partners to celebrate innovation, enterprise, and youth-led solutions in agriculture.
Latest Stories
-
Flood mitigation should be continuous, not a one-off effort – Expert warns
29 seconds -
From Tragedy to Triumph: Ghana’s path to flood resilience (A Story of Lessons Learned, Global Inspiration, and a Collective Commitment to a Better Future)
3 minutes -
Kristo Asafo dispute centres on my father’s final directives, not inheritance — Adwoa Safo
12 minutes -
Kristo Asafo saga: ‘My dad didn’t die intestate; he left a valid will’ – Adwoa Safo
13 minutes -
New Eastern Regional Fire Commander tours stations, identifies key operational challenges
54 minutes -
Government fully responsible for Accra flooding crisis – Miracles Aboagye
1 hour -
Successive governments have failed to address flooding crisis – Susan Adu-Amankwah
1 hour -
No one can hold title on Ramsar sites – Inusah Fuseini warns against encroachment
1 hour -
We don’t need prayers or relief items; enforce the law – Samson Lardy Anyenini on recurring floods
1 hour -
Fresh attempt to remove seized galamsey excavators in Aowin sparks controversy
1 hour -
Susan Adu-Amankwah urges African governments to evacuate citizens over South Africa xenophobic attacks
1 hour -
Former Finance Minister Amin Adam hands over Masjid Al-Noor to Muslim community
1 hour -
Bawumia commends Amin Adam for visionary Masjid Al Noor project in Tamale
1 hour -
Flood-related death toll could rise amid possible disease outbreak — Susan Adu-Amankwah warns
2 hours -
Xenophobia: South Africa must use civilised means to remove illegal migrants – Inusa Fuseini
2 hours