Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Association of Teachers of English on Wednesday attributed the deteriorating knowledge of English language in schools to the recruitment of teachers of other subjects to teach the subject as a result of the inadequate supply of specialized teachers.
There are about 3,000 vacancies for English teachers in second cycle schools throughout the country that needed to be filled.
A request for 716 teachers for the subject last year by senior secondary schools could not be met because the country produced 167 graduate teachers in that category during that period.
Mr Mathew Doh, Acting National President of the association, said this at Wa at the opening of the 10th annual conference of the association that was attended by delegates from all regions.
The association, which was formed 10 years ago, meets annually to deliberate on issues affecting the welfare of members and evolve ways of promoting the quality of teaching and learning of the subject.
Mr Doh expressed regret that while each school needed about six well trained and adequately prepared English Language teachers, most of them had one such teacher.
The poor usage of English Language by students, he said, was impacting negatively on their performance in other subjects.
On the new reforms in education, he said these reforms could not succeed if the morale of teachers was not also reformed and teachers must be well motivated and provided with the right environment to give off their best.
Mr George Hikah Benson, Upper West Regional Minister, said in a speech read on his behalf that government was aware of the numerous challenges teachers faced in terms of salaries and other conditions of service and assured them that the Fair Wages Commission would address some of them.
He said the education reforms would deal with the setbacks of previous reforms and ensure an equitable education system that would offer opportunities for all Ghanaians and produce school leavers who could contribute effectively towards national development.
Mr Samuel Bannerman-Mensah, Director-General of the Ghana Education Service in an address read on his behalf, appealed to the association to design courses for non-specialized English teachers who had been recruited to teach the subject.
Source: GNA.
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.
Tags:
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
-
Ghana’s Kyere Mensah nominated to World Agriculture Forum Council
6 minutes -
Creative Canvas 2025: King Promise — The systems player
18 minutes -
Wherever we go, our polling station executives are yearning for Dr Bawumia – NPP coordinators
26 minutes -
Agricultural cooperatives emerging as climate champions in rural Ghana
59 minutes -
Fire Service rescues two in truck accident at Asukawkaw
60 minutes -
Ashland Foundation donates food items to Krachi Local Prison
1 hour -
Akatsi North DCE warns PWD beneficiaries against selling livelihood support items
1 hour -
Salaga South MP calls for unity and peace at Kulaw 2025 Youth Homecoming
3 hours -
GPL 2025/2026: Gold Stars triumph over Dreams in five-goal thriller
3 hours -
Ibrahim Mahama supports disability groups with Christmas donation
4 hours -
2025/26 GPL: Berekum Chelsea come from behind to beat XI Wonders 3-1
4 hours -
NACOC dismantles drug dens in Eastern and Greater Accra regions in ‘Operation White Ember’
4 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Aduana fight from two goals down to draw against Young ApostlesÂ
4 hours -
Emmanuel Dzivenu: The ‘stolen’ birthday
4 hours -
ECG announces technical challenge with MMS-compliant meters; says it’s being fixed
4 hours
