Audio By Carbonatix
Mr Bertinus Bagbin, Offinso South Municipal Director of Education, said the government’s vision to create wealth could only be realized if quality education is provided to all children without discrimination.
To achieve this, he said, the Ministry of Education (MOE) had placed emphasis on primary education with the framework of the Education Strategic Plan (ESP) and the Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy (GPRS II).
Mr Bagbin made the observation at a day’s workshop for 40 Directors of Education and some Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO’s) in the Ashanti region on the draft Complementary Basic Education Policy (CBE) in Kumasi on Thursday.
The Ministry of Education in collaboration with the Ghana Education Service (GES) organised the workshop with support from the United Nations International Children and Education Fund (UNICEF).
Mr Bagbin disclosed that about 800,000 school going-age children which formed about 20 percent of national enrolment, were still out of school.
He therefore welcomed the Complementary Basic Education (CBE) system that would open up attractive and equitable educational opportunities for the unfortunate children.
The CBE, Mr Bagbin explained, would provide structured programmes of learning outside the formal school system to enable them to acquire minimum knowledge and skills for continuing education in the formal sector.
He said this would offer a second opportunity for the category of children to access mainstream education.
Mr Joseph Kwabena Onyinah, Ashanti Regional Director of Education said various interventions to improve access and participation have yielded positive impact.
He indicated that with 67.7 percent completion rate in 2008, there was the need to increase enrolment and retention to reduce dropout rate.
Mr Onyinah, however, noted that it was not realistic to achieve 100 percent retention and zero percent drop out rate and called for a convenient and practical system to mop up the school drop outs and the school going age children who are not in school.
Mrs Comfort Bandoh, District Director of Education for Afigya Sekyere, said the most challenging issue with the implementation of the CBE policy was funding and emphasised the replacement of cost–sharing measures with all stakeholders.
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
-
‘Don’t put the President on the spot’ – Fifi Kwetey rebukes Majority over OSP Bill
47 minutes -
‘There is no conspiracy by NDC’ – Fifi Kwetey explains OSP Bill fallout after presidential intervention
58 minutes -
Nigeria allege DR Congo ‘fraud’ as they hunt World Cup reprieve
1 hour -
Alcaraz announces shock split with coach Ferrero
2 hours -
Two held over viral assault on minor
2 hours -
The Oscars to leave ABC and stream on YouTube starting in 2029
2 hours -
Starmer tells Abramovich to ‘pay up now’ or face court
2 hours -
FIFA video game to return after four years in Netflix exclusive
3 hours -
Ghana’s programme performance has been broadly satisfactory – IMF Board
3 hours -
Former chancellor George Osborne joins OpenAI
3 hours -
No bank has been cited, sanctioned by any regulatory or law enforcement agencies – Association of Banks
3 hours -
Ghana’s GH₵10m relief support to Jamaica grounded in compassion and solidarity – Ablakwa
3 hours -
Speaker, Ga Mantse to headline GJA Dinner Night
3 hours -
JoyNews to host National Dialogue on declining adherence to standards on Thursday
3 hours -
Newmont to fully fund 13 kilometers Ntotroso–Kenyasi road in 2026
3 hours
