Stakeholders in the educational sector
in the Savelugu-Nanton Municipality of the Northern Region of Ghana, have been
urged to play their supervisory role effectively in order to reverse the growing
trend of low enrolment and retention of pupils and poor performance of schools
in the area.
According
to a report by the Ghana Education Service (GES) in the Municipality, 22 Junior
High Schools were presented for the 2012 Basic Education Certificate Examination
(BECE) and out of that figure, 15 schools scored below 40 percent representing
68.20 percent of the overall figure.
Some
of the underlying causes attributed to the poor performance of the schools
included candidates lack of adequate understanding of simple concepts in their
subject areas; incomplete coverage of syllabus/loss of contact hours; weak
foundation at the primary level; poor attitude of teachers towards work; lack
of standardized mode of assessment to track schools performances and high level
of truancy among BECE candidates after registration.
Others
were inappropriate use of instructional hours by teachers; lack of parental
supervision and monitoring of children’s learning behavior; negative peer
influence; inadequate or poor supervision of schools by GES officials as well
as mass promotion of pupils to the next class at the end of academic years.
Speaking
at a sensitization workshop organized by Bibir Ghana in Savelugu, the Director
of Human Resource Management at the GES Chief Mahama Abubakari, also cited
frequent teacher absenteeism/lateness to school; loss of professional ethics
including poor teacher-parent-community relations; non-preparation of scheme
work/lesson plans; and non-observation of schools performance and appraisal
meetings, among others as contributory factors for poor performance of schools
in the area.
Participants at workshop |
He
charged PTAs and SMCs to own schools in their localities and monitor the
attendance of pupils likewise teachers to ensure that everybody was performing
their roles effectively. Adding, he emphasised that teachers who have been
provided with accommodation in their schools should try and stay there instead
living in town and commuting everyday to and fro school.
Under
the theme: “Supporting Basic Education In Communities of Northern Ghana; The Role
of Stakeholders”, the workshop brought together Parent Teacher
Associations, School Management Committees and Teachers of some ten selected
basic schools in the Savelugu-Nanton Municipality whose academic performances
in recent years appeared to be dwindling.
It
was aimed at building the capacities of these stakeholders on how to identify
some of the negative factors confronting quality education delivery in their
various communities and schools and find lasting solutions to those challenges.
By this, participants were encouraged to play effective collaborative roles by
ensuring that community members including parents and chiefs monitor the work
of teachers by visiting schools and give them support as and when it was
necessary while teachers too, could visit homes of pupils who do not turn up
for school.
The
workshop which was part of the implementation of a project by Bibir dubbed “Supporting
Basic Education in The Communities of Northern Ghana” with funding from
Intervida, would also provide beneficiary schools with learning materials.
According
to the Executive Director of Bibir, Joseph Charles Osei, in-service training
would also be organized for teachers who teach core mathematics, English and
Integrated Science.
About
260 pupils, he said, would be registered under the National Health Insurance
Scheme whilst those whose card had expired would have theirs renewed. “In
addition to this, we’ll donate bursaries such as sandals, exercise books,
school bags and other learning materials to pupils of the various schools”, he
disclosed.
Mr.
Osei observed that if stakeholders shirked their responsibilities, there would
be continuous poor performance of schools in the Northern sector and charged
them to live up to expectation.
Bibir-Ghana, a local NGO based in
Tamale has its operational areas in the Tamale Metropolitan and Tolon/Kumbungu
Districts. Established in 2005, the organization works with mainly women and
children in deprived communities. The emphasis is on giving children a good
environment and health to enable them gain access to formal education so as to
be the motor of change in society. It is because of its support for children
that a local name “BIBIR” which literally means children in Dagaare, was chosen
to enable many people understand what the organization stand for. Since children
can either be direct beneficiaries through the distribution of school
materials, they can also be indirect beneficiaries through the empowerment of
their mothers. Once the women are empowered, the children's education can be
sustained.
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