JaneAgyemang, Education Minister |
The Government of Ghana with technical and financial
support from the School for Life (SfL) and the UK’s Department for
International Development (DFID) will from this September enrol 55,000 school
dropouts into a Complementary Basic Education (CBE) Programme which began last
year.
This follows a successful
implementation of the first phase of the CBE programme which saw some 24,700
school dropouts out of an initial target of 25,000 benefiting from it. The
beneficiaries came from 34 districts in 4 regions including the Northern, Upper
West, Upper East and Brong Ahafo benefiting from it.
A Deputy Manager of SfL in
charge of Gender and Advocacy, Mrs. Lorentia Abakisi Dakura, announced this at
the second quarterly media review meeting of the Ghanaian Developing
Communities Association (GDCA) in Tamale.
The review meeting was aimed
at taking stock of activities being implemented under the second phase of the
Empowerment for Life (E4L); a five year programme being implemented by the GDCA
and the Youth Empowerment for Life with funding from the Ghana
Venskabsgrupperne, a Danish partner.
E4L is implemented in 15
districts in the Northern Region. The programme which was launched in 2010 and
expected to end on 31st December, 2014, is aimed at empowering the
poor, vulnerable and marginalised groups to have the capacity and ability to
improve their quality of life through education, employment, local organisation
as well as better access to and management of food and water resources on the
basis of a rights-based approach.
According to Mrs.
Dakura, about 10,000 children from 9 districts in the Northern and Upper West
Regions benefited from the first phase of the CBE programme. “It is envisaged
that, over 90 percent of them would be integrated into the formal education
system when schools reopen in September 2014,” she intimated.
She called on
parents and guardians in remote communities and urban centres to enrol their
children in these schools. She also called on the government to provide
budgetary support as well as enact a legislative instrument to support the
continue running of the programme.
An estimated 1
million children, according to Ghana’s Ministry of Education, are believed to
be out-of-school nationwide. This is as a result of poverty amongst families,
lack of teachers and classroom infrastructure, cultural and religious beliefs
that discriminate against female education and among others.
Despite several
attempts by governments and other stakeholders in the educational sector over
the years to avert the trend, it appears the complexity surrounding the issue
of school dropouts and poor quality education will also need a rather more
sophisticated approach to deal with the problem in a sustained manner.
For instance, most
school dropouts are found in rural areas of the country where the lack of
social amenities to a large extent, discourage a lot of competent teachers to
accept postings to go there and teach.
Besides, some
ethnic groups in Northern Ghana believe that, female education is unimportant,
because women unlike their male counterparts do not stay in the family when
they grow up but get married. Thus, a greater percentage of women (over 65
percent) in the Northern Region alone cannot read or write as against over 68
percent of men who can read and write, according to a Ghana Living Standards
Survey report.
Against this
backdrop, SfL which works to strengthen civil society’s role in improving
access to quality education and retention of pupils in school, has over the
years proven that with sustained support from governments and other
stakeholders, the number of school dropouts could drop drastically through its
CBE model.
The Ghana CBE programme provides an added impetus to
the literacy drive in the country, using the SfL methodology which involves the
use of the mother tongue as the mode for all instructions.
It takes approximately nine months for a child to go
through the CBE system and he/she is taught local languages, music and dance,
as well as reading and writing. Children are also taught some basic skills and
knowledge that is useful in their families and communities, thus promoting a
positive perception of education in the hope that families will choose to let
the children continue their education in formal schools after graduation.
Since its establishment as a non-governmental
organisation in 1995, SfL has made over 170,000 children literates in their
mother tongue and about 80 percent of these children have been integrated into
the formal school system. Today, many past SfL graduates can be found in higher
institutions of learning including Universities, Polyclinics, Colleges of
Education, Nursing Training Colleges and Senior High Schools. Many are also
professionals in various fields including teaching, nursing, accounting and
other life endeavours.
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