Executive Director, Bibir-Ghana |
Several
reasons have been cited by various stakeholders in education as the cause of the
falling educational standards in basic schools in the Nanton Constituency in
the Savelugu-Nanton Municipality in the Northern Region of Ghana.
The reasons are, inability or refusal by parents to
pay their wards school fees, teacher absenteeism, lack of monitoring and supervision
by educational authorities, lack of teachers, learning and teaching materials and
among others.
This came to light at a forum of educational stakeholders
including Parent Teacher Associations, School Management Committees, non-governmental
organisations and students. The forum was organised by Bibir-Ghana in Nanton in
the Savelugu-Nanton Municipality.
The forum was part of the implementation of a literacy
and numeracy education programme by World Vision-Ghana with technical advice
and support from Bibir-Ghana in some five communities in Nanton. The
communities are Bulung, Kpachilo, Nantonkurugu, Kpano and Gbumgbum.
Bibir-Ghana would among other things, form reading
clubs in the five communities, and also revive existing ones formed by World
Vision to imbibe the culture of reading among children in the beneficiary communities.
However, the aforementioned reasons assigned to the
falling educational standards by stakeholders, are not so different from what educational
authorities also outlined recently at a similar forum.
They include candidates lack of adequate
understanding of simple concepts in their subject areas; incomplete coverage of
syllabus; 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.
The rest are inappropriate use of
instructional hours by teachers; lack of parental supervision and monitoring of
children’s learning behaviour; 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.
As a result, of the 22 Junior High Schools
presented by the Savelugu-Nanton Municipal Directorate of the Ghana Education
Service for the 2012 Basic Education Certificate Examination, 15 schools scored
below 40 percent representing 68.20 percent.
The Executive Director of Bibir-Ghana Joseph Charles
Osei, said by the end of September 2014, an estimated 234 children from the
five beneficiary communities would have been able to read and write as well as solve
some basic arithmetic problems with ease.
World Vision ADP Manager |
He said there would be a quiz competition towards the
end of the programme to assess the competence of children who participated in
it and those who emerge winners would be rewarded.
Area Development Programme Manager of World
Vision-Ghana in the Savelugu-Nanton Municipality, Michael Kingsley Dohzie,
explained that the aim of the organisation’s education project is to improve
access and quality of basic education for approximately 11,000 children leading
to improved learning outcomes.
He
also cited improved literacy, numeracy and essential life skills in primary
education leading to increased knowledge of teachers in literacy and numeracy
instructional methodology and increased learning opportunities for children.
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