The Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) has underscored the need for early childhood educators to be resourced to discharge their duties effectively.
It was important that the right opportunities were created for them to upgrade their knowledge, skills and teaching methodologies, President of the Association, Phillipa Larsen advocated.
According to the Ghana Living Standard Survey conducted in 2020, about 651,000 children in the country were at age four, which was the school-going age.
Ms Larsen, speaking at the National Early Childhood Educators (ECE) Representatives meeting at Abankro in the Ejisu Municipality of the Ashanti Region, bemoaned the non-recognition and respect for ECEs in the country.
“It has been perceived that teachers who teach at that level are not brilliant and skilled.
“However, this is not true, because the ECEs remain some of the best tutors on the Ghanaian scene since they are the foundation builders for all pupils,” the GNAT President emphasized.
Consequently, issues impeding their work such as inadequate classrooms to cater for the growing number of children, welfare issues and the lack of furniture, teaching and learning materials ought to be addressed.
Ms Larsen pointed out that this was necessary to enhance effective teaching and learning for the benefit of the Ghanaian child.
The programme saw the ECEs drawn from the 16 regions across the country, going through the Early Childhood Education Policy, the New Curriculum and the Universal Design for Learning.
It was designed to lift the professional status of the practitioners in early childhood education.
The GNAT President said once a new curriculum was implemented, there was the need for the ECEs to upgrade their knowledge and skills, and rise above just being mere care-takers.
She drew attention to challenges at the infants’ level, stemming from the designing of their classrooms, feeding and support for parents.
Ms Larsen called on the teachers to demonstrate actionable and practical steps towards children’s holistic development.
General Secretary, GNAT, Mr Thomas Tanko Musa, said good early childhood education ought to be strengthened and supported to make teaching and learning of infants more enjoyable.
“The child who does not have a good educational basis and cannot read and write before basic three is likely to drop out of school with the attendant negative consequences such as child labour and streetism,” he observed.
Director for Early Childhood Education at the Ghana Education Service (GES), Madam Barbara Ntow, called on all stakeholders in education to support the implementation of the ECE Policy to give impetus to infant education.
Latest Stories
-
Nigerian-born conquers childhood hearing loss to become KNUST’s overall best graduating student
6 mins -
ECOWAS Court orders compensation for violations against New Force’s Shalimar Abbiusi
18 mins -
Dreams FC denies allegations of attempting to sign Najeeb Yakubu
1 hour -
Election 2024: ‘Right to free and fair elections non-negotiable’ – Akufo-Addo
1 hour -
Kurt Okraku took out my passport from the U23 squad that travelled to Japan – Najeeb Yakubu alleges
2 hours -
Where hope fails: Ghana’s decaying home for the destitute
2 hours -
NDC Mining Committee for 2024 campaign refutes allegations of recruiting thugs for elections
2 hours -
Traction Control: A lifesaver with an off switch? Here’s why it exists
2 hours -
I don’t need anyman to woo me with money – Miss Malaika 2024 winner refutes pimping claims
2 hours -
”Kurt Okraku sabotaged my national team career because I refused to sign with Dreams FC” – Najeeb Yakubu
2 hours -
Businesses urged to leverage Generative AI for enhanced customer engagement
2 hours -
MultiChoice Ghana partners with Ghana Hotels Association to elevate guest entertainment
2 hours -
Bawumia’s music streaming app or Mahama’s pay-per-view TV channel?
2 hours -
Karpowership Ghana empowers 40 Takoradi Technical University students with scholarship
2 hours -
We expect significant reduction in prices of petroleum products in coming weeks – CEO AOMC
3 hours