Builsa South MP Dr Clement Abass Apaak has added his voice to the countless call by stakeholders for government to review its flagship Free Senior High School (SHS) programme.
According to him, although there is an increase in enrollment of students in schools, monies invested in the programmes do not correlate to the quality of students produced.
“The Free Senior High School has led to an increase in enrollment but with poor learning outcomes, I think that is very significant.
"It is largely because of that component of poor learning outcomes that justifies the call by John Mahama and the likes of Prof Ayettey, Prof Addae-Mensah, Kofi Asare of Education Watch, and Dr Partey of the Institute of Educational Studies. Are we getting value for money and the answer is no,” he said.
Speaking on JoyNews Newsfile, he explained that his colleagues in academia have raised concerns about the poor standards of students from the second-cycle institution.
“You can call a few of my colleagues who are at the universities and lecturers and ask them, about the quality of students, who are coming through these days. They will tell you that the quality is unsatisfactory.
“There are agitations from colleagues who are in academia, proposing the need to institute entrance examination because we have students who have very good grades and yet when they get to the university they are struggling to cope with tertiary level educational activities,” he said.
When asked if Free SHS is to be blamed for the quality or lack he spoke about, Dr Apaak said “The second cycle institution is the feeder level that feeds into tertiary so when you have lecturers at the tertiary levels complaining about the quality of students that they have to deal with, then we must go back to look at the source of students who go on to take positions at the Tertiary level.”
The Free SHS programme is amongst the sixteen projects the government is expected to review as part of its conditionalities to obtain the second tranche of money from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
On the back of this, Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah on May 24, 2023, revealed that the government already had plans to review the programme.
Latest Stories
-
Queenmother calls on President-elect Mahama to appoint more women in his government
7 minutes -
Atletico Madrid beat Barcelona to go top of La Liga
25 minutes -
Usyk breaks Fury’s heart with points win in rematch
28 minutes -
Ghana-Russia Centre to run Russian language courses in Ghana
6 hours -
The Hidden Costs of Hunger: How food insecurity undermines mental and physical health in the U.S.
6 hours -
18plus4NDC marks 3rd anniversary with victory celebration in Accra
9 hours -
CREMA workshop highlights collaborative efforts to sustain Akata Lagoon
9 hours -
2024/25 Ghana League: Heart of Lions remain top with win over Basake Holy Stars
10 hours -
Black Queens: Nora Hauptle shares cryptic WAFCON preparation message amid future uncertainty
11 hours -
Re-declaration of parliamentary results affront to our democracy – Joyce Bawah
11 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Vision FC score late to deny Young Apostles third home win
11 hours -
Enhancing community initiatives for coastal resilience: Insights from Keta Lagoon Complex Ramsar Site Workshop
11 hours -
Family Health University College earns a Presidential Charter
11 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Bibiani GoldStars beat Nsoatreman to keep title race alive
11 hours -
GPL 2024/25 Bechem United keep title hopes alive with narrow win over FC Samartex
12 hours