MR PRESIDENT, HALF A MILLION BECE FAILURES IN 3 YEARS IS
A THREAT TO NATIONAL SECURITY
Asare
Otchere-Darko
Ghanadot, Oct 27,
2011
According to statistics published this week in London on
the 2,000 people charged over the August riots in
England, there is a strong connection between a failing
education system and social tensions.
More poignantly, kids who fail
in schools are more likely to fall prey to the
underworld of crime and delinquency.
Specifically, the England figures that those arrested
for the riots were poorer, younger and of lower
educational achievement than average. The UK government
figures show 13% of those arrested were gang members;
66% or two-thirds of the 1,984 young people in court
were classed as being under-achievers or having some
form of special educational need, compared to 21% for
the national average.
Moreover, more than a third of young people who were
involved in the riots had been excluded from school, for
one bad deed or the other, during 2009-10 - this
compares with Department for Education records showing
6% exclusions for all Year 11 pupils. Some 90% of those
brought before the courts were male and about half were
aged under 21. Only 5% were over the age of 40.
In short, many of the young people arrested for the
riots came from deprived areas.
Deprived neighbourhoods, whether in London or Accra,
Chicago or Tamale, tend to lack the institutions and
organisations that help improve life outcomes, such as
good schools. Again research shows that young residents
in deprived areas are less likely to have access to
stimulating learning environments such as parks or use
community services that promote healthy development.
Moreover, the stigmatisation of neighbourhoods by both
society, at large, and public institutions further
inflates the low expectations and life chances of
residents in repressive ways.
According to Faiza Shaheen, a UK-based researcher on
economic inequality, 30 years of literature, from Europe
and across the Atlantic, has documented the outcomes
when social housing, unemployment and poverty is
concentrated in neighbourhoods. And, these outcomes
range from higher levels of crime, poor academic
achievements, to poorer health.
In the US, there is evidence that once unemployment and
high school drop-outs hit a certain level (a
‘tipping-point’) in a neighbourhood there is a
mushrooming of social problems including crime. This
mushrooming is related to the influence of peer groups,
i.e. the way negative behaviour of the people around you
can in turn strongly affect your behaviour.
When earlier in the month, Nana Akufo-Addo, the
flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party, delivered his
‘Teacher First’ education policy statement, there was
one key point that he made, which seemed to have been
lost in the subsequent debates. He said:
“We need to reverse the current trend which sees half of
students failing at the BECE level at 15 as minors who
are not old enough to be employed, yet who are
considered old enough by the system to leave basic
school, but to a future of grave uncertainties. In five
years, that could amount to an additional one million
young men and women in our streets without any form of
employable skills. We need to bring an end to this
disastrous phenomenon. We cannot afford failing 50% of
our youth. It is potentially a major threat to our
national security.”
Figures from the West African Examinations Council show
that the pass-rate of students who sat for the Basic
Education Certificate Examination has been on a constant
downward decline since 2009. In sum, out of the total
number of 1,121,817 students who sat for the BECE in the
past three years, 574,688 failed to achieve the pass
mark.
This means that more than half a million young people,
with an average age of 15 years, have
been thrown onto the streets with no employable skills
in the past three years alone.
This is a clear indication of a dangerous trend in
falling standards in education, especially at the most
important stage of a child’s formative years, the basic
education level.
That is why the Danquah Institute is calling on
Government to pay attention to this serious crisis in
the quality of education at the basic level and take
urgent, decisive and sustainable action to arrest this
negative development.
We are making this call because, otherwise, we fear
that, if this trend of high failure rate continued, the
nation risked banishing about half of its young
generation to lurching on the fringes of society, a
phenomenon that could have dangerous national security
ramifications for Ghana in
the near future.
The 2011 results of BECE students have been the worst in
13 years, using 1998 as the base year, with 46.93% of
students achieving a pass rate and thus being eligible
for placement into Senior High Schools. Out of the
375,280 students who sat for the 2011 examination, only
176,128 passed their examinations with the fate of
199,152 students now doomed to a grim future of
uncertainties.
In 2010, 350,888 students sat for the examination.
172,359 of them, representing 49.12%, achieved a pass
rate. That was worse than the 2009 pass rate of 50.21%,
confirming the worrying trend of worsening results.
The 2008 batch of BECE students performed comparatively
better than 2007 and 2009, with 210,282 students out of
the 338,292 who sat the examination scoring between
aggregates six and 30, thus meeting the requirements for
placement into second-cycle schools under the
Computerised Schools Selection and Placement System.
This represents a percentage pass rate of 62.16%.
Figures from the WAEC reveal that 61.28% of students
passed the 2007 BECE examination.
While the average pass rate in the last 3 years, under
the National Democratic Congress, has fallen by more
than 12 percentage points to 48.75% the New Patriotic
Party, in its 8 years, achieved an average pass rate of
61.25% for students who sat the BECE examination. 2001,
the first year of President J A Kufuor, represented the
lowest point of BECE results under the NPP’s tenure with
60.40% of students achieving a pass rate. What the
results also show is that students did better in the
BECE under the previous NDC government than they are
doing now.
These sudden reversal of students' performance,
resulting in a peculiar constant decline in standards
since 2009 calls for urgent, detailed analysis. It
signifies a crisis in education at the basic level that
requires urgent and deliberate attention from
Government.
The recent falling standards may also be measured
against policy decisions taken by the current
administration. What has been the impact on teaching and
learning from agitations and strike actions by teachers?
What about reduction in real terms in important social
interventions in education?
In an article I wrote a year
ago, “It’s the Poverty, Stupid!” I stressed on the
obvious that all governmental actions must be designed
contextually with the nation’s deep poverty issue in
mind. Typical of this is the high failure rate in
schools.
Analysis of the results
at any given school in any district, point to the
obvious
socio-economic circumstances that constitute the core
cause of lowered scores in many instances.
Ours is a nation where
multitudes have been condemned to a life of urban or
rural anonymity. They are not living; merely existing.
Ghanaians are poor. Our people are very, very poor. My
point is that there is very little any government can do
within its life time to change that mightily, when the
basis of the people’s adversity and misery – lack of
education, lack of skills and lack of jobs cannot be
tackled with any radical zeal. The Ghanaian situation
calls for structural transformation of the way things
are to achieve three things: (i) access to quality
education for every Ghanaian child; (ii) acquisition of
relevant, practical, employable skills for the youth;
(iii) integrated industrialization that adds value to
economic activities, especially at the SME level.
Every Ghanaian mother may be
willing to accept her own limitedness if given credible
assurance that her children are likely to have a better
life. Some fathers want to make sure
their human dignity –
of being able to provide the basic necessities of life
to their wards — is not taken away by the inadequacies
of their circumstances.
As I wrote sometime back, there is nothing that
subtracts dignity from our humanity than not being able
to care for the children you bear. Will he or she grow
up in a society of opportunities? What, with less than
half of JHS graduates earning a pass grade? What happens
to the majority who didn’t pass? What investments have
been made in vocational and technical educations, from
where the majority of skills that make any nation
develop are churned? Why should Hope be hanged so high
up beyond the reach of the many who only want it to
inspire them, motivate them, and serve as a pillow to
their daydreams. Why all so high?
The Danquah Institute feels that to fail our children is
the worst crime that any government can commit against a
nation’s future. The destiny of Ghana, as a peaceful,
prosperous and free society can only be realized if we
make the quality of education we offer to every Ghanaian
child a national priority. Surely, we can offer a future
of enhanced opportunities for our kids. Yes, we can!
And, we must!
gabby@danquahinstitute.org
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