Press Release
September 30, 2011
Akufo-Addo sad over BECE results
The
2012 Presidential Candidate of the New Patriotic Party,
Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has stated that the results
of Junior High School students who sat for the recent
Basic Education Certificate Examination give credence to
why “I have made education, education, education, a high
priority of an Akufo-Addo administration.”
According to the NPP flagbearer, “this year’s BECE
results are at best, negatively, consistent with the
results of previous years, except we have more people
failing this year, and facing a very bleak future
prospect.”
In an exclusive interview
with the New Crusading Guide, Nana Addo lamented what he
sees as a lack of commitment from the authorities to
take decisive action against this phenomenon of high
failure rates.
“We are making no progress at
this level, the basic level, which to me is the most
important level of a child’s development. It appears
clearly that our Junior High School system is failing
our kids and we need a government that can put a lot
more meaningful emphasis on improving standards at that
level.”
Nana Addo says, “We need to
give our children quality education and we need to give
our children the needed skills for the job market. The
number of children who have been failed by the
educational system over the years and those who continue
to be failed by the system require that we approach the
prevailing crisis with a two-prong solution: quality
education and skills acquisition.”
Nana Addo continued, “I mean
access to quality education for every Ghanaian child. As
a country we should also focus more on reforming and
expanding, significantly, the vocational and
technical aspects of our education system.”
He
explains further, “This is necessary in order to create
the necessary skills for the industrialisation project,
which in my opinion, is the most important project for
any government worth its stewardship.”
Nana Addo says his programme for Ghana, if elected, he
would use his period in office to change the structure
of the economy, from producer of raw materials, to an
industrialised economy.
But, “we need an educated and skilled workforce to make
it happen that is why I have made education, skills and
industrialisation for jobs” my main campaign message.
Explaining his point, Nana
Addo stated that the adoption and application of science
and technology, not only to our educational system but
to our businesses, especially the small and medium scale
enterprises, is the way forward.
“It is through this value
addition component of our economy that we can create the
desired numbers of decent jobs with decent pay for our
people which will subsequently raise the necessary
income, as well as taxes, to provide an effective public
service sector for our nation and also ensure guarantee
prosperity for every Ghanaian”, Nana Addo added.
When asked what he would do differently to ensure his
vision is realised, Nana Addo stated that basic school
would be expanded from the JHS level to the SHS level.
Nana Addo reiterated his commitment of making SHS free
for every child within the first four years of his
administration.
“Making SHS free will
increase enrolment. The focus, however, is not only on
increasing enrolment, but on providing quality education
for every child no matter where the child lives in
Ghana,” Nana Addo said.
He
says, his Education Policy carries the theme ‘Teacher
First’, because the quest for quality education will
remain elusive unless the situation of teaching and the
teacher is resolved comprehensively.
The
NPP flag bearer spelt out what he describes as the tried
and tested three R’s namely – Recruitment, Retention and
Retraining.
For example, statistic shows
that there is a shortage of about 24,000 teachers in
Ghana’s educational system.
“We
need to make it attractive to recruit more teachers and
train more people to give our children quality
education. Teaching shouldn’t be the last option for our
students who pass out from school in search of jobs. We
are committed to this because it is at the foundation of
the kind of prosperous Ghana we want to build.”
The
NPP is committed to using a significant amount of
Ghana’s oil proceeds for education. “Since education is
critical to industrialisation, we see education as a
capital investment. We will, therefore, spend
responsibly and courageously on education”.
The NPP flagbearer says this will result in the
expansion of training facilities for the training of
more teachers “because if we’re going to have more
students at the secondary level, then we’ll need more
teachers.
“If we’re to give better
education to our children, then we have to retain them
in the classrooms. Retention of teachers will mean we
will have to improve their conditions of service.”
He
says the NPP will not compromise on the critical issue
of quality education. “The sort of quality education
that allows a poor child from Moseoso in Atiwa, to get
the opportunity to study in Yale and subsequently become
the first presiding bishop of the Methodist Church of
Ghana, is what we would want for every Ghanaian child of
the 21st Century,” he looks back, with reference to the
Most Rev. Dr. Asante Antwi, who launched his
autobiography yesterday.
The
NPP flagbearer launched the book at the Trinity College,
Legon. The autobiography, ‘Samuel Asante Antwi - Living
Story’, in Nana Addo’s words, is “a 160-page story of
perseverance, hard work, culture, history, patriotism,
Christian teachings and success. It is a story of what
should be possible today and what was possible even for
a poor, village boy in colonial, pre-independence
Ghana.”
He continued on Rev Dr Asante
Antwi, “The story of his life, depicting his rise
through a society of limited opportunities but great
aspirations to becoming the First Presiding Bishop of
the Methodist Church of Ghana, can be best summed up in
the words of the great founder of Methodism, John
Wesley: Do all the good you can, By all the means you
can, In all the ways you can, In all the places you can,
At all the times you can, To all the people you can, As
long as ever you can.”
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