Teachers, parents
cautioned against “dubious fairy tales”
Saltpond (C/R), Dec. 7, GNA – Mrs Justina Esenam
Torjagbo, Central Regional Director of
Education, has expressed concern about the use
of fairy tales with dubious characters for
entertaining children in the homes and at
school.
In a speech read for her at the annual
conference of teachers of Ahmadiyya Muslim
Schools in Central Region at Saltpond, Mrs
Torjagbo noted that even though some of the
characters were portrayed as cheats, swindlers
and thieves parents and teachers seemed to
endorse them by not frowning on their behaviour.
“As a result children grow up to behave like
them,” she held and called on teachers to select
stories that challenge children to think and
come out of difficult situations or solve
problems..”
The Regional Director of Education said things
that contributed to children growing up to
resign their fate to supernatural powers should
be discouraged.
Mr Frank Eshun, Central Regional Chairman of
Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT),
called for a review of the curriculum for
teacher training colleges to take into account
partnership between the colleges and schools.
Mr Eshun, who is the Headmaster of Obrachire
Secondary Technical School, said in order to
ensure that the teacher develop and grow in
knowledge and methodology, there was the need to
establish effective in-service programmes to
take over from where the training colleges left
off.
Speaking on “Challenges of the Educational
Reforms to Teachers”, the GNAT Chairman
intimated that no education policy could succeed
without teacher motivation and attention to
provision of educational facilities and
effective monitoring and supervision.
Miss Vivian Etroo, Mfantseman District Director
of Education, noted that the inability of pupils
to read and understand what they have read was
the cause of their poor performance in
examinations.
Speaking on “Falling Education Standards, what
to do,” Miss Etroo said out of 3,010 students
presented for the 2006 Basic Education
Certificate Examination (BECE) in the District,
only 1,021, representing 33 per cent, had
aggregate six to 30 required by a student to
qualify for admission into a Senior Secondary
School.
Mr Rorbert Quainoo-Arthur, Mfantseman District
Chief Executive (DCE), urged teachers to
constantly upgrade themselves, saying, “this
world of ours is so dynamic that what was
yesterday, might not be applicable today, you
need to prepare yourselves to be able to catch
up with the changing world, particularly in the
area of Information Communication Technology (ICT).
“I do not believe that the future will belong to
those who are content with the present, I do not
believe the future will belong to the cynics, or
to those who stand on the sideline. The future
will belong to those who have passion and to
those who are willing to make personal
commitment to make the country better.
The future will belong to those who believe in
the beauty of their dreams,” the DCE stated.
Mr Osam Abakah, Central Regional Manager of
Ahmadiyya Muslim Education Unit, said the Unit
had 13 Kindergartens, 16 Primary, 15 Junior
secondary Schools and two Senior Secondary
Schools in the Region.
Mr Jibrin Dimbie, general Manager, Ahmadiyya
Muslim Education Unit, urged teachers not to
regard children as being ignorant.
The General Manager urged teachers not to
frustrate children because of poor condition of
service, saying teachers knew the conditions
before choosing to be a teacher.
The theme for the day’s conference was
“Education as Key to Good Moral Life and
National Development – the role of the Teacher”.
GNA