Accra, Oct 29, – A new World Bank
report on education says in Ghana less than 10 per cent of children of primary
age (age six-11) are out of school.
The World Bank Group Education
report 2018 dubbed “Facing forward: Schooling with Learning in Africa” said 16
per cent of kids from the poorest quintile were out of school and that there
was gender distinction at primary level.
Mrs Eunice Ackwerh, the Senior
Education Specialist, World Bank Country Office, who presented an overview of
the report on Ghana, said access to education had increased, but challenges
relating to age of entry and repetition remained.
She said age of entry was a
persistent challenge to enrollment rate monitoring, which shows barriers to
access for on time enrollment related to supply of easily accessible basic
schools for example.
The report, which compared Ghana
to Senegal, Burkina Faso and Malawi, indicated that in Ghana, there was
relatively consistent attendance through basic education.
It said at the secondary level,
there was a much bigger drop off since there was an entrance examination and
placement process limited to those “qualifying” based on the number of places
available.
The report said Ghana conducts
national education assessments every two years but there was the need for more
formative assessments to feedback into schools and to measure intermediate
results of student competencies.
It said while the Basic Education
Certificate Exam (BECE) was normative and used to place students into Senior
high school, students were not tested again until end of Senior High School
(West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination) for entrance to university.
It noted that by participating in
the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) through 2011,
Ghana saw increases in each year of testing (albeit from a low starting point).
It said Ghana had been
participating in EGRA/EGMA since 2013 with support from USAID, however the
results had been questioned by policy makers because of the low learning levels
revealed across both some local languages and English.
The report said in Ghana, schools
lack basic services to provide quality education.
The report, which compares Ghana
to the Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) average of percentage of primary schools with
access to basic services in 2013, indicated that for toilet, Ghana had 58 per
cent while that of SSA was 69 per cent.
For portable water, Ghana scores
45, whereas that of the SSA was 51 per cent; however for electricity Ghana’s
performance was 31 per cent, while that of the SSA was 25 per cent.
Policy direction for Ghana, the
report recommended early investment; adding that quality pre-primary was
critical especially in order to develop non-cognitive foundational skills.
It said Early Childhood Education
could interrupt the low skills equilibrium improving schooling, jobs, and even
earnings called for alignment of curricula, teacher training, materials and
assessments around goal of foundational skills for all.
It said there was the need to
recognise inequality in learning opportunities - disadvantaged children attend
schools that are also disadvantaged adding“Our policies need to help level
playing field and address particular challenges to learning for these
children,” .
It advocated quality-enhancing,
non-teacher-related inputs, define and implement standards for minimum school
facilities“ Education doesn’t currently build literacy effectively- students
can go through school without learning basic foundational skills in reading,
maths and science,” and called for improvement in teacher management and
support.
It said additional time for
learning, school feeding and more/better teachers demonstrated impact as well.
Dr Beatrix Allah-Mensah, World
Bank Senior Country Officer, said: “Schooling is not the same as learning and
here in Ghana we are well aware of education failing some of our students,
particularly children from low-income communities”.
She noted that education should
equip students with the skills they need to contribute to their society.“The
recent expansion in education is impressive- and Ghana deserves significant
praise for its achievements in almost universal access to basic education,”.
“Ghana’s access indicators are
the envy of many African countries, however, this contradicts the low learning
levels, measured by several national and international assessments that
indicate that even if students attend school, they may leave without the very
basic skills for literacy and numeracy,” she added.
Dr David Evans, a Lead Economist
on the team for the 2018 World Development Report, who gave an overview of the
report, said countries that provide better education had faster and sustainable
economic growth.
GNA

No comments:
Post a Comment