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Debate over SHS duration is unnecessary-NAGRAT

Mon, 4 Oct 2010 Source: xfm95.1

The Vice President of the National Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT)

has decried the ongoing brouhaha surrounding the reversion of the Senior

High School (SHS) duration from four to three years.

To Angel Kabonu, the debate over whether SHS duration should be three or

four is a non-starter that should not come up at all if government will want

to concentrate on delivering quality education. ³It is unfortunate that the

debate has been reduced to three years-four years. That debate is a non

starter as far as education delivery is concerned², Mr Kabonu told Emefa

Apawu, host of the Big Bite on Xfm 95.1, a private commercial radio station

in Accra.

The number of years for SHS education became a matter of priority when the

opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP), when in government increased the

duration from three to four years.

The ruling National Democratic Congress(NDC), then in opposition protested

vehemently against the increase and promised that one of the first things

the party would do in the education sector when it wins power was to abolish

the four year duration to the earlier three year programme.

This the government did shortly after assuming the reins of government.

The NPP which seems not to be too happy with the change is demanding from

the NDC government an explanation why the Senior High School duration has

been reverted to three years. According to the party, since no significant

improvement has occurred in the school system under the Mills¹

administration, there was no need to squeeze the high school program from

four to three years.

However, to Mr Kabonu, the duration of the Senior High Education, is not as

important as what goes into education. He gave an example to further stress

home his point. ³For example, when you have good facilities, motivated

teachers and a congenial environment, and you put a student who is doing SHS

for two years, and then you have a very deplorable environment, unmotivated

teachers and you put a student who is doing SHS for 10 years, definitely,

the student who has two years is going to do better than the one with 10

years,² adding that ³so the issue is actually not about duration.²

Mr Kabonu who said he felt very uncomfortable and disturbed talking about

this issue said what government officials should concern themselves with is

what the content of education is and not necessarily its duration. ³In fact,

I get a little bit disturbed that we have reduced education delivery to this

duration. That is absolutely not the issue. The issue is what facilities

have we provided for our people? What is the environment for education in

this country? What is the content of education, what type of teachers stand

in front of the students to deliver education?² He said as long as these

issues remain unsolved, the high percentage of students failing in the end

of year exams will continue to increase.

He attributed the problems within the education sector in this country to

the lack of adaptation in the sector. ³We are a people that are so

conservative, who do not want to respond to change. We find change very

difficult and offensive. He said the over reliance on theoretical teaching

and what he called the ³classroom-based certificate-education² would

continue to be our bane if nothing pragmatic is done to arrest the problem

associated with education in the country. ³You have a situation where

students engage in practical activities outside the schools and they earn

credit for that. You come to our jurisdiction and all that we do is to hold

the student in class, subject him to a three-hour examination and this

determines the student¹s intellectuality for the past three or four years

the student has spent in school. No serious country is doing this. Secondly,

we are concentrating on theoretical teaching. You have a science student who

can really recall all the scientific theories but does not know any

practical issue. We have people who have gone through university education,

who have their Masters in engineering, meanwhile when their cars have

problems, they cannot even fix them. This is the problem of education in

this country and until the time that we change, we would just be running

around in circles².

Abena Asiedua Tenkorang/ Robert Israel Xfm95.1 Accra, Ghana

Source: xfm95.1