• GES has described Professor Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang comment on WASSCE performance as unfair
• Prof Naana Opoku-Agyemang is reported to have said that students cheated their way to get good results hence it is needless to celebrate their performance
• At least 411 out of the 465 candidates who scored 8As in the 2020 WASSCE were students from Ghana, and beneficiaries of the Free SHS policy
The Ghana Education Service (GES) has dismissed claims that Ghana recorded impressive WASSCE results because of leaked examination questions.
Their reactions stem from a pronouncement by former education minister Professor Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang who attributed the excellent ‘Free SHS’ WASSCE results to leaked papers.
Speaking on the Asaase Breakfast Show, the deputy director-general of the GES, Dr Kwabena Tandoh described Prof Opoku-Agyemang’s comments as unfortunate.
“If there were leaks, the reactions that Prof Opoku-Agyemang called an earthquake in terms of the students’ displeasure with the way the exams went, it wouldn’t have made sense, because anybody who had leaks of exams questions obviously cannot come out and be angry and destroy property.”
He believes that such comments bring the office of the Ghana Education Service into disrepute.
“For GES, it was quite shocking to hear that because we had students from Holy Child, Achimota, Wesley Girls, Archbishop Porter all these young boys and girls somehow to suggest that there was a coordinated effort among GES, schools, children to leak exams papers to all these children, it questions the integrity of everybody so we are wholly disappointed in the unfortunate statement of the former education minister,” he said.
At least 411 out of the 465 candidates who scored 8As in the 2020 WASSCE were students from Ghana and beneficiaries of the Free SHS policy.
Again, 2020 was the only year that 50% of Ghanaian students scored A1 to C6 in all core subjects, official records at WAEC said.
Prof Opoku-Agyemang on WASSCE results
Prof Opoku-Agyemang in an interview with Woezor TV questioned why Ghanaians are celebrating the outstanding performance of the SHS students in the 2020 WASCCE exams.
“We have also heard and seen students who wrote an exam, came out and it was like, you know we had an earthquake in this country, it wasn’t like one school or two schools … this same group performance is supposed to be outstanding that we shouldn’t be talking, it is the group I am referring to,” she said.
She added: “And they went and wrote the exams we heard of the leakage of the exams, we heard of invigilators being compromised, we heard many things and we also saw the students come out and speak about, ‘no this is not what we were told will happen’, now these students have As and we are happy? It is up to us.”