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Adulterating Ghana’s Education System

Mon, 17 May 2010 Source: Dickens, Thomas

The cliché that education is the key to success is undoubtedly one maxim seriously

understood in Ghana. Anyone who doubts this may want to go the length and breath of

Ghanato see how many

private schools ably given the sobriquets of Academy or Preparatory

schools there are. It must be given to understand that I trust Education is a

country’s breath of life without which any such

nation—civilised or uncivilised-- is doomed. My problem at the moment is against the

mercenary taskmasters who are bent upon destroying

education in Ghanaand I feel it is only right to raise a strident

advocacy against the numerous charlatans, worst and despicable than

Squeers and all the Yorkshireschoolmasters put together.

I once saw an educator with the following written

on a T-Shirt he was wearing: “All professionals can boast but, the

teacher taught them all!” If this dictum should be trusted, then I have

some qualms about the unchecked mushrooming of basic schools in Ghana. I am focusing

on the primary

school education in Ghanaas a form of giving credit to the Biblical

truism of teaching the child the way he should go so that he does not depart from it

when he grows

up. It is therefore—in my view-- of paramount importance that early

childhood edification is conducted in an apposite manner as it is what

possesses the potential of forming good or bad citizens. The massive

disregard of education, especially in the hinterlands, where children

are taught next to nothing; with some of them unable to write their own

names (shocking, isn’t it?) after school, with proprietors charging

exorbitant fees, should be a concern to every well-meaning Ghanaian.

Ghanais

essentially littered with very pricey private schools, with some having

circus-like school uniforms. What should preoccupy us is certainly the

rationale for setting up these schools and not the fancy dress uniforms

the poor pupils are made to wear like some forlorn prisoners. The first

guess is that the originators of these schools are only interested in

conducting savages into a modern terrain of civilisation. But, a second

deeper look is all it takes to realise that forming good citizens or

future leaders is the last thing on the list of these founders-- if it

happens to be there at all among their very many motives. The point is that: if the

doctor is held responsible if his

operation of a patient goes wrong; if the economist is charged if he

messes up the finances of a country; if the architect is blamed if the

house he designs is defective and the mechanic is slapped with

legally-motivated compensatory claims when the car he builds is

substandard; what then happens to the swindler who tutors these

professionals if he happens to be woefully inadequate with the knowledge he claims

to possess to want to impart?

I hate to mention this but despondently, the monstrous

neglect of education as a way of forming good citizens and so-called

future leaders has brought in its wake the quite superfluous production

of schools by some people who see education as their short cut to

riches! The prominent private schools, I will say without fear or

favour, seem to have taken it into their heads that churning the best of grades out

of their pupils is the best form of education without any

intention of developing their mental faculty to its full capacity. I

have come across a lot of people whose grades pit them against the likes of

Einstein, Newton, Aristotle and Plato, to mention a few but whose

level or reasoning is like that of a naked man on the street who accuses everybody

of being crazy. A lot of "intelligent" people cannot even

think on their feet; consequently, any problem whose solution is outside their

textbooks always leaves them dumbfounded, fumbling for ideas.

Dejectedly, this is the type of education many preparatory schools or

academies are inculcating into our younger brothers and sisters in this 21st Century.

For this reason, I must reiterate that while

the description of the education system in Ghanaas derelict,

dilapidated and ramshackle may be considered offensive; I must apologise to use them

as they are only an understatement with regards to the

gruesome neglect of these schools and must not be seen as the writer's

penchant for exaggeration. It is poignantly distressing to observe that

men who have proven their unfitness for any occupation in life are free, without

examination or qualification, to open a school anywhere;

although the preparation for the functions they undertake, is required in the

surgeon who

assists to bring a child into the world, or might one day assist

perhaps, to send him out of it—in the chemist whose prescription can

chase away a nagging illness or rather jeopardise a rather healthy

person into an early grave.

Nevertheless, the irresponsibility of some parents and their helpless children

make these petty school owners the millionaires who should be accorded

the highest form of respect in the land. Many are the parents whose main priority is

how many “A” grades their wards can make while in a

particular academy. Most importantly, these Shylock school founders know what

colourfully embellished language to use on radio advertisements to get these grade

chasers to part with their moneys and abet their

chosen pedagogues to distort the brains of their children for eternity.

Is it any wonder that we are always being taken for a ride by a few

politicians whose impeccable resort to sophistry, as distasteful as it

is, is mistaken for the astuteness of Solomon? But since majority of Ghanaians are

ready to believe some of

these half-educated politicians and what they expound to them—and with

scores of people refusing to think for themselves-- the devil is

certainly bound to have all the best tunes. This is why when a fairly

balanced opinion is expressed, sympathisers of some political parties

and some disgusting "tribalists" route for abuses simply because of an

inexplicably extreme form of bigotry or brutish logic due to the

stagnation of their brains caused by the nebulous education system being talked about.

With financial gains as the reason for opening schools,

these school proprietors are just traders in the avarice. These

ignorant, sordid, brutal men, to whom a few considerate persons would

entrust the board and lodging of a dog, form the worthy cornerstone of a structure,

which, for absurdity and a magnificent high-handed

laissez-aller abandon, has rarely been exceeded in this world! I do not

need to mention the reasons why boarding houses of such schools have

become a den for criminality, a lair for drug abusers and a practising brothel for

future prostitution and prostitutes. Has anyone mulled over our

education system producing graduates with no jobs to occupy them? Well,

it appears that is the raison d'être of some graduates using the school system as a

springboard to future “better” jobs. How pathetic!

That many troop into the Police Service with its paradoxical motto of

“Service with Integrity”, the Immigration and the Customs Excise and

Preventive Services as a means of enriching themselves in the shortest

possible time in occupation.

Let anyone come out and say what a nation we

expect of Ghanafor posterity when pedagogic moral moulders trade grades

for sexual favours from their female students. These people who are fit

for teaching pigs relegate pedagogy to the background and end up

polluting innocent children both morally and academically. With their

dodgy money-making managers at the helm of affairs, the most vital

preoccupation of some of these teachers who need to school themselves on how to pass

on knowledge to others only force children to fill their

heads with irrelevant nonsensical understanding. Children are thus forced to “chew

the cud” as they have

to commit so many unimportant stuffs to memory and become the bleating

sheep of George Orwell’s Animal Farm. Perhaps, it is apt to paraphrase Montaigne's

contention that a

well-formed head is better than a full head!

Need I quote Alexander Pope?: “A little learning is a

dangerous thing; drink deep or taste not the Pierian Spring: there shallow draughts

intoxicate the brain, and drinking largely sobers us again”. We are all

happy to quote this saying to impress our intellectual prowess on others but do we

know where exactly this Pierian Spring is, let alone attempt

to sip it lightly or gulp it down voraciously? A Ghanaian professor will normally

have his name written proudly followed by a long paragraph of

his degrees. Much as I respect these learned folks and envy what they

have achieved, I am quite baffled that they have very little or nothing

to show for their degrees. Edison, Fleming, Einstein, etc, boasted in what they

achieved after years of researches and not their university degrees. We

have thousands of scientists yet, we still import cars and common drugs

from China; we are yet to develop a potent antidote against malaria. We have

thousands of journalists

however, most of them are bedfellows of politicians, who disguise the

truth of which they are meant to be a watchdog; we have very brilliant

economists yet, our economy is so badly broken that the name for it is

now “ecomini”; we have thousands of musicians still, most of the songs

we hear are sampled from other countries. The list can go on and on but

how wretched we look if this is all that we have to show for our 53 years of

Independence.

Furthermore, I would like to acknowledge the aphorism that

there is an exception to every rule as I am not seeking to entangle

myself in the web of a fallacious generalisation argument. It is

therefore noteworthy to say that there are very excellent pedagogues out there. Each

of us can give names of these excellent teachers without

whom we could have landed on the moral and academic rubbish heap where

most youngsters are being dumped now. What I do know of good teachers is that they

choose the profession for the love of it and not as a means

of fulfilling a gap year to better jobs! I have overheard some graduates who go into

teaching with the devilish thought that they will teach

until they find a good job. Such is how the mercenary taskmasters as aforementioned,

are bastardising the noble teaching profession.

Maybe it is about time we reminded ourselves that knowing

all the classical Greek literature, the entire psychology books, every

bit of the philosophy books and being able to recite the whole of

Shakespeare do not make an intelligent person. What are our deductions

from these books? We have read, re-read and memorised the Bible umpteen

times but we always leave ourselves open for impostors with crooked

reasoning and arguments to mislead us. Men who should be titled “Men of

Lies/Darkness” have always entered our homes and led us on to believe

that they represent Light. How many times have we not seen or heard two

people pretending to be part of the same religion but interpret the same literature

differently for their own whims?

Bringing this article to an end, I must reiterate a point I have made earlier: we

hear sometimes of an action of damages against

the unqualified medical practitioner, who has deformed a broken limb in

pretending to heal it. But, what about the hundreds of thousands of

minds that have been forever malformed by the incapable pettifoggers who have

pretended to form them? I am not against the abundance of private

schools in Ghana. All that I am requesting is that the Ghana Education

Service adopts very stringent measures to ensure that the fellow who

stands before twenty to thirty children with the aim of moulding their

mental faculties is both of the highest integrity and pertinent at the shaping of

these young brains.

Thomas Dickens (yesiah2003@yahoo.com).

Columnist: Dickens, Thomas