Tag: Students

  • Sokode SHTS students yet to resume classes after clashes

    Sokode SHTS students yet to resume classes after clashes

    Sokode Senior High Technical School remains without students, despite the scheduled reopening on March 20 after its closure due to recent clashes.

    On February 23, the Volta Regional office of the Ghana Education Service (GES) ordered the indefinite closure of Sokode Senior High Technical School due to violent clashes between students and members of the Sokode community.

    The altercation, which took place on Saturday, February 22, arose from unresolved disputes and left several individuals injured.

    One of the casualties was a journalist from Ho-based Swiss FM, who sustained serious injuries while reporting on the incident.

    When Citi News visited the school, only staff members were present, as students had yet to return.

    School officials informed Citi News that a meeting with parents and relevant stakeholders is scheduled for Monday, March 24, 2025, to address the aftermath of the conflict.

    Meanwhile, management has reassured parents that the school environment is now secure for academic activities, in line with directives from the regional minister.

  • 1st-year tertiary students who have already paid their admission fees will get a refund – Haruna Iddrisu

    1st-year tertiary students who have already paid their admission fees will get a refund – Haruna Iddrisu

    Education Minister-designate Haruna Iddrisu has announced that first-year students at public tertiary institutions will receive a refund for their admission fees.

    He emphasized that this measure is part of President John Mahama’s broader strategy to enhance access to higher education for all.

    Speaking during his vetting before Parliament’s Appointments Committee on Monday, the Tamale South MP disclosed that the government will allocate GH¢345 million to cover the admission fees for students enrolled in general academic programs at tertiary institutions, excluding specialized courses such as medicine.

    “On the authority of President Mahama, and with the approval of the Minister of Finance-designate, Hon. Ato Forson, this provision will be included in the government’s Reset Budget. The funds will ensure that students undertaking courses in the general subject areas have their admission fees refunded,” Haruna Iddrisu said.

    The Minister-designate assured that students who have already settled their admission fees will also benefit from the refund.

    He added, “And for President Mahama, this is a model to experiment. We will look at it. How do we fare as a country? If it’s possible for expansion, then he will expand it. And he’s not asked that if you are able, you should not.”

    The policy honors a commitment made by the National Democratic Congress (NDC) in their 2024 election campaign.

    It forms a key part of a broader reform initiative aimed at expanding access to higher education, with a particular focus on supporting students from financially challenged backgrounds.

  • Those diverting students’ food will face the law – Dr. Apaak warns

    Those diverting students’ food will face the law – Dr. Apaak warns

    Dr.The Member of Parliament for Builsa South, Clement Apaak, has delivered a resolute message to individuals contemplating the misappropriation of food designated for students.

    He firmly declared that such actions would no longer be permitted, warning that perpetrators would face stringent repercussions.

    Dr. Apaak reiterated that resources meant for students must serve their intended purpose and stressed that any effort to redirect or deprive students of these provisions would attract the harshest legal penalties.

    “Let those who have been fleecing the system know that henceforth such conduct will be severely punished. Food meant to feed our wards must be fed to our wards. Anyone caught diverting food or trying to shortchange our students in any way will face the full weight of the law,” he added.

    A viral video captured by an eyewitness has prompted the arrest of a taxi driver allegedly involved in offloading diverted supplies.

    In swift response, the Ghana Education Service (GES) has suspended three officers from Tsito Senior High Technical School in the Volta Region to allow for an in-depth investigation.

    The individuals implicated include Rev. Joy Kafui Akpebu, the Headmaster, Sylvanus Awunyo, the Storekeeper, and Samuel Kwame Ampeh, the Driver. They stand accused of misappropriating 100 cartons of tinned tomatoes intended for student meals.

    This disciplinary action is consistent with Section 8, Clauses (i-v) of the GES Code of Conduct, which permits the service to suspend staff suspected of obstructing investigative efforts.

  • Students in Benin trapped in a collapsed school building amid heavy rain

    Students in Benin trapped in a collapsed school building amid heavy rain

    Several University of Benin (UNIBEN) students are reportedly trapped inside a collapsed storey building in Edo State.

    According to Sahara Reporters, the incident took place on Ekhator Street in Ekosodin, a popular student residential area.

    The building gave way after a heavy downpour on Saturday morning in Benin City.

    Rescue efforts are currently underway.

    A student, who wished to remain anonymous, shared that a university rescue team had managed to free some of the trapped individuals, though many sustained serious injuries.

    According to a witness, the injured victims were swiftly transported to the hospital for treatment.

    “The rescue team is still searching for one victim who remains trapped inside the rubble. It was reported that the victim called from inside the building, pleading for help, and efforts are ongoing to locate and rescue them,” the student said.

    The Dean of Students at UNIBEN is said to be present at the site, overseeing the rescue operations in collaboration with the university’s team.

    At the time of reporting, the university administration has not issued an official statement regarding the cause of the collapse or the exact number of people impacted by the incident.

  • First-year students to report on Sept. 27 for 2024/25 academic year – GES

    First-year students to report on Sept. 27 for 2024/25 academic year – GES

    The Ghana Education Service (GES) has announced that first-year senior high students for the 2024/25 academic year are scheduled to begin classes on Friday, September 27.

    School heads and parents are advised to take note of this date and ensure that their wards are adequately prepared for the new academic term.

    In a press statement released on Tuesday, July 16, the GES outlined the timeline for the first semester, indicating that students will conclude their classes and begin their vacation on December 6.

    “Management of the Ghana Education Service (GES) wishes to inform all heads of Senior High/Senior High Technical Schools that the reopening date for 1st year students of the 2024/2025 academic year is set for September 27,” the statement read.

    The GES assured that all planned activities and programs for the semester will proceed as scheduled without any changes.

    Parents and guardians are encouraged to ensure their children are prepared with the necessary supplies and materials needed for the upcoming academic term.

    School heads are also urged to make the necessary arrangements to welcome the new students and facilitate their smooth integration into the school environment.

  • Ghana included in top 25 countries sending students to the US

    Ghana included in top 25 countries sending students to the US

    A report from Open Doors, published on Monday, November 13, 2023, has it that over 6,400 Ghanaian students pursued studies in the United States during the 2022-2023 academic year.

    The Institute of International Education (IIE) releases the Open Doors Report annually, examining the statistics of international students in the United States.

    “U.S. colleges and universities offer world-class educational opportunities and Ghanaian students in the United States are deepening the ties of friendship, family, and business between our countries.  We are so happy to see Ghanaians seeking to learn, develop their skills, and return to Ghana to benefit their communities,” said U.S. Ambassador to Ghana Virginia Palmer.

    Ghana has entered the top 25 countries globally for sending the highest number of students to the United States.

    In the 2022-2023 academic year, the report indicates that a record 6,468 Ghanaians pursued studies in the United States, marking a significant 31.6 percent increase.

    Among them, 4,140 were enrolled in graduate degree programs, positioning Ghana as the 14th largest source of graduate students to the United States, with a notable 38 percent rise from the previous year.

    In the same period, Ghanaian students secured nearly $9 million in scholarships across 700 educational institutions spanning all 50 states.

    To meet rising demand, the U.S. Embassy processed a record number of student visa applications in the last fiscal year.

    The United States remains the leading destination for international students, hosting over one million (1,057,188) in the 2022-2023 academic year, reflecting a 12 percent increase from the prior year.

    The majority of international students in the United States are pursuing degrees in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM), with mathematics and computer science standing out as the most popular fields of study.

    This year, the U.S. Embassy in Ghana organized the largest-ever EducationUSA college fairs in Accra and Kumasi, attracting over 13,000 students, parents, and academic professionals.

    Through EducationUSA, the U.S. Embassy in Ghana assists qualified individuals in navigating the college application process successfully, with advising centers in Accra and Kumasi at ACE Consult in Asokwa.

    EducationUSA advisers offer personalized guidance both in-person and online to support Ghanaian students in their applications to accredited U.S. higher education institutions.

    Over the past year, advisers from these centers facilitated applications for admission to hundreds of U.S. universities and colleges for thousands of Ghanaian students.

  • Students at Virginia Commonwealth University stage a graduation walkout over a speakers remarks

    Students at Virginia Commonwealth University stage a graduation walkout over a speakers remarks

    Scores of Virginia Commonwealth University students staged a walkout during their graduation ceremony on Saturday, partly in response to remarks made by a speaker, State Governor Glenn Youngkin, regarding campus protests.

    This occurs as school officials across the US prepare for potential disruptions of commencement ceremonies amid protests over the Israel-Gaza conflict.

    Numerous colleges, which have been rocked by protests, are holding graduation events this weekend.

    Since mid-April, over 2,000 individuals have been arrested in connection with the protests.

    Social media posts on Saturday depicted Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) students clad in caps and gowns exiting the venue as Governor Glenn Youngkin began his commencement speech.

    Criticism arose among students regarding Mr. Youngkin’s selection as the speaker for that year’s event, citing his opposition to VCU’s proposed racial literacy requirement and his stance against allowing encampments on college campuses.

    Online videos depict VCU protesters chanting “disclose, divest – we will not stop we will not rest.”

    Across the US, many student protesters are advocating for their schools, some of which possess substantial endowments, to sever financial ties with Israel.

    According to Sereen Haddad, a second-year VCU student involved in organizing the protest, applause drowned out Mr. Youngkin’s speech to the extent that some audience members couldn’t hear him speak.

    Ms. Haddad stated that around 150 individuals, including protesting students who walked out, participated in a march outside the ceremony.

    Thirteen people, including six students, were arrested at VCU when the encampment there was cleared by police on 29 April.

    Mr Youngkin’s speech went on as planned despite the walk-out. He later posted a message on social media congratulating graduates and did not comment on the protest.

    At another commencement on Saturday, the University of California Berkeley Chancellor Carol Christ opened the ceremony by acknowledging the weeks of demonstrations from protesters.

    “I’m saddened by how this conflict has divided students, faculty and staff,” she said, according to the LA Times.

    The remarks drew some applause as well as chants of: “Hey hey, ho ho, the occupation has got to go”.

    Some 20 students stood up and began waving signs, Palestinian flags and chanting, “Free Palestine” as during another speech, the San Francisco Chronicle reported, and they were later joined in chants by more graduates.

    In a statement, UC Berkeley said that the event continued despite being “unfortunately disrupted” and that protesters who left the ceremony did so voluntarily. No one was arrested.

    The protest came a day after eight students wore shirts spelling out “UC divest” during the law school graduation ceremony.

    In the past month, the BBC has counted more than 130 US colleges and universities with protests against the ongoing war in Gaza.

  • Nine university students abducted in Kogi State, Nigeria

    Nine university students abducted in Kogi State, Nigeria


    Gunmen have kidnapped nine university students in central Nigeria’s Kogi State.

    Reports indicate that the assailants targeted the Confluence University of Science and Technology late on Thursday night.

    They stormed into classrooms while students were studying for upcoming exams, firing shots into the air before rounding up a group of students and abducting them.

    Although the Kogi state government confirmed nine abductees, concerns linger that the actual number could be higher.

    Authorities have mobilized security forces to conduct a search and rescue operation for the abducted students.

    “Hundreds of local hunters who understand the terrain as well as the conventional security agents are currently combing the area to ensure safe rescue of the abducted students who were kidnapped in the classrooms,” a statement said.

    Nigeria has experienced a rise in kidnappings – hundreds of people, including children, have been abducted in recent months.

    Some families said they were made to pay ransoms running into thousands of dollars before their loved ones were freed.

  • Students in US intensify rallies against Gaza War nationwide

    Students in US intensify rallies against Gaza War nationwide

    Last week, Columbia University students started a protest against Israel’s war with Hamas. By Tuesday, students from other universities were also joining in by setting up camps, taking over buildings, and not listening to requests to stop.

    Protests had been happening for a few months, but got more intense after over 100 people supporting Palestine were arrested at Columbia University’s upper Manhattan campus on Thursday. Many more protesters were arrested at other schools, and now they may be charged with going into a place illegally or behaving in a disruptive way.

    Because students are scared to go to Columbia, the school will do a mix of in-person and online classes for the rest of the semester. This will finish by the end of next week.

    Police at the nearby New York University arrested 133 protesters on Monday. They were all released with a ticket to go to court for being disruptive. New York City Mayor Eric Adams said that police officers were hit with bottles and other things during protests this week.

    In Connecticut, the police arrested 60 people who were protesting, including 47 students, at Yale University. They were taken into custody because they didn’t want to leave a area in the middle of the campus.

    Yale President Peter Salovey said the protesters did not accept an offer to stop their demonstration and talk with the trustees. School officials gave a lot of warnings, then decided that the situation wasn’t safe. The police then removed the camp and arrested people.

    In the Midwest, on Tuesday, there were protests at the University of Michigan and the University of Minnesota. Nearly 40 tents were set up at the University of Michigan and nine people were arrested at the University of Minnesota. Hundreds of people gathered at the Minnesota campus in the afternoon to ask for their release.

    Cal Poly Humboldt on the West Coast of California will be closed until Wednesday because protesters took over a building on Monday night. Three people were taken by the police because they were protesting. The school said on its website that classes will be taught online.

    Since the fighting in Gaza started, colleges and universities have had a hard time keeping students safe while also allowing them to express their opinions freely. A lot of protests that used to be allowed are now getting harsher punishments.

    Harvard University in Massachusetts has closed most gates to its Harvard Yard and is only allowing people with school ID to enter, in order to avoid protests. The school put up signs that say you need permission to set up tents or tables on campus.

    Christian Deleon, a Literature Ph. D student, said he knows why Harvard doesn’t want protests, but students should still be able to share their opinions.

    “He said we should all be able to use these places to protest and speak out. ”

    Ben Wizner, a lawyer from the American Civil Liberties Union, said that college leaders have to make very difficult choices because they are responsible for making sure that people can share their opinions, even if others don’t like them.

    “He said they also need to keep students safe from being harassed, threatened, or intimidated. ” “Sometimes it’s hard to tell where the line is. ”

    The New York Civil Liberties Union warned colleges not to rush to involve the police, in a statement on Tuesday.

    Donna Lieberman, the head of the group, said that officials should not mix up criticizing Israel with hating Jewish people, or use hate incidents as an excuse to stop people from expressing their political views.

    Leo Auerbach, a University of Michigan student, said that the different opinions about the war didn’t make him feel in danger on campus. However, he’s afraid of the “hurtful language and anti-Jewish feelings” that some people are expressing.

    “Auerbach said that in order to make everyone feel like they belong on campus, different groups need to talk to each other in a helpful way. ” “And currently, no one is talking. ”

    Hannah Didehbani, a senior studying physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that the protesters were motivated by the ones at Columbia University.

    “Currently, some professors at the campus are receiving money directly from Israel’s ministry of defence for their research,” she said. “We have been asking MIT to stop working with that research. ”

    Protesters at the University of California, Berkeley, were inspired by the demonstrators at Columbia University. They had about 30 tents set up on Tuesday. Law student Malak Afaneh said the Columbia demonstrators are the leaders of the student movement.

    Columbia’s President Minouche Shafik said she felt very sad about what’s happening on campus. Some Jewish students feel that criticism of Israel has turned into antisemitism.

    US House Speaker Mike Johnson is going to visit Jewish students at the university on Wednesday. He will also talk about how to stop hate against Jewish people at college campuses during a press conference.

    Columbia has a long history of protests. In 1968, many students were mad about racism and the Vietnam War, so they took over five buildings on campus. A thousand police officers came and removed them after a week, taking 700 people into custody. The news said that 100 students and 15 police officers got hurt.

    Protests started on the campus after Hamas attacked southern Israel, killing about 1,200 people, most of them were civilians, and holding around 250 people hostage. In the war, Israel has killed over 34,000 people in the Gaza Strip. The local health ministry says that at least two-thirds of those killed are children and women, but they don’t separate combatants and noncombatants.

  • We are facing hardships due to delay in stipend payments – Ghanaian students studying in Serbia

    We are facing hardships due to delay in stipend payments – Ghanaian students studying in Serbia


    Ghanaian students enrolled in academic programs in Serbia are grappling with significant hurdles stemming from delayed stipend disbursements, as reported by the Ghana Scholarship Secretariat.

    Many students have not received their stipends since their arrival in the country, leading to a critical situation where expulsion from academic pursuits looms for some.

    The root causes of this dilemma include mounting financial constraints and administrative obstacles, prompting students to explore alternative avenues to sustain their livelihoods.

    Reports indicate that students are compelled to seek out loans or accept low-paying jobs to make ends meet.

    Beyond the immediate financial ramifications, the prevailing circumstances have inflicted profound psychological distress on affected students.

    Urgent appeals have been issued to the Ghanaian government, urging swift action to alleviate the hardships endured by its citizens studying abroad.

    Abdul Salam Mohammed, a Ghanaian student in Serbia, narrating his ordeal said “We came in May [2023] and we haven’t received our stipends since last year, so it’s almost been 11 months. Even though we’ve had constant engagement with the Secretariat, nothing has been done about it and this has been a challenge for us. Many of us are adapting by doing a lot of menial jobs here and there which is also affecting our academics.

    Another student who spoke on anonymity to Citi News said “I arrived in Serbia last year and the main challenge here is with finances. We struggle to cater for many of our needs here and this affects our studies, which is the main reason why we’re in this country. We borrow money from our country mates and people from other African countries to feed ourselves. Even moving to the main campus for lectures is by bus and if we don’t have money to do that, how do we learn.”

  • Distance learning students at UEW request Education ministry’s involvement in resolving  graduation dispute

    Distance learning students at UEW request Education ministry’s involvement in resolving graduation dispute


    Students enrolled in the Distance Education program at the St. John Campus of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW), expressed their disappointment with the institution’s management and urged the Ministry of Education to intervene and maintain standards.

    These students, nearing the completion of their National Service Scheme (NSS) and anticipating graduation later this month, encountered a hurdle imposed by the university’s management.

    They were instructed to provide receipts for their school fees spanning from 2019 to 2024 before being cleared for graduation.

    This requirement sparked frustration among the students, who saw it as indicative of mismanagement and a lack of leadership on the part of UEW.

    They argued that they had already submitted all necessary receipts before their final exams last year, and producing receipts for each academic year over the past four years would be impractical.

    The students perceived this demand as unreasonable and potentially discriminatory, given the challenges of retrieving receipts from multiple years.

    They insisted that their prior compliance with financial obligations should be sufficient for graduation clearance.

    Expressing their concerns, the students emphasized the administrative burden placed upon them by this unexpected requirement, particularly as they approached the culmination of their academic journey.

    In response to these grievances, the students called upon the Ministry of Education to intervene and ensure that UEW upholds fairness and transparency in its administrative processes.

    They sought a resolution that recognized their prior compliance with financial obligations and facilitated their smooth transition to graduation without undue obstacles.

    The dispute underscored broader issues of accountability and student welfare within tertiary institutions, highlighting the need for clear and equitable policies that support student success.

  • VIDEO: Mud classroom collapses on students

    VIDEO: Mud classroom collapses on students

    A disturbing video circulating on social media shows a school building, constructed with clay and straw, collapsing on students and teachers.

    The location and time of the incident are unknown, but the video suggests that it occurred in an African country.

    In the video, cries of distress can be heard as a group of men work tirelessly to rescue children trapped under the debris. One child is seen being pulled out, while efforts continue to locate others.

    The user who shared the video, TheNewForceParody, blamed African leaders for the incident, citing a failure to invest in children’s education and inadequate infrastructure as contributing factors.

    The incident underscores the urgent need for governments to prioritize education infrastructure and ensure the safety of school buildings to prevent such tragedies in the future.

  • Over 280 Nigerian students kidnapped by gunmen freed

    Over 280 Nigerian students kidnapped by gunmen freed

    Reports from officials indicate that more than 280 children in Nigeria who were kidnapped from the town of Kuriga, have been released unharmed.

    The governor of Kaduna state, Uba Sani, didn’t say what happened when the kidnapped people were set free. This happened a few days before the kidnappers wanted money.

    A group of kids, aged eight to 15, and one teacher were taken by force on March 7th.

    Criminal groups called bandits have taken thousands of people captive in the past few years, especially in the north-west.

    But, there were fewer children being kidnapped last year until this week.

    This time, the people who took someone wanted $690,000 (£548,000) as a payment to let the person go. The government said it will not give any money to set someone free.

    Governor Sani thanked President Bola Tinubu for making sure that the kidnapped Kuriga schoolchildren were set free without getting hurt.

    Mr Sani said that the Nigerian Army did a great job in showing that they have the courage, determination, and commitment to fight criminal activity and make our communities safe again.

    The big kidnapping happened on March 7th in the morning while students were all together for a school meeting.

    Witnesses saw some students in the school yard around 8:30am when a lot of gunmen on motorcycles came through the school. They took away 187 students from the high school and 125 from the nearby elementary school. Twenty-five people came back later.

    A 14-year-old student was shot and killed by the gunmen.

    Many kidnappings in north-west Nigeria, like in Kaduna state, are thought to be done by criminals who want to get money from ransom.

    In 2022, a law was passed in Nigeria to try to stop the growing problem of kidnapping. The law made it illegal to pay kidnappers ransom money. The punishment is being in jail for at least 15 years, but no one has ever been caught.

    Earlier this year, a family in Abuja said the police were wrong when they claimed to have rescued their kidnapped daughters. The family had to pay a ransom to get the girls back.

    Many people around the world were very angry when Boko Haram kidnapped almost 300 girls in the town of Chibok in Nigeria in 2014.

    Most of the people who were taken have been released or got away, but there are still many people who are missing.

  • Lassia Tuolu SHS in Wa West District temporarily closed down due to fire outbreak

    Lassia Tuolu SHS in Wa West District temporarily closed down due to fire outbreak

    The multipurpose dining hall complex at Lassia Tuolu Senior High School in the Wa West District has been engulfed in flames, prompting the temporary shutdown of the school.

    The fire, which ignited during the early hours of Saturday, ravaged newly constructed desks and dining tables, while also laying waste to assorted food items stored in the school’s kitchen.

    Amidst the wreckage, 833 students have been evacuated and sent home, as authorities work diligently to implement measures aimed at containing the aftermath of the fire.

    The Upper West Regional Coordinating Council, comprising the Wa West District Chief Executive, the Regional Director of Education, and officials from the Ghana Police Service and Ghana National Fire Service, visited the school to assess the extent of the damage.

    As the community grapples with this unfortunate incident, an investigation has been launched to uncover the circumstances surrounding the devastating fire.

  • Soldiers, security personnel collapse at the celebration of Ghana’s 67th Independence

    Soldiers, security personnel collapse at the celebration of Ghana’s 67th Independence


    Students from multiple schools across the New Juaben Municipality and the wider Eastern region turned out in force for the 67th Independence Day celebrations, showcasing their marching prowess and other talents in a vibrant display.

    The festivities also saw farmers and security personnel joining in the colorful spectacle, seizing the opportunity to exhibit their own skills and contributions.

    Amidst the jubilation, however, there were moments of concern as some soldiers and security personnel collapsed during the parade.

    Quick action was taken, with personnel from the Ghana Ambulance Service swiftly responding to attend to the affected individuals. GhanaWeb’s lens captured the urgency as medical responders rushed to the scene, providing assistance to an officer who had fallen.

    The collapsed officer was promptly placed on a stretcher and evacuated from the area for further medical attention.

    The event, attended by esteemed dignitaries including President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia, boasted the participation of 21 contingents from various security agencies, representatives from 11 schools, and diverse traditional groups, adding to the grandeur of the occasion.

  • Video: Obese ladies fight over a man

    Video: Obese ladies fight over a man

    A recently circulated video on social media captures two students engaging in a heated confrontation, laying bare their frustrations over a romantic involvement with a guy.

    The identity of the school and the students remains undisclosed, but the video captures the intense exchange, featuring loud rantings and insults as both parties express their grievances.

    The heated confrontation includes phrases such as, “Stop opening your legs,” highlighting the intensity of the argument as it unfolds in the viral footage.

    Watch video below:

  • VIDEO: Sawla-Tuna-Kalba students study on cement blocks

    VIDEO: Sawla-Tuna-Kalba students study on cement blocks

    Students of the Sawla-Tuna-Kalba District in the Savannah Region of Ghana are facing challenging conditions in their quest for education, as they are forced to study on cement blocks due to inadequate furniture in their classrooms.

    A video circulating on social media shows students of the local school sitting on cement blocks, using them as makeshift desks while writing notes and engaging in learning activities.

    The lack of proper desks and chairs has been a longstanding issue in many schools across Ghana, depriving students of a conducive learning environment. The situation not only affects their comfort but also their concentration and overall academic performance.

    On the subject, Member of Parliament for the Old Tafo constituency, Vincent Ekow Assafuah, has emphasized his belief that it is better for students to study under trees without the necessary infrastructure than to go without formal education.

    This statement was made as he strongly defended the Free Senior High School (SHS) policy, asserting that it should not be subjected to a review. Mr Assafuah expressed this viewpoint during an interview on CitiTV’s Eyewitness News with Umaru Sanda Amadu.

    “For me, it is better for a young person to sit on the floor without a desk to learn rather than not being educated. It is better for a young person to go to school without a slipper and be educated than not being educated at all,” he said.

    This statement comes in response to recent calls for a review of the Free SHS policy. Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum, the Minister of Education, has also opposed these calls, asserting that the policy does not require any revision.

    Mr Assafuah acknowledged challenges in the education sector but maintained that reviewing the policy is not the solution. He emphasized the need for collective leadership support for the policy, underscoring that despite challenges, students are receiving education, which he deems crucial.

    Assafuah stressed the importance of providing education for the future generation and urged all Ghanaians to collaborate in addressing challenges instead of advocating for a review of the Free SHS policy.

    Executive Director of Africa Education Watch, Kofi Asare, has disclosed that the government needs to build an additional 5,000 additional school blocks to achieve parity in the provision of educational infrastructure for basic education in the country.

  • Ghanaian students in Canada surged by 167% in 2023 – Report

    Ghanaian students in Canada surged by 167% in 2023 – Report

    A study conducted by ApplyBoard, a prominent technology platform for international student mobility, reveals a remarkable 167% surge in the population of Ghanaian students in Canada in 2023.

    The analysis, based on data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), indicates a significant rise from 3,455 Ghanaian student permit holders in 2022 to 9,235 in 2023.

    Ghana secured the second position, following Guinea, in terms of countries experiencing the highest growth in student population in Canada, with an impressive 179% increase in 2023.

    The brief by ApplyBoard highlights that among student populations with over 2,500 valid study permits, Guinean, Ghanaian, and Nepali students demonstrated the most rapid growth.

    “Of the student populations with over 2,500 valid study permits, Guinean, Ghanaian, and Nepali students were the fastest-growing in 2023.

    “The total number of Ghanaian students grew by 167% compared to 2022, making it Canada’s second fastest-growing student population. In 2023, there were 9,235 Ghanaian study permit holders in Canada, up from 3,455 in 2022,” part of a brief by ApplyBoard on its findings reads.

    The breakdown of the surge in Ghanaian student numbers in Canada reveals a notable increase of 107% in students studying health and sciences.

    Additionally, the number of Ghanaian students pursuing computing and IT witnessed a 137% rise, while those studying engineering experienced a 67% increase in Canada.

  • School building in Eastern Region collapses on 4 students, teacher and others

    School building in Eastern Region collapses on 4 students, teacher and others

    Eight people, including four basic school pupils and a teacher, are in critical condition after a school building collapsed in the Upper West Akim District of the Eastern Region.

    The incident occurred during the Domeabra Zonal Inter-School Sports event on Wednesday, February 14, 2024.

    The victims also include three community members who were at the tournament. They are currently receiving treatment at the Adeiso District Hospital, according to reports.

    The Zonal Vice Chairman, John Priestly Badu, confirmed the incident, stating that the event was taking place at the Sukrung Awemfi D/A Primary School grounds.

    Due to the rain, participants sought shelter in the school building, which is in a dilapidated state. Unfortunately, three classrooms, housing classes one to three, collapsed around 4:30 pm, trapping the victims.

    Bystanders managed to rescue them and rushed them to the hospital for medical attention.

    The Gyasehene Edward Kotey and Mbrantihene Edem Atiemo have since visited the victims at the health centre.

  • Govt used GHS1.5bn from DACF to acquire laptops for SHS students – Eric Opoku

    Govt used GHS1.5bn from DACF to acquire laptops for SHS students – Eric Opoku

    The Member of Parliament for Asunafo South, Eric Opoku, has accused the government of redirecting an amount of GH¢750 million in 2023 from the District Assemblies Common Fund.

    The funds were allegedly earmarked for the purchase of laptops to be distributed to Senior High School (SHS) students.

    The Minister of Education, Dr. Yaw Osei Adutwum, recently announced the government’s intention to distribute over 1.4 million tablets to students at Wesley Girls Senior High School under the free SHS policy.

    The goal is to enhance the teaching and learning experience within the school within the next two months.

    During an interview with Citi News, Eric Opoku expressed concern that this diversion of funds would impede development at the district level. He further alleged that the government plans to divert an additional GH¢750 million for the same purpose.

    He stated, “They [the government] took GH¢750 million from the Common Fund meant for the development of the assemblies and that is why most of the assemblies are not doing anything at all.

    “And this year, they intend to add another GH¢750 million so that they will have GH¢1.5 billion for the purchase of those laptops.”

  • A guide to becoming a Law student in Ghana

    A guide to becoming a Law student in Ghana

    To embark on the journey of becoming a law student in Ghana, the first step is to acquire a degree, typically spanning four years.

    Any degree from a recognized institution qualifies, where “recognized” denotes acknowledgment by institutions offering law degrees such as UG, KNUST, GIMPA, Zenith, and Mount Crest.

    Private arrangements leading to a ‘London Law Degree’ exist, but details are not provided.

    Following the completion of the initial degree, one can seek admission to institutions like UG, KNUST, GIMPA, Zenith, or Mount Crest for a two-year LLB (Bachelor of Laws) program.

    Upon successful completion of the LLB, with certain conditions met, one becomes eligible to enroll in the Ghana School of Law for the two-year Professional Law Course. The entire journey, from non-graduate to a qualified lawyer, typically takes about eight years.

    An alternative route, referred to as Route 2, allows students with secondary school certificates to directly enroll in the LLB program at certain universities like UG and KNUST. This option shortens the overall duration of study, spanning approximately five years from university to the Ghana School of Law.

    Route 3 involves students pursuing the LLB program at a foreign university in a Commonwealth heritage country such as Britain, the USA, Canada, or Australia. Upon obtaining the LLB, successful application to the Ghana School of Law may secure a place in the full two-year program.

    Alternatively, those admitted as lawyers in foreign countries with Commonwealth heritage may undergo a “conversion” process to the Ghana bar.

    This involves enrolling in a three-month program, subject to potential changes, at the Ghana School of Law after meeting post-qualification conditions in the foreign country.

  • SHS students in my constituency receive provisions from me every year – Sheila Bartels

    SHS students in my constituency receive provisions from me every year – Sheila Bartels

    The Member of Parliament (MP)representing the Ablekuma North constituency, Sheila Bartels, has highlighted her achievements since taking office on January 7, 2021.

    During an interview on Adom FM’s morning show, Dwaso Nsem Thursday, the MP outlined her contributions to enhancing the constituency’s road infrastructure and bringing improvements to the education and health sectors.

    Bartels shared that she provides free provisions for first-year Senior High School (SHS) students and conducts complimentary extra classes for BECE candidates.

    Additionally, she proudly mentioned fully sponsoring three students to university and six students to SHS this year.

    “Since I became MP, our major problem has been roads so that was my primary target. We have so far done several roads in the constituency. We have also fixed damaged traffic lights. When it comes to education, I have built and renovated some school blocks in my constituency.

    Every year I give BECE free extra classes and give provisions to SHS goers. I have also sponsored three students to the university. We have also provided equipment for our municipal hospital and every year we offer free health screening,” she said.

    Addressing the prominent issue of roads in the constituency, Bartels emphasized her focus on road construction and the repair of damaged traffic lights.

    In the realm of education, she disclosed her efforts in building and renovating school blocks within her constituency.

    Bartels reiterated her commitment to education by offering annual free extra classes for BECE candidates and distributing provisions to SHS students.

    Beyond education, she has sponsored three students to university and provided equipment for the municipal hospital, organizing free health screenings every year.

    Confident in her leadership, Bartels believes she is the right candidate to lead the New Patriotic Party to victory in the 2024 general election. Currently seeking re-election, she faces competition from former MP Nana Akua Owusu Afriyie in the January 27 NPP parliamentary primaries.

  • Tragic! Stampede claims lives of 10 students in Cameroon

    Tragic! Stampede claims lives of 10 students in Cameroon

    This morning, an unprecedented tragedy struck at the heart of the political capital as at least ten students lost their lives in a stampede at Lycée Bilingue d’Etoug-Ebe in Yaoundé.

    The incident occurred when students, arriving late for school, rushed to enter through the closed school gate, resulting in a devastating stampede.

    The aftermath saw many students losing their lives on-site, with others urgently transported to nearby health facilities.

    Local and national authorities are actively addressing this unexpected crisis, deploying medical teams, law enforcement, and psychologists to the scene for immediate and necessary assistance.

  • SIMMS students disapprove of sleeping in classrooms after a fire outbreak incident

    SIMMS students disapprove of sleeping in classrooms after a fire outbreak incident

    Students affected by a recent fire outbreak at SIMMS Senior High School on Friday have voiced their opposition to the school authorities’ decision to have them sleep in classrooms.

    The students expressed concerns that their difficulties would intensify if they were compelled to sleep in classrooms infested with mosquitoes and other unfavorable conditions.

    During an exclusive interview with GhanaWeb, the distressed students appealed to the school authorities, teachers, and other stakeholders to allow them to leave the campus for a period before returning to school.

    This directive was issued after the visit of the Kwabre East Municipal Director of Education, Baffour Adu Asare, who encouraged the school authorities to temporarily permit students to use the classrooms.

    The director of education visited the scene to offer support and consoled both teachers and affected students. He also urged teachers to compile a list of all affected students and document the items they lost.

    While encouraging teachers to provide psychological support to the affected students, he reminded the students that they were not facing this challenge alone.

    However, in response to the directive to use the classrooms for a temporary period, the concerned students vehemently opposed the decision, fearing that it would only exacerbate their difficulties.

    “How can we sleep in classrooms which are full of mosquitoes?”

    “We are going to use these classrooms in the night, and the next morning, we may be forced to park our things to pave the way for classes. That is very stressful, isn’t it? We are begging them to allow us go home for some time,” the students justified.

    During the fire outbreak at SIMMS Senior High School on Friday, several items, including mattresses, chop boxes, bedsheets, trunks, and an undisclosed amount of cash, were consumed by the flames.

    Despite the quick response of fire officers to the scene, the cause of the outbreak has not yet been determined.

    Several students who shared their thoughts with GhanaWeb attributed the incident to the outdated wiring system in the dormitory.

    “We had been complaining severally about the wiring system that had become very old and a death trap,” they said.

  • Over 600 KTU students calls on management to reconsider its decision on deferment

    Over 600 KTU students calls on management to reconsider its decision on deferment

    Over 600 Kumasi Technical University (KTU) students have petitioned the university’s administration to recind its decision to postpone their programs due to their inability to register for their classes.

    A total of 648 students who have not registered for their courses will be deferred from the ongoing end-of-semester assessment.

    Despite admitting their failure to register for the courses, the impacted students are asking the University’s administration to temper punishment with kindness.

    “I paid the fees late and I wasn’t able to do the registration. The day we were writing the exams, they said it was a deadline, we didn’t see any notice. After paying the fees, we were asked to pay the penalty which was GH¢100, we were told to go to IT for registration, we were told they had closed registration when we reached there. We reported to the registrar and he told us that there was nothing he can do about it. They later said they will have a meeting and get back to us, they later told us that we have to defer.”

    Meanwhile, administration claims that the University’s Academic Board established multiple deadlines for students to register for classes.

    Acting University Relations officer for the Kumasi Technical University, Joshua Appiah, in an interview with the media, “Students are supposed to register, and the university will know the number of students who have registered. This semester, that’s the 2nd semester of the 2022/2023 academic year, the registration period was for 2 weeks, which ended May 29. By May 24, the university sent a notice reminding them to register.

    After the May 29 deadline, the deadline was extended to June 5, with a penalty for individuals who had not registered to do so and pay a penalty to register. There was another extension for them to register after June 5. It even continued into June and July, when the SRC came to plead with management despite the passage of time. The deadline was set for August 3.”

    He refuted media reports that the number of students affected exceeded 2,000.

    “For now about 648 students are affected not 2,000 as speculated, even with the 648, it might be lesser than that. If you defer your money hasn’t been lost, you can still come back next semester to continue your education. Nobody has been deferred from the university”.

  • Wa Technical Institute housemaster attacked; 3 students arrested

    Wa Technical Institute housemaster attacked; 3 students arrested

    On Tuesday, July 25, a disturbing incident occurred at the Wa Technical Institute in the Wa municipality of the Upper West region, resulting in three students being apprehended by the police for allegedly attacking their housemaster. The school authorities filed a formal complaint, bringing the vicious assault on the teacher to light.

    The housemaster, identified as Ishmail Musah Froko, sustained severe injuries during the attack and was rushed to the Wa Municipal Hospital for urgent medical treatment. The assault took place at the house two block of the Wa Technical Institute while Mr. Froko was on a routine monitoring visit.

    During the incident, one student was arrested for assaulting the housemaster, while two others were apprehended for assaulting a fellow student who intervened to rescue the teacher.

    In response to the distressing event, the headmaster of the Wa Technical Institute reassured parents that the situation was under control and emphasized that the safety of their children at the school remained a top priority. He urged parents to actively participate in the development of their children’s behavior and conduct.

    Currently, the three students involved in the attack have been detained by the police to aid in the ongoing investigations.

    As authorities work to address the situation and conduct a thorough inquiry, it is essential for the school and community to come together to prevent similar incidents in the future and foster a safe learning environment for all students.

  • Implement a structured formula for adjusting NSS allowance – NUGS to government

    Implement a structured formula for adjusting NSS allowance – NUGS to government

    The National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS) is urging the government to implement a structured formula for the upward adjustment of the national service allowance.

    On July 23, 2023, the management of the National Service Scheme announced that it had received approval from the government to increase the monthly allowances for National Service Personnel from GHC 559.04 to GHC 715.57, with the increment backdated to January 2023.

    This decision came after prolonged protests and calls for an increase in the allowance since the previous year.

    However, according to NUGS President, Dennis Appiah Larbi-Ampofo, the increment falls short of their proposed figure.

    He suggested that implementing a structured adjustment formula would eliminate the need for periodic prolonged advocacy to secure the necessary increases in allowances. By establishing a clear and consistent formula, the process of adjusting the national service allowance can be streamlined and made more efficient.

    “If you look at the expenditure of service personnel it would have been fine if we had gotten to the 800 cedis mark we had pleaded for. But at this point what our focus is now is that we don’t want to travel 5 years again before service allowances are increased again. We are calling on the government to institute a structured formula for increasing NSS allowance. If this happens it would save us from having to go through lengthy advocacy, pleading, negotiations before NSS allowances are increased”, he stated.

    Mr. Larbi-Ampofo further proposed the increase be adjusted in line with the times.

    “The money is already not enough so if the increments are not in tandem with the prevailing economic conditions, this makes lives unbearable for service persons.”

    “All we are calling for is a structured formula of increasing NSS allowances, so we don’t need to go so long a time before NSS allawa are increased”, he concluded.

    https://youtu.be/e06Xo3HY5HI
  • Students drown after sneaking out to swim in river

    Students drown after sneaking out to swim in river

    Three first-year students tragically drown in flooded River Subri at Daboase Senior High Technical School.

    The unfortunate event took place on Saturday, June 24, when a group of seven students allegedly sneaked out of the school premises to embark on an ill-fated swimming excursion.

    Despite being boarders, these students managed to leave their dormitory undetected by the school authorities and their housemaster.

    Regrettably, two bodies have been recovered from the river and are presently resting at the morgue in Effia-Nkwanta Teaching Hospital.

    However, the search continues for the third missing student.

    The Western Region and its surrounding areas have been battered by heavy rainfall, resulting in the overflow of numerous rivers and the displacement of several communities.

    Although the students were not residents of Daboase Township, they ventured into the river to bathe and wash clothes, underestimating the formidable current caused by the flooding, which ultimately swept them away.

    Despite the courageous efforts of four companions to rescue them, they were unable to prevail against the force of nature.

    Nevertheless, a dedicated rescue team, led by District Chief Executive Mr. Emmanuel Boakye and assembled by the District Security Council, is tirelessly combing the area in search of the missing student.

    Expressing profound grief over the incident, Mr. Boakye acknowledged that this unfortunate event was just one among many severe consequences of the incessant rain that has been relentless since Wednesday.

    He remarked, “The rains have rendered numerous people homeless. While we were inspecting the affected communities, the police informed us about the tragic incident involving the students.”

    Providing further information about the victims, Mr. Boakye disclosed that they hailed from Inchaban in the Shama District, Amanful in the Sekondi-Takoradi Metropolis, and Agona in the Ahanta West Municipality.

    The school authorities and local assembly have notified the parents of the victims, extending their support during this immensely difficult time.

    Seizing the opportunity, the DCE advised students, particularly those from other parts of the country, to refrain from venturing into rivers, especially given the current perilous conditions.

  • Licensure exams: Mass failure should be blamed on Teacher training colleges – Dr Addai-Poku

    Licensure exams: Mass failure should be blamed on Teacher training colleges – Dr Addai-Poku

    Teacher training colleges, according to Dr. Christian Addai-Poku, Registrar of the National Teaching Council (NTC), are to blame for teachers failing their license exams in large numbers.

    According to him, these institutions did not train the students in the requisite skills needed to manage and teach in classrooms.

    This, he stressed makes the students victims.

    “When you look at NTC data over time, at any point you will see an average of between 50% and 65% of the people who fail are distance and sandwich mode. Regular candidates tend to do better in the exam.

    “The challenges are many but for me, I always say that the candidates are victims because the institutions are supposed to train them, and bring them out well refined and fit for purpose because you have admitted people for a programme, a professional programme,”

    Speaking to the media, he explained that most institutions offered long-distance programmes and sandwich courses. However, NTC data showed that these people were in the majority of the failures recorded during the examination.

    He stressed that these colleges failed at churning out students to fit well into the teaching profession.

    Again, he added that if teachers did not have command over the English language and the skills needed to teach it was a major concern for the NTC.

    “If a person is not well adapted in the knowledge, in the skills that the person is supposed to use in delivering, then we have a huge challenge. That is why these basic things that the people are not able to do is a problem,” he said.

    Dr Addai- Poku said these failures started in 2018, since the licensure exam began, and the body has since taken steps to find lasting solutions to the problem.

    Meanwhile, he said his outfit has been working behind close door to improve the process of the examination and reduce the failures.

    This, he said had led to the NTC reforming the examination.

    Key stakeholders have in the past week shared a similar view as the Registrar of NTC.

    Notable amongst them is a former Rector of the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA), Prof. Stephen Adei who urged critics and the public to desist from creating the impression that all teachers in the country are hopeless.

    ‘We shouldn’t see all teachers as hopeless over a few failures in licensure exam’ – Prof Adei

    His comment follows revelations by the NTC that about 83.5% of candidates failed the teachers’ licensure exams held in May 2023.

    Speaking to the media, on June 22, Prof Adei noted that the number of teachers that failed the exam is a small section compared to the over 300,000 teachers in the country, many of whom have successfully passed the exam.

    He added that the teachers that failed in the 2023 May exams are those who failed previously in their multiple attempts to get through the exams. 

    The NTC noted that out of the 7,728 teachers who participated in the re-sit exams, only 1,277 passed.

    The assessment in numeracy, literacy, and professional knowledge is to enable qualified teachers to get a professional license, while attracting young graduates with the required professional knowledge and skills to teach.

  • More than 500 KTI students dismissed for misconduct

    More than 500 KTI students dismissed for misconduct

    Over 500 students have been expelled from the Kumasi Technical Institute in the Ashanti Region for flouting school rules.

    The students, who were all in the boarding house, reportedly caused damage to school properties during a rampage on May 17.

    School authorities failed to give further information on the matter but only said they took action to instill discipline in the school.

    The authorities say they have submitted an official report of the conduct of the students to the Technical and Vocational Education Training Directorate for the appropriate action.

    Citi News has learned that the affected students failed to attend a general assembly parade on Friday during which the authorities conducted a roll call.

    The authorities subsequently asked the students to pack their luggage out of the dormitories and will be made to face the school’s disciplinary committee when they are recalled.

    The authorities are expected to meet the parents of the affected students to brief them on the development.

    Most of the affected students on Friday left the school while others were still packing out when Citi News visited the premises.

    Police from the Manhyia Divisional Command later went to the school and the Police Commander addressed the remaining students in the school and urged them to be law-abiding.

  • More than 500 Kumasi Technical Institute students suspended over misconduct

    More than 500 Kumasi Technical Institute students suspended over misconduct

    More than 500 students at the Kumasi Technical Institute in the Ashanti Region have been sent home due to their misconduct and violation of school rules.

    On May 17, the students, who were all in the boarding house, reportedly engaged in a rampage that resulted in damage to school properties. School authorities have taken action to maintain discipline but have not provided further details on the incident.

    The authorities have filed an official report with the Technical and Vocational Education Training Directorate regarding the students’ behavior, seeking appropriate action.

    It has been discovered that the affected students failed to attend a general assembly parade, where the authorities conducted a roll call on Friday. Consequently, the students were instructed to pack their belongings and vacate the dormitories. They will face the school’s disciplinary committee upon their recall.

    The authorities are scheduled to meet with the parents of the affected students to provide them with an update on the situation.

    During a visit by Citi News, most of the affected students had already left the school, while others were in the process of packing their belongings.

    The Manhyia Divisional Command dispatched police officers to the school, and the Police Commander addressed the remaining students, emphasizing the importance of obeying the law.

  • Foreign students in UK to be banned from bringing families along

    Foreign students in UK to be banned from bringing families along

    This week, rules prohibiting the entry of family members of overseas students are anticipated to be announced in the UK.

    The move follows reports that net migration into the UK has hit 1 million with Tory MPs asking Prime Minister Rishi Sunak “to get a grip on the rocketing numbers”.

    UK current immigration law permits dependants to accompany their spouses or parent(s) who have a valid student visa.

    According to the report, UK ministers are expected to announce the immigration clampdown on Tuesday or Wednesday.

    The ban will affect all master’s students and some other post-graduates, but it will not apply to PhD students who are highly skilled and whose courses last between 3 to 5 years.

    If implemented, the crackdown will affect many Nigerian students hoping to pursue their postgraduate studies in the UK, as they accounted for the highest increase in the number of dependants accompanying persons with study visas in 2022.

    The Times (UK) had also reported in February that the UK was nursing the ban and that Sunak and Suella Braverman, the home secretary, were becoming more concerned after a near-eightfold rise in the number of family members joining foreign students.

    media reports had reported how the home secretary considered reforming the graduate visa route.

    Under her proposal, foreign students would have to obtain a work visa by getting a skilled job or leave the UK within six months after the end of their studies.

  • Galamsey report is not fabricated – Frimpong-Boateng

    Galamsey report is not fabricated – Frimpong-Boateng

    The former chairman of the disbanded Inter-ministerial Committee on Illegal Mining (IMCIM), has said that every detail in his galamsey report is accurate and not fabricated.

    Speaking to the media, the former Minister for Environment, Science and Technology said he stands by everything in the controversial report on illegal mining.

    Professor Frimpong-Boateng on April 20 caused a stir when a report he authored on illegal mining popularly known as galamsey was leaked to the media.

    The report indicted a couple of NPP officials for engaging in illegal mining activities.

    Among the persons mentioned in the report included a leading member of the New Patriotic Party, Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, Director of Communications at the Presidency, Lord Commey, Information Minister, Oppong Nkrumah, and a host of others.

    All the persons mentioned have denied the allegations.

    But speaking on the report for the first time, the renowned Heart Surgeon said he had to be brutally honest with the President in his report. Professor Frimpong-Boateng also denied leaking the report to the public.

    According to Prof. Frimpong-Boateng, the report was handed over to personnel of the Criminal Investigations Department during investigations on some missing excavators.

    “I didn’t write the report for Ghanaians to talk about it. It has been two years since the report was authored. I didn’t leak it. After I was granted an interview with GTV, some CID officials visited me to investigate some comments I made in the interview concerning some excavators. I then handed over the report to them.

    “I am not saying the CID officials leaked the report but I gave them the report to aid with their investigations and that was the end.”

  • Collins SHS struggles to feed students after rain destroys kitchen

    Collins SHS struggles to feed students after rain destroys kitchen

    Authorities at Collins Senior High School in Asante Akyem Agogo, Ashanti Region, are having difficulty feeding students following the destruction of its kitchen facility.

    The kitchen facility which served over 1000 students according to school authorities was completely razed following a downpour.

    Jacob Agyenim Boateng, a journalist from Otec FM visited the school and he observed that matrons of the school were force to cook under a dilapidated structure which poses as a threat to lives of the students.

    Speaking to OTEC News on Wednesday April 26, 2023, the Organizer for the 1989 year group (an old students association of the school) Mr. Owoahene Acheampong described the situation as worrying.

    Mr. Acheampong said the recent destruction of the kitchen facility has disrupted teaching and learning in the school as matrons fail to serve food to students on time.

    He urged authorities in the Ashanti Region and the education sector to treat the issue as a matter of urgency and find solution to the problem.

    “As old students, we are doing our part to ensure the smooth running of the school, just recently we organized ourselves and present teaching and learning materials to the Home Economic Department of the school, but this particular problem is beyond our reach

    “This is the reason why we are calling on stakeholders in the educational sector to come to the aid of the school and provide a befitting kitchen for the students”, he said.

  • 10 students kidnapped by gunmen in northwest Nigeria

    10 students kidnapped by gunmen in northwest Nigeria

    Gunmen have kidnapped at least 10 students in northwest Nigeria, according to authorities on Tuesday.

    The state commissioner of security, Samuel Aruwan, said students from the Government Secondary School in Kaduna state were kidnapped during an attack on Monday, however it was unclear exactly where they were taken.

    “The exact location of the incident is yet to be ascertained but detailed reports being awaited will clarify whether the incident occurred within the school premises or elsewhere,” he said.

    Abductions of students from schools in northern Nigeria are common and have become a growing concern since 2014 when Islamic extremists kidnapped over 200 schoolgirls in Borno state. More than 1,000 students were kidnapped from schools in the northwest and northcentral regions in 2020 and 2021, according to a United Nations report last year.

    Authorities blame the abductions on armed groups who often target remote communities. Most of the gunmen are thought to be young men who are ethnic Fulani, a largely Muslim group of semi-nomadic herders who have been embroiled in conflicts with communities over access to land and water.

    While attacks were reduced last year as Nigeria’s security forces ramped up military operations targeting the gunmen’s hideouts, the government’s still struggling to quell the insurgency.

  • Heavy rain destroys a part of Huni-Valley SHS

    Heavy rain destroys a part of Huni-Valley SHS

    The roof of the science block at the Huni-Valley Senior High School in the Western Region has been ripped off by a heavy rain that began at 3:40 pm on Tuesday, March 28, 2023.

    The block houses the school’s Biology, Chemistry, and Physics laboratories.

    The rainfall severely impacted the science block, which also houses five classrooms used by SHS 3 students.

    The incident occurred at a time when final-year students are eagerly awaiting the start of their first mock exams on Thursday, March 30.

    A source told Citi News, learning materials in laboratories and classrooms have been exposed to rain, while electricity poles in the school have been impacted.

    Some surrounding communities have been left in the dark.

    The violent rainstorm wreaked havoc on nearby communities such as Amoanda in the Prestea-Huni-Valley Municipality, as well as individual homes.

    https://youtube.com/watch?v=FBX_lI822P4
  • UG students detained over violence granted GH¢50k bail

    UG students detained over violence granted GH¢50k bail

    The University of Ghana has granted bail in the sum of GH $50,000 for the 18 students who were detained for allegedly causing disturbances on campus.

    The students were picked up last week by the Ghana Police Service following a clash on the University of Ghana campus on Tuesday, February 14, 2023.

    The 18 were among aggrieved past and continuing students who stormed the University premises to protest Management’s new residential policy restricting continuing students from occupying the Commonwealth and Mensah Sarbah residential Halls to make way for level 100 and graduate students.

    Subsequently, the students were put before an Accra Circuit Court and remanded into custody for unlawful conduct.

    Appearing before Circuit Court 4 on February 20, the students were granted bail with two common sureties without justification.

    Counsel for 16 of the 18 students, Albert Quashigah speaking after the court proceedings said the defense was only in court today to seek bail for the students which was granted.

    “Our business today was only to apply for bail and the judge was generous and granted us the bail, and we are now taking steps to execute the bail that has been granted to us”.

    Though he was optimistic, he feared the processes of the court may delay the bail execution and have the students released by the end of day today.

    “This administrative process of the court can be a bit delayed, and we are hoping to execute the bail and have the students freed by the close of the day. It can take some time, but I am only hoping that we will be able to execute the bail to free these students, so they can return back to their studies,” Mr. Quashigah added.

  • Police and UG students clash at Commonwealth Hall

    Police and UG students clash at Commonwealth Hall

    On Tuesday, University of Ghana students clashed with some heavily armed police officers outside Commonwealth Hall.

    The security personnel at the forecourt of the Commonwealth Hall prevented aggrieved former occupants as they tried to make entry into the hall.

    After stiff resistance from the police, the students claimed they have secured an interlocutory injunction to reside in the hall.

    The latest stand-off comes on the back of the university management’s new residential policy indicating that continuing students are supposed to occupy other halls apart from the Commonwealth and Mensah Sarbah halls to make way for level 100 and graduate students.

    In an interview with Citi News, a member of the Academic Communication Team of the university, Professor Ransford Gyampo described the attitude of the students as lawless and urged them to use the appropriate channels to meet their grievances since the matter is still in court.

    “It is this kind of lawlessness that vindicates the position that position the university has taken. There is a ban on processions on campus…some groups feel they don’t like the decision that the University has taken, and so they have taken the university to court.

    “Before the substance of the matter is heard, they ask for an injunction. Merely asking for an injunction or even if a court grants an injunction, does not preclude those who have been injuncted from asking for a stay of execution and appealing against the decision. So it is lawless for someone to say that the court has granted an injuncted, so we are going to enforce the injunction ourselves.”

  • Students at National Open University threaten strike over increment of fees

    Students at National Open University threaten strike over increment of fees

    The National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) students have opposed the school’s abrupt and considerable tuition increase.

    They demanded a complete reversal and characterized the NOUN management’s tuition fee increase as obscene.

    Students of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) have rejected the sudden and significant hike in their tuition.

    On social media, some of the students asked the school to reverse the hike or “expect the mother of all protests”.

    They described the increase in tuition fees by the management of NOUN as ill-considered and outrageous while insisting on total reversal.

    “With utmost humility, we write the general public on behalf of a coalition of others concerned to convey the sentiments and pains of the students of the National Open University of Nigeria over the recently communicated memo stating an outrageous increment in school for degree and postgraduate students of the University,” a statement issued on Monday and jointly signed by some students’ leaders in the institution reads.

    “We are most assured and confident that the Directorate and authority of the University take her decisions after critical discussions, thoughts and review amidst the academic juggernauts and motherly minds that occupy and guide the activities of our academic life as students.

    National Open University Students Reject School Fees Hike, Threaten Nationwide Protest

    “To this understanding and in the context of the unravelling realities open to all, the released amount (a sum total of Undergraduate New Students From #36,000 to #55,000 minus courses and exam registration, Exam registration is #1,500 from #1,000, Project fee #25,000 and for postgraduate from #35,000 to #61,000 ), an increment of like 300% to be paid is felt outrageous and overwhelming for us, our parents and guardians and particularly for many of us who bear the risk of these challenging economic realities to send ourselves to school.

    “As objective minds and members of the public, it is safe to research and review from our colleagues who run degree programmes with other Universities, none pay this much for tuition, even in some private universities.

    “We are seriously alarmed and troubled that in our efforts of pursuing a first degree and postgraduate degree programs and to be responsible citizens who would in return give back to the society that has given a lot to us, we might be witnessing a serious roadblock to complete this exercise with the amount that has been charged if we are to further our education. 

    “These concerned students humbly appeal for a considerable reduction in this fee, to its previous amount and status quo.

    “There is serious distress, fear and agony ravaging our colleagues as a result of this increment, some are on verge of losing hope and we will all be most gracious as always if this is resolved as quickest as possible, and just also to douse all tensions in the air.

    “We are very hopeful and confident our requests will be considered and we will be made to smile again and aspire for greatness that we strive at all costs to be.”

    Source: Sahara Reporters

  • V/R: Storekeeper, taxi driver arrested for stealing food items from school

    Two persons are in the grips of police in the North Dayi District of the Volta region for allegedly stealing food items belonging to the Sovie C.Y.O Technical and Vocational Institute.

    The suspects include the storekeeper of the school Mr. Elias Tsitsiwu and Mr. Christian Mane, a taxi driver who was allegedly carting the food items away from the school’s store on Wednesday night.

    The arrest of the two suspects follows several weeks of surveillance and intelligence work by some students of the school upon suspicion.

    Luck, however, eluded the two suspects when some students through a dangerous but an act of bravado chased and arrested suspect Christian Mane who sped off from the school campus in an Opel Caravan with registration number GR 6243-T fully loaded with food items purportedly stolen from the school’s store.

    Upon arrest, the suspect driver allegedly mentioned the school’s storekeeper, Mr. Elias Tsitsiwu as his accomplice.

    The vehicle is also believed to be owned by the storekeeper.

    A student who spoke to Starr News’ Faisel Abdul-Iddrisu on anonymity said, “Last night, I was going to bath when I suddenly heard the whistle and as a cadet member, I had to obey the whistle.”

    “I got there and there was a car fully loaded with our kitchen food so we decided to push the car to the school then the man who stole the food -our kitchen storekeeper came begging us but we refused,” he added.

    Things, however, got dramatic when the driver of the Opel Caravan attempted to speed off with the items forcing the students to jump onto the car.

    “The storekeeper while begging us told us that the driver would bring the car to the headmaster’s residence claiming that the steering wheel was locked but when the driver sat in the car, he switched on the ignition and started speeding off.”

    “So I and my two other friends jumped onto the car with one person finding his way into the car and attempted struggling with the driver but he pushed him onto the floor. So we started shouting while the remaining two of us cringed onto the top of the car.”

    But what really looked like a blockbuster would soon come to an end as the driver had a tyre burst on a speed ramp around the Anfoega hospital.

    At this point, town folks including Okada boys who heard the distress call from the two students atop the vehicle joined in the chase.

    The two students chased and pulled down the driver who attempted to abandon the vehicle even before the town folks and the police came in to help drag him to the police station with the vehicle and the items.

    The items allegedly stolen include bags of gari, rice, beans, and corn. Other items include tin tomatoes and 2 cartons of sardines.

    The District Chief Executive for North Dayi, Edmond Kudjo Attah who is livid about the incident has called on the police to ensure that the suspects are prosecuted.

    “I want to see the logical conclusion of this matter and for the police, I want to see how they will end this matter. People must answer for their wrongs.”

    The DCE believes such actions, mostly undertaken by greedy, selfish persons are aimed at sabotaging the government’s efforts in addressing the recent food shortage that has hit second cycle school’s across the country.

    “Things are difficult, the President admits himself, I admit same and so when out of such difficult the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is able to make funds available for us to feed our children and this is what people will do to us as a country,” Kudjo Attah laments.

    “Where are we going? I have this simple question; who is killing the nation? It is you and I. This kind of attitude, we are destroying the nation and the time has come for us to stop it and that is it,” the DCE retorted.

    Police in the North Dayi District have confirmed the arrest but are tight-lipped on any further details.

    The two are, however, expected to be charged for stealing and duly arraigned before court after investigations.

  • Russian mayor: School children ‘sew clothes for soldiers’ fighting in Ukraine

    The Russian mayor of Labytnangi has shared photos of local schoolchildren who appear to be sewing clothes for soldiers fighting in Ukraine.

    Marina Treskova said on the Russian social network VK: “Our compatriots continue to demonstrate their readiness to help not in words, but in reality”.

    She added that the school students were sewing clothes for “military personnel who are in the special operations zone” – the term Russia uses to describe its invasion of Ukraine.

    VK

     

  • MAPOLY students disrupt ongoing examination over hike in tuition fee

    Monday morning, blocked all entries into the institution, protesting the hike in tuition fee.

    The protesting students accused the school management of extortion and illegal fees.

    It was gathered that the students had barricaded the main entrance of the institution as early as 6.30 am chanting solidarity songs.

    This development affected the ongoing second-semester examination.

    Some of the placards carried by the students read: “We no be rich kids, na why we come to MAPOLY,” “#Say No To Unreasonable Increment Now!!!” “Say no to extortion” and “Bring back our 60/40% what is new on the portal,” among others.

    The Chairman of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Ogun State, Simeon Damilola, while speaking with newsmen called for the reversal of all increased fees.

    “Today, we have commenced actions to protest the mismanagement, corruption and inhumane policies in MAPOLY.

    “We demand that a reversal should be made on all increased and newly introduced fees.

    “We demand that the state government set up a panel of enquiry to investigate how funds going into the school are expended.

    “We are disheartened to converge here today, not for celebration, but to decry the suffering and panic the management of the MAPOLY has subjected us to as students.

    “Our offence as Nigerian students is that we want to be educated and the Dr. Adeoye Odedeji-led management of MAPOLY is saying education is not for the poor”.

    “A few months ago in the last academic session, tuition fees for both ND and HND students were increased, including part-time students whose figure is not accurately given”.

    “Without considering the economic conditions of parents and guardians, tuition fees were increased outrageously again for two consecutive sessions. This is the highest level of discomfort any management could think of putting the students through.”

    In his reaction, the Head, Public Relations and Protocol of the institution, Mr Yemi Ajibola said, MAPOLY charges the least tuition fees in South West.

    He said, the management of MAPOLY introduced a registration fee of N20,000 only, payable by all newly admitted applicants, who are to enjoy the launching of the full digital registration process on the institution’s upgraded portal, as against the usual manual routines.

    He said, though, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) requested its removal but was reduced by 50 per cent (i.e N10,000) by the Governing Council after wide deliberations with stakeholders.

    “Similarly, admission application forms range from N2,000 to N7,500 only, depending on the category of application, either for National Diploma or Higher National Diploma programme with the acceptance fee remaining N35,500 only”.

    “Medical screening exercise is compulsory to determine the health status of the newly admitted students. This exercise is being carried out at designated registered medical centres outside the campus at a uniform economic rate”.

    “Conclusively, the Polytechnic does not collect money for tax clearance. Students are only expected to present tax receipt/certificates of their parents or guardians as evidence for fulfilment of tax obligation. This is a part of requisites for file arrangement during entry registration”.

    Therefore, allegations levied against the management of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta by the NANS are baseless, sentimental and unsubstantiated”.

    Ajibola advised parents, guardians, and the general public to visit www.mapoly.edu.ng for general information or contact the institution’s management via the available social media platforms on the website

     

    Source: Vangardngr.com

  • WAVTI: Students depend on gari only for survival for over three weeks

    Students of the Walewale Vocational and Technical Institute (WAVTI) in the West Mamprusi Municipality of the North East Region are bearing the brunt of the shortage of food in the school.

    The school which was recently added to the beneficiary boarding schools in the region is still not properly feeding the students the required diet.

    The students are fed with gari without sugar, salt, or oil for over three weeks during lunch and supper meals respectively.

    Some students are suffering from beriberi, with sores in their mouths, stomach pain, and diarrhea due to the continuous intake of gari without oil or sugar.

    Meanwhile, the boys are compelled to carry concrete and other construction-related works in Walewale and other neighboring communities due to the hunger they are encountering.

    They lamented that the shortage of food in the school had affected their studies and other academic activities.

    “We are suffering here. Every day, we are given only gari. Some of us have diarrhea and fever due to the gari we are eating. If we get the chance, we will run to our parents. They have been giving us gari, we cannot count the number of weeks that we take gari,” one of the students lamented.

    Some say they are scratching their private parts because of the kind of food they always take.

    “We are not getting enough and some of us don’t have food in our chop boxes or money to buy food. It is affecting us. Some of us are scratching our testis because of the gari we take every day,” another student bemoaned.

    Another student also added that “They have been giving us food like porridge in the morning without sugar and then lunch times too, they normally give us gari without oil or sugar. We are suffering because whenever we call home for help, our parents always tell us that the school is feeding us so why are we requesting food again? Things are difficult here and we don’t know what to do.”

    Meanwhile, some sources disclosed that on Wednesday 5th of October, the students took porridge for breakfast, lunch, and supper after their usual gari got finished on Tuesday (4th October 2022).

    The principal of the school declined to comment on the issue saying the regional director of education can only speak on the matter.

  • Iran protests: Students stuck in Tehran during protests in Iran, reports

    Iranian police and students battled on Sunday at one of the nation’s most prestigious institutions according to reports in the official media and social media.

    Reports say a large number of students at Sharif University in Tehran have been trapped in the campus car park.

    Videos on social media appear to show students running away from security forces, with apparent gunshots fired.

    Anti-government protests erupted in Iran in September after the death of a woman detained by the morality police.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, fell into a coma hours after morality police arrested her for allegedly breaking headscarf rules.

    Officers reportedly beat Ms Amini’s head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have said there is no evidence of any mistreatment and that she suffered “sudden heart failure”.

    Protests started at her funeral and have spread across the country to become the worst unrest seen in the country for years.

    One video posted on social media shows students running from security forces on Sharif university’s campus. Sounds resembling gunshots can be heard from a distance.

    In another, security forces on motorbikes appear to shoot at a car holding the passenger filming the video.

    Iran International cites reports which say security forces attacked student dormitories and fired guns at their dorms. Other reports mention the use of tear gas on protesters.

    Sunday was the first day of term for many students attending Sharif university for the first time. Reports say crowds had gathered outside the campus’s main gate late in the evening after hearing about the clashes.

    The BBC is unable to verify the events at the university.

    The last two nights have seen an escalation in anti-government protests in Tehran and many other cities across the country, despite a growing death toll.

    Iran Human Rights, an NGO based in Norway, says 133 people have been killed across Iran to date.

    Authorities have promised to come down hard on the protesters, who they say have been put up to it by Iran’s external enemies.

  • GIJ Academic-Practitioner Conference: Experts empower students to bridge gaps in theories and practice

    Ghana Institute of Journalism (GIJ) has guided students on how to bridge the gap between academic theories and real-life corporate practices through its “GIJ Academic-Practitioner Conference.”

    The 2022 GIJ Academic-Practitioner Conference held under the theme: “The PR & Marketing Communications Practice & Taught: Real or Perceived Gap?”, witnessed experts from both academia and the corporate world gather to share with students how best they could strive in the corporate world after school.

    The event hosted at the GIJ Dzorwulu Campus on September 29, 2022, saw a filled auditorium as students enjoyed the privilege to listen to speakers like Dr. Abena Animwaa (HoD, Department of Communication Studies, University of Ghana), Paa Kwesi Forson (Head, Public Relations, Global Media Alliance), Cynthia Ofori-Dwumfo (Group Head – Marketing &Corporate Affairs, Hollard Ghana), Benjamin Alpha (Corporate Communications Professional), Sophia Kujordji (Chief Corporate Communications Officer, Jospong Group of Companies), Dr. Isaac Tandoh (Lecturer, Faculty of Public Relations, Advertising and Marketing, GIJ), and Joyce Ahiadorme (Head of Transformation and Communications, Texstyles Ghana Limited).

    Dr. Isaac Tandoh, a decorated lecturer and an expert in both academia and corporate practice shared that the perceived gaps between academia and practice are only exaggerated. According to him, theories evolve hence students need to apply theories in a structured contest.

    “Perceived gaps are just exaggerated. I’m tempted to say they are not existent. I had previously worked in the corporate with big institutions and the money was quite good for me. Finally, I decided to step into academic but one of the reasons I joined is that after my PHD studies I was still thinking if I need to go back to the industry and make my money. But most of the HRs I met questioned why would they employ a Dr who was only good with theories. I only knew this after I encountered one after an interview and was like I did very well but the assumption was that Drs are too theoretical. Then I asked him respectfully what is theory? He couldn’t answer but they were accusing me of being theoretical. Meanwhile these corporate bodies come to us and I have done a lot of trading programmed for a number of them in the country. So, for me if you really understand your theories, your practice will be better,” he said.

    Joyce Ahiadorme on the other hand reiterated that industry is result oriented and powered by actions only. She highlighted that the ability to apply theories learnt to real work will guarantee success.

    “The truth is you need the theories. For the individuals, the theories are important but do not think that is all. It is the application of those theories when you come in. For the lecturers and schools, the world is changing and for us things move quickly. Now climate change is globally talked about and there are theories around it that would begin to teach people. We talked about CSR when I was in school now it is ESG in the field.”

    Paa Kwesi Forson. Head of Public Relations at Global Media Alliance, admonished students to build great relationships with their colleagues as this can help them in the future.

    Head of Corporate Communications, Jospong Group, Sophia Kujordji in her view acknowledged that indeed there are perceived gaps between academia and practice. However, there are real ones.

    She urged students to engage in internships and volunteerism to allow them to settle effortlessly in the corporate world.

    “There are somethings that when you go into the work space you realize that yes, you have the theories but it has to be put into context for application. We can make it easier for ourselves through internships and offering ourselves, volunteer for other services just to learn or just to appreciate whether what you’re learning in school is what is pertaining here. The theory is key and very important. It gives you the basis and something to stand on to the next level. It is also important to have that humility, soft skill to enter into the workspace. You can’t do with one without the other. They have to go together,” she shared.

    Also representing the academic field, Dr. Abena Yeboah-Banin reiterated that knowledge sharing is the primary purpose of educational institutions. However, according to her, such institutions are being denied the necessary resources to prepare the students for the job market.

    “We create the knowledge and use however many available avenues to share that knowledge. There are two key resources that I’ve noticed that the academic is being denied. First is the resourcing for running that institution and the teaching and learning environment. Increasingly, the money and other resources needed to do that and be good at it are being taken away from academics but alongside it is the expectation that the academic should do magic and still be able to produce people who are ready for the market.”

    “Second resource is the individual student’s readiness to be prepped. Unfortunately, we are dealing with students who are not driven, they don’t want to do the work and always want somebody to do the work for them. All they came in there for was the certificate. Walk out with it and not be able to do anything.”

    Cynthia Ofori-Dwumfo on her part mentioned that society needs to encourage strict values through socialization as she said intentionality is the key to bridging the perceived gaps.

    According to Benjamin Alpha, exploring is the key to skill development. The thought-provoking conference inspired sparked questions from students, while the renowned speakers satisfied their curiosity.

    Professor. Eric Opoku Mensah, the Deputy Rector, also admonished students to take classroom experiences seriously as they serve as critical tools for the job market.

    Speakers were appreciated with citations from the Public Relations department for honouring their request to share their experiences. Bright Senanu, the Executive Producer and the Event Marketing and Promotion Lecturer under whose leadership this conference was held was also appreciated with a citation. The conference was successfully moderated by PR lecturer, Doctoral Researcher, Brand and Corporate Communication Strategist, Noel Nutsugah.

  • Headmistress of Abonyi Catholic/BA Basic School appeals for support to refurbish dilapidated library

    Headmistress of Abonyi Catholic/BA Basic School, Madam Emelia Boevi is unhappy about the current dilapidated state of the school’s library facility and has appealed for support to get the facility renovated.

    In an exclusive interview with GhanaWeb, she revealed that she was transferred to the school two years ago. Still, even before her arrival, the facility was in a very deplorable state. She then planned to refurbish it but at the same time, the KG Block was also not in good shape so she used the money to renovate the KG Block.

    “I came here in 2020, during the Covid era. This’s how it was before I arrived so I decided to renovate it but at the same time, the KG Block was also not in good shape. So I used the money to renovate the KG Block instead of the library.

    I’ve spoken with the community assemblyman and opinion leaders, and they promised to help us, but we’re yet to receive any help. Due to that, we’ve packed the books from the library; some into my office and the KG classroom. So, we need help so we can arrange the books back for the students to use,” she said.

    Some students of the school also shared their challenges with GhanaWeb; according to them, the lack of a library facility is affecting their studies.

    One Samuel Arthur, a JHS 2 student said, “I used to go to the library to read but because the library was not good, the books were packed from it so we want it to be renovated so we can have our books back to read.”

    Besides, Beatrice Eshun, a class six student also mentioned that “We want a good library, this one is destroyed so you people should come and do it for us so that we can have a place to read.”

    Besides, speaking with Hon. Matthew Acquah, the assemblyman for the area, admitted that such a report has come before him and he is working to get some funds for the refurbishment.

    “I know about the bad state of the library, it has been like this for over two years now but we’re trying our best to get it renovated. They brought a budget which I promised to assist with! But I’m also pleading to anyone who can help us to come to our aid because this’s a big school,” he mentioned.

    Abonyi Catholic/BA Basic School is located at Gomoa Abonyi in the Gomoa Central District in the Central Region. The school enrolls from KG to JHS with a population of about 500 students.

  • Medical Council decision to bar medicine degrees from Ukraine unfair, illogical – Titus Glover

    The former Tema East Member of Parliament, Daniel Nii Kwartei Titus Glover, has berated the Medical and Dental Council of Ghana for its decision not to recognise degree certificates of Ghanaian doctors trained in Ukraine.

    According to him, the decision of the council is not only unfair but also illogical because the nation badly needs the services of doctors.

    The council said that it will no longer recognise degree certificates issued by Medical and Dental Schools from Ukraine, as some schools have resorted to studying online.

    According to citinewsroom.com, the council said that the training of these students online is not in accordance with the required process and will not be accepted as it threatens the quality and credence of the profession.

    “Training to be a doctor must be in accordance with established strategies. Will potential patients be happy to be treated by a doctor who was trained online? We have to take our public interest responsibility seriously. The point is what is the kind of training that is acceptable in the world? If it is not standard, then, I am afraid, this regulator will not give any stamp of approval,” citinewsroom.com quoted the Council’s Registrar, Dr. Divine Ndonbi Banyubala.

    He, therefore, urged students to take advantage of the government’s intervention to continue their training in Ghana rather than taking online lessons.

    But speaking in a Multimedia interview monitored by GhanaWeb, Titus Glover, who is also a former deputy minister of transport, intimated that there is nothing wrong with students studying online given the advancement in technology.

    He added that the students not being able to complete their education through in-person tutoring was no fault of theirs.

    “Parents paid money for their wards to have some education in Ukraine and because of the Russian invasion, they had to come back home.

    “During the COVID-19 era were the universities not running online programmes? The online courses are still going on in the country.

    “We plead with the Medical and Dental Council to reverse their decision. Lawyers who train abroad are given the chance to take the professional exam when they come back home. Why are we not giving the doctors from Ukraine the chance to write the medical examination because we need more doctors? For them to tell them that we don’t recognise doctors from Ukraine is unfair,” he said in Twi.

  • UEW gives October 7 deadline to settle GPA issues after protests

    The University of Education, Winneba, has given stakeholders up till October 7, 2022, to settle student concerns about their cumulative Grade Point Average.

    After a meeting with protesting final-year students, the school also assured that there will be some updates to the GPAs starting from September 26.

    Students have been complaining that the school had not been updating their GPA records.

    The agitation came with the students expected to graduate in about three weeks.

    “Result-related issues that have been submitted by various departments have been collated and are being uploaded for students to view online in the coming week,” a statement from the school said.

    The school is also setting up a help centre to receive complaints.

    After the school’s students demonstrated on Friday because of the lack of action from the school, UEW’s management urged students to instead “resort to dialogue to have any issues resolved.”

    “They are also entreated to take advantage of the laid down procedures and directives given for the speedy resolution of their problems.”

  • UEW final year students protest, accuse school of not updating GPA for 3 years

    Level 400 students of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW), have demonstrated because of what they say is a deliberate attempt by school authorities not to update the cumulative record of students for the last three years.

    The students among many accusations are blaming the data protection unit of the school for failing to update the records on their portals, making the various portals of the students empty.

    The school is expected to hold its graduation for the final year students in three weeks’ time.

    The students say they are not able to track their academic performance as a result of the school failing to update the portal.

    Demonstrating students are not allowing vehicles to enter the campus and have blocked the main entrance of the school.

    Persons caught taking pictures of the demonstration have had their phones seized.

     

  • Unemployment crisis: Some curriculum teachings not connected to employers expectations – Lecturer

    Business consultant and entrepreneurship lecturer, Isaac Tweneboah-Kodua, has charged students to be committed to acquiring more knowledge to be well packaged and marketable for the job market.

    He said that the country’s curriculum programme merely bridges the gap for students between schooling and readiness in the corporate world.

    “The first one has to with the curriculum we teach the younger people at the universities. Some of them are not really connected with what the employers are looking for.

    “So, when the people come out of school especially those who did not do anything directly with what the industry is looking for, it because very difficult for them to stick themselves into the industry,” he told Samuel Eshun on the Happy Morning Show.


     

    He however, suggested that despite the defects of Ghana’s curriculum activities, students can ready themselves by investing in improving their skills and knowledge in other fields of study.

    “But that does not warrant that if for example someone did a course that there is no readily available job in the market the person shouldn’t prepare him or herself.

    “I did Geography and Political Science when I was in Legon but at the time I got to know that if I didn’t find myself something to improve myself, I would be unemployed after school.

    “So right away I did Marketing at along my main courses as did my roommate. From that time till now I have never known unemployment. Not that I’m superhuman but the fact is I got to understand my talent alone doesn’t warrant me to automatically get a job after school.

    “If I did my main courses alone, my best bet would have been to teach in the classroom. At the same time my colleagues at Winneba and UCC were doing the same course with education. If we both were looking for the teaching jobs, they would be favorited ahead of me,” he added.

    Source:happyghana.com