Author's note:
This was written on 20/11/2012. I am posting it today because I was unable to do so on the day. It did however appear on Vibeghana.com and Ghanaweb.com subsequently. Please read on:
Today, I am reproducing a story written by reporters of the UK
newspaper, the Daily Telegraph, entitled: "£230 million British aid
programme to support schools in Nigeria is failing".
It is my two-pesewa contribution to the debate about free secondary education in Ghana.
There are many discerning Ghanaians who feel that somehow the lack of a
proper national debate on the subject, might lead society to
sleepwalk towards a possible future disaster, which might destroy
second-cycle education, and possibly dislocate our national economy on
top too.
One hopes, therefore, that the discerning and independent-minded
Ghanaian patriots, whose crucial swing-votes now determine who becomes
Ghana's president, will step back and make up their minds that they will
prevent a gigantic fraud being perpetrated on ordinary people in
Ghana.
If the uncharitable in our midst are right about them, then those they
describe as "ruthless and determined politicians", who they allege
care precious little about the education of ordinary people, but are
nonetheless using the promise of free secondary education as a clever
campaign-carrot ploy, to enable them win power, ought to be prevented
from succeeding in their cynical aim, at all costs.
Let this culled story about the shortcomings of education in Nigeria,
serve as a warning of what possibly awaits ordinary Ghanaians in
the not too distant future - if decent and independent-minded people
are prevented from demanding answers to the troubling question of how we
will fund free second-cycle education in Ghana on a sustainable basis,
and, above all, precisely how much it will cost our nation over the first
four years. Please read on:
"A £230 million British aid programme to support schools in Nigeria has
failed to produce any major improvement in pupil learning, the
development watchdog said today.
By Telegraph reporters
6:00AM GMT 20 Nov 2012
The Independent Commission for Aid Impact (ICAI) said the UK's education
programme in Nigeria was being undermined by a shortage of effective
teachers and a lack of support from local state governments.
On its system traffic light ratings, the commission ranked the scheme
amber-red - the second lowest rating - indicating "significant
improvements" were required.
To date, the Department for International Development (Dfid) has spent
£102 million on supporting education in 10 of Nigeria's 36 states, with a
further £126 million committed to 2019.
However, the commission found that around a third of the eligible
children - an estimated 3.7 million - were still not in school, while
those that were received little by way of education.
"We are concerned by the very high numbers of out-of-school children and
the very poor learning outcomes in nine of the 10 Nigerian states
supported by Dfid," it said.
"Dfid's education programme in Nigeria operates in a very challenging
environment, with too few effective teachers, poor infrastructure and
unpredictable state funding all contributing to poor learning outcomes
for pupils in basic education.
"Our review indicates no major improvement in pupil learning."
The findings will further add to the pressure on ministers over the aid
budget, with many Tory MPs strongly opposed to David Cameron's
commitment to maintain overseas aid at a time of spending cuts at home.
ICAI chief commissioner Graham Ward said: "The communities we spoke to
in Nigeria want their children to become self-reliant by learning to
read and write.
"In our view, Dfid's programmes will only become sustainable when they
can routinely help to unlock state governments' budgets to fund the
required improvements both adequately and equitably."
A spokesman for Dfid said: "This was a limited enquiry in that the team
only visited one per cent of schools, most of which were in only one
state in Nigeria, and they did not take into account the most recent
evidence of the projects' progress. However, we will carefully review
the report's recommendations and respond in due course."
End of culled Daily Telegraph report.
Whiles a very good and progressive idea, it is essential, dear reader,
that no political party is allowed to get to power in Ghana, promising
free secondary education, without thoroughly explaining exactly what
the "free" in its promised free second-cycle education policy proposal
consists of, precisely how much it will cost our nation over a 4-year
period and from whence those funds will be sourced. A word to the
wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Email: peakofi.thompson@gmail.com
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