Double-track system is a leapfrogging strategy for access – Adutwum

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Minister of Education Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum
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The Minister of Education, Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum, has said the double-track system was one of the best decisions taken by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to give Ghanaians access to education.

Double-track system was an intervention that allowed schools to accommodate more students within the same facility to reduce overcrowding.

The Member of Parliament for Bosomtwe said access is key in order to produce the best human resources to compete in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

“Double-track system is a leapfrogging strategy for access because before the President promised Free SHS, the research that had been done indicated that it was going to take 20 years for us to be able to do Free SHS,” he said at the latest edition of #PatrioticSpaces on Twitter.

“So, when the President said ‘use double-track as is done in California and other places’ he was prescribing a leapfrogging strategy for access. Instead of 20 years, he was able to do it during his first term using a time-tested innovative strategy that increases access without waiting for the development of infrastructure over a period of 20 years,” he said.

“When we came to power, enrollment in secondary education was 800,000. Today, we’re talking about 1.3 million within a period of six years because the President adopted a leapfrogging strategy for access,” Adutwum told the over 2,000 participants.

Investing in education

He said that the Akufo-Addo government is investing more in the education sector to position Ghana well in the era of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution is the current and developing environment in which disruptive technologies and trends such as the Internet of Things (IoT), robotics, virtual reality and artificial intelligence (AI) are changing the way modern people live and work.

Speaking on the topic: “Education for the next generation,” Adutwum said the current government is transforming the sector to make it fit for purpose.

“What we are trying to do is to make Ghana’s education [system] fit for purpose so far as the Fourth Industrial Revolution is concerned,” the Education Minister said.

“We know we are in the Fourth Industrial Revolution and things are shifting rapidly,” he said. “We also have to confront the challenge of inequity within our country and outside.”

He added: “I know there are people who will say our education system has challenges. Yes, we do but these are mere hiccups. The kind of transformation work that the President is doing in the education sector is second to none. The infrastructure that we’re building across the country is part of the transformation agenda.”

Source: 3news.com|Ghana