Take the One Student, One Tablet initiative seriously – Anis Haffar

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Ghanaian educationist, teacher, columnist, and author, Anis Haffar has underscored the importance of ICT as part of the education system in Ghana.

He says with the availability of laptops and computers, educational materials can be kept for years.

To that end, he said that the current One Student, One Tablet initiative should be taken seriously.

“This is a digital era so I am looking for ways we can use digitalistion to make life easier.,” he said.

“We have to take it seriously,” he said during a national dialogue organized by Media General and STAR-Ghana on Thursday, April 4.

In order to address the disparity in the teacher deployment, Mr Anis Haffar further stated that “We have to raise our teachers with the enthusiasm to go to the places to teach.”

Also speaking at the same event, the Executive Director of the Africa Education Watch, Kofi Asare, attributed dropout at the Junior High School level to the distance between where the pupils live and the schools, especially in rural areas.

He indicated that some of the students have had to walk for kilometers in order to reach their schools. “This is a disincentive for them to continue,” he said.

Furthermore, he said, the lack of junior high schools in most rural areas is a factor causing the dropout.

Speaking at a national dialogue session organized by Media General and Starr Ghana and on Thursday, April 4, he said “Distance, lack of junior high schools after factors for the drips  from P6 and JHS 1.”

The third factor he identified is the disparity in teacher deployment. He noted that the unavailability of teachers in rural areas is causing the dropout.

Free SHS: There has been consistent and significant improvement in the WASSCE results – Kwasi Kwarteng

The Public Relations Officer of the Ministry of Education, Kwaku Kwarteng also touted the achievement of the free senior high school programme.

He says the results of the West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) have seen significant and consistent improvement under the free SHS policy.

He added that although the quality of education is not where it is expected to be, the fact remains that the quality is not bad presently.

“When access increases, the general template is that quality decreases, but even though we are not where we have to be, we are not doing badly,” he said during the national dialogue session organized by Media General and STAR-Ghana on Thursday, April 4.

He added, “Data from WASSCE clearly show that there has been consistency and significant improvement.”

Kwasi Kwarteng also mentioned the ‘One Student, One Tablet’ initiative as one of the interventions to improve on quality education.

“We have the ‘One Student One Laptop’ (‘One Student, One Tablet’), we have done quite a significant work,” he said.