Supervise your wards to study whiles at home


Print

By Ishmael
Adams/Sarah Frimpong, GNA   

Kumasi, Sept. 15, GNA – Parents have been
counselled to maintain strict 
supervision of their wards, especially girls, as they spent two months
at home, awaiting their turn to begin second cycle education.

Mr. Samuel Oduro, a parent, who spoke to the
Ghana News Agency (GNA), while registering his child at the Serwaa Nyarko
Senior

By Ishmael
Adams/Sarah Frimpong, GNA
   

Kumasi, Sept. 15, GNA – Parents have been
counselled to maintain strict 
supervision of their wards, especially girls, as they spent two months
at home, awaiting their turn to begin second cycle education.

Mr. Samuel Oduro, a parent, who spoke to the
Ghana News Agency (GNA), while registering his child at the Serwaa Nyarko
Senior High School (SHS) in Kumasi, said they needed to keep an eagle’s eye on
their children and always counsel them to stay clear of habits that could
truncate their education, as they waited for their turn to go school.

They should engage them to be sober, working
hard on their books by way of revision to always refresh their minds, stayed at
home and not be roaming aimlessly with friends in town.

The GNA during a visit to some SHS in the
Kumasi Metropolis, three days into their re-opening, observed that the queues
of parents trying to register their wards admitted under both tracks of the
system had minimized.

This was not unexpected since most of them had
done the registration on the first and second days.

The situation was however different on Monday,
the beginning of the academic year when the GNA got to the Armed Forces SHS and
the Kumasi Girls School.

Some of the parents in the long winding
queues, had travelled from as far as Bogoso in the Western Region to register
their children.

The school authorities were not prepared to
talk but there was every indication that the double track system had taken-off
smoothly.

GNA


قالب وردپرس