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Sunday, February 9, 2025

Ministry Of Education Rubbishes Mahama’s Attempt To Undermine WASSCE Candidates Intelligence

 

The Ministry of Education (MoE) has strongly refuted recent claims made by former President John Dramani Mahama regarding lax supervision and collusion in the West Africa Senior Schools Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

In a statement released on Friday, the MoE labeled Mahama’s comments as a “calculated attempt to downplay the great strides made by the Ministry in improving learning outcomes in the country.”

The former President had challenged the authenticity of the recent WASSCE results, alleging that invigilators colluded with teachers to aid students in answering questions.

The Ministry of Education pointed out the remarkable progress achieved in WASSCE results, citing a substantial improvement from a 28.7 percent score (A1-C6) in Integrated Science in 2015 to an impressive 66.80 percent achieved by the 2023 WASSCE candidates under the leadership of President Nana Akufo-Addo.

“We have made monumental progress, and over the past few years, WAEC has instituted several measures to curb exam malpractices during the BECE and WASSCE test administration,” the Ministry asserted.
They highlighted the strict supervision measures implemented by WAEC in collaboration with the Ghana Education Service to ensure the integrity of the examinations.

The statement clarified that candidates caught cheating faced severe consequences, with subject papers or entire exams being cancelled depending on the nature of the malpractice. Invigilators and supervisors involved in malpractices were reported to law enforcement agencies and faced disciplinary proceedings, often resulting in termination from the Ghana Education Service.

The Ministry further defended Ghana’s superior performance in the WASSCE, citing the highest-ever 8 A1s recorded in 2020 and consistent improvement over the past six years. They attributed this progress to interventions such as the Free SHS policy, which provides students with access to better-prepared teachers, core textbooks, remedial packages, and increased teaching hours.

“The Ministry of Education wishes to assure our students, parents, guardians, and the general public that the quality of education and examinations at all levels, including the WASSCE, was not and will not be compromised,” the statement concluded. It urged stakeholders to disregard any information suggesting Ghana’s withdrawal from the WAEC exams for WASSCE.

By Vincent Kubi

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