Ghanaian Education And The Voucher System

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Elizabeth Couri Social Policy Jeff Manza 21th May 2014 Ghanaian Education and The Voucher System For years, the Ghanaian Ministry of Education and the Ghana Educational service have experienced successes and difficulties in raising educated people in a country that has just reached middle-income status. These institutions acknowledge that without proper planning of education, a functioning structure and effective knowledge and skill acquisition, the country will not develop with its own efforts and Ghana will be dependent on outside forces to manage its economy. This is why there is a strong concern for the Education to reach more people and to be delivered with good quality. One of the biggest issues that confront Ghana is that, due to high costs of education and high drop-out rates, there are still thousands of children who are not able to climb through the ladder of education to the tertiary level. The numbers that drop out after every major stage are alarming and most government policies on education have not been able to solve this. The highest rate of drop that is of most concern occurs between the transitions from Junior High School to Senior high school. For any country, this should be alarming. The reason every child does not get into a Senior High school is mainly that they either cannot afford the school or they cannot get into the few competitive slots. This paper seeks to suggest why the government may be better off providing vouchers for students to go to private schools that will complement the already existing public schools. In the end, this may succeed at increasing the people who gain senior high school education and this may also push quality standards higher up. Formal Education was introduced to Ghana (fo... ... middle of paper ... ...istrict offices to also disburse monthly salaries of teachers, especially those in public schools, though similar governmental banking institutions like the Ghana Commercial bank. For the government to ensure that the private schools they support through vouchers are upholding the nationally developed curriculum which is designed to express educational solutions to the present and current challenges of the country, the schools should prepare its students to take the same tests that those in public schools do. This will ensure a good way to evaluate the actual advantages and disadvantages of the voucher system and whether or not it is a good system for the government to adopt and support. It will also help the government determine which areas of the country may need extra adjustments to the voucher allocations and which low income groups to expand the services to.

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