Sunday

November 24th , 2024

FOLLOW US

WHY GHANA? LOOK AT YOUR TEACHERS

featured img



The Ghana Education Service (GES) under the Ministry of Education, is responsible for employing teachers in Ghana, especially, the Basic School teachers. Teachers form a huge fraction of the employed. One fact remains that anybody who has a white collar job, is a direct beneficiary of the teacher. If you can read and write today, then you owe it to some teacher. Have you ever had the experience of an illiterate passing on a mobile phone to you, just for you to choose and dial a number with a certain name for them? Have you seen how you enjoy social media? Can an illiterate enjoy Tiktok or Facebook or Twitter like you? Of course the teacher is amazing! Don’t you think so? Just see how our President, Ministers, MPs and other literates deliver speeches every day with ease. The teacher taught them all.

As a JHS teacher, I think about the situation of teachers in Ghana and I weep every day. First of all, let me talk about the meagre salary of the teacher. People have always said that the reward of the teacher is in heaven. I don’t dispute that, however, the umbrella cannot stop the rain but it can let you stay in the rain. Many thanks does not fill the stomach. As the teacher wakes up and baths every day to school, and closes 2:30pm, his average monthly salary is GH? 2000.00. By simple division, the teacher’s daily mark is GH?67.00. Even though teachers are as calm as a cold bottle of beer, they are rooted into multiple loans just to live up to expectation. The Ghanaian teacher is virtually nothing without loan. In fact, if you see the payslips of teachers, you will go blank. It is simply lachrymose. The debt situation of the Ghanaian teacher is so grave that hardly does a teacher get the ability to own a complete house even after pension. Let nobody think that it is financial indiscipline that kills the teachers, because you can’t climb trees to catch fish. I am sure you won’t discuss your malaria illness with the mosquito.                                                               

Now, let’s look at the inconsistencies in salary. Can you fathom that a teacher who crosses three rivers to school, to a remote area without internet access and Electricity, takes the same salary as a teacher in a city with full dose of internet and Electricity? That is the case for the Ghanaian teacher. A teacher in the city has numerous opportunities than the village teacher. Sometimes you leave your community and travel to a village where even good food is a problem, yet you are regular and punctual. The city teacher has side business that fetches him money. The city teacher rarely goes to school regularly, but at the end of the day, same salary. I am not opining that some category of teachers should be punished, but what appreciation is there for very industrious teachers and teachers who work in deprived communities? In fact, some teachers have distinguished themselves so much that a day’s absence from school, amounts to grief for students and disaster for the entire school. Without them, the school cannot just function. Hmm! These special teachers are everywhere but nobody identifies and rewards them. With time, they will surely rust, trust me.

With all this bitterness of the Ghanaian teacher, the GES and perhaps the government has not helped matters; If I am not economical with the truth. In this 21sth century, GES appreciates a lazy teacher whose lesson notes are up-to-date than a hardworking teacher who has no lessen notes. What is this? For five years now, All BECE candidates get placement to good schools with their poor grades. Basically, once you sit for the BECE exams, you are qualified to proceed to SHS no matter your aggregate. And to make matters worse, they go free even with the failure. So if all JHS graduates must go to SHS with whatever results, what is the essence of the BECE? Why waste money to set, mark and release results as if there is selection for promotion? Someone who gets aggregate 48 plus, you tell that child, to go to SHS free. What product will such a child become? And now, our SHS teachers are battling with students who can’t even read? What policy is this?  At the JHS level, there is massive indiscipline because the students have realised that they don’t need you-the teacher, to pass and go to SHS. After all, they will get a SHS to attend. So they now see learning as a disturbance. As I speak to you, Basic schools are still in despair as to how they can implement a so-called adopted Common Core Curriculum because there are no textbooks.

I think we don’t need glass eyes to tell us that the Education System of Ghana is collapsing, and if nothing is swiftly done, the future is bleak. 

Total Comments: 0

Meet the Author


PC
HAADI YAMUSAH

TEACHER

follow me

INTERSTING TOPICS


Connect and interact with amazing Authors in our twitter community