A year ago
Abraham Annang Yemoson, the headmaster of the Cape Coast School for the Deaf and Blind, has requested laptops or desktop computers to help the institution with the instruction and study of information and communication technology (ICT).
He stated that the teaching and study of ICT were essential for properly preparing the students to be more relevant in a technologically advanced society.
The laptops and desktop computers required for efficient instruction, he claimed, were not readily accessible.
Thomas Hughes Amissah, a National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate for Cape Coast South, gave food items, toiletries, chocolates, and street lights to the school, prompting Mr. Yemoson to issue the plea.
three colleges
Mr. Amissah, also known as "Skillful," visited three schools in his district, including the Adom Memorial Day Care Center, the Cape Coast School for the Deaf and Blind, and the Aboom School for Special Needs.
Customized chocolates, spaghetti, tin tomato cartons, liquid soap, cooking oil, sardines, a bag of rice, a box of tea bags, and cookies were among the donated goods.
The Cape Coast School for the Deaf and Blind also received streetlight donations from him.
454 kids attended the school, according to Mr. Yemoson, including 380 who had hearing impairments and 74 who had vision impairments.
He said that the school's inadequate road system was still another big issue, making it challenging for pupils, particularly those who are visually challenged, to get around the campus.
Need for Infrastructure
He said that the school's facilities and water supplies were inadequate.
He thus pleaded for the construction of extra classrooms, an assembly hall, and a water supply for the school.
According to Mr. Amissah, it is extremely important and wise to show hearing and visually impaired kids affection since it makes them feel cherished and cared for.
The Cape Coast School for the Deaf and Blind and the Aboom School for Special Needs are two schools in his constituency that he urged benefactors and business organizations to sponsor.
The proprietress of the Aboom School for Special Needs, Mary Osei, accepted the gifts on behalf of the institution and explained that their main difficulty was a lack of infrastructure. She pleaded for more classrooms and a school bus.
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