Accra, April 27, GNA - The Convention Peoples Party (CPP) on
Wednesday called for a policy change in the Basic Education Certificate
Examination (BECE) as a terminal point for basic school leavers. The call was made by Mr Kojo Armah, CPP Shadow Cabinet Minister of
Education, when speaking on the alternative policy vision on Education; at
the 15th in the series of 93How The CPP Will Do It: Education," in Accra= .. "The CPP's view is that the BECE as it stands now prematurely
condemns a large percentage of our youth to the fringes or outer perimeters
of national development as they are categorise as drop-outs because they
could not make the required aggregates to enter secondary schools, yet have
very little other windows open to them," he said. On senior high school education, the CPP intended it to be an integral part
of basic education to which all children should have equal access. According to the CPP, BECE would be abolished as a terminal point but
re-designed to become an integral part of a selection process to determine the
next level of the child's education instead of a pass or fail option. The CPP also outlined its policy for second cycle education, teacher
training colleges, trade, vocational and technical schools, national youth
employment programme, non-formal education, tertiary institutions and
managing the gap between private and public schools. Mr Armah said the CPP was determined to widen the frontiers of
education for girls through increased affirmative action. He pointed out that the party when given the opportunity to rule the
country after Election 2012, would encourage higher institutions to place
more emphasis on research, which must be seen as a necessary support to
the nation's new age of industrialisation especially in the wake of Ghana= 's oil
and gas production.