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General News of Thursday, 15 October 2020

Source: GNA

Fees expected to fall as govt announce free utility tariff for tertiary students

Minister of Education, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh Minister of Education, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh

The Minister of Education, Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh says no student in the public universities will pay utility bills from the next academic year.

This is intended to lessen the financial burden on students and increase access to tertiary education in the country.

Dr. Opoku Prempeh, who announced this at the third edition of the Nation Building Updates in Accra on Tuesday, said the Akufo-Addo led government was the first to introduce a tertiary education policy to streamline interventions rolled out in the sector.

He said if the ruling government was re-elected, a tertiary student would only need his or her Ghana Card to secure a student loan. There will be no need for a guarantor.

The event was held on the theme, “Investing in Education, Investing in the Future,” which allows the various Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) to provide detailed accounts of their stewardship.

The Minister stated that the Akufo-Addo led government since 2017 had initiated 719 infrastructure projects in the basic education sector and completed 252 of them.

They included two-unit classroom blocks for the Kindergarten, three-unit, six-unit, 12-unit, and 18-unit classroom blocks for primary and junior high schools.

At the secondary education level, he said, the government had initiated 1,011 infrastructure projects and completed 492 of them.

They included classroom blocks, dormitories, libraries, water systems, and toilet facilities.

The new single and double-storey dormitories constructed in some secondary schools had created additional 20,340 beds.

In the process, he said, 84,600 seats were created for students to study in a conducive environment, while 14,832 toilet and water facilities had been provided.

Dr. Opoku Prempeh stated that $800 million had been invested in education infrastructural development in the secondary education sector.

The investment went into new physical infrastructure, upgrading of facilities, new equipment, retooling, and capacity building of teachers in competency-based curricula.

Dr. Opoku Prempeh, also the member of Parliament for Manhyia South, refuted claims by the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) that, the ruling NPP government had neglected the E-blocks and Community Senior High Schools.

He stated that the previous NDC government completed seven out of 23 Community SHS under World Bank support.

However, the NPP administration under President Akufo-Addo had completed 14 more of such projects.

Additionally, the NDC government completed 22 out of the 50 e-blocks it started, but the ruling NPP administration had completed nine of them, while the rest were at various stages of completion.

Also, the ruling government provided a head teacher’s bungalow, accommodation for two assistant headmasters, and teachers’ flats to complement the Community SHS, which were absent in the ones provided by the previous government.

On technical/vocational education, the Minister stated that 37 of the 47 technical institutes in the country were being refurbished, while 34 National Vocational Training Institutes (NVTI) were being upgraded and retooled.

The national headquarters of the NVTI was being refurbished while 10 regional offices of NVTI were being constructed.

More also, the government was building district vocational education training centres across the country to train the youth in jewelry, bakery, beads making, basketry, among others.

Dr Opoku Prempeh announced that the Akufo-Addo’s government would construct the first-ever Creative Arts secondary schools as model SHSs to enable students interested in honing their music, dance and oratory skills to do so.