Ghana's School Hair Policy: A question of national interest, not western fashion

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  • Randy Nutakor 1 month ago

    Excellent piece, and i hope people will read and understand that our second cycle institutions are meant to train, educate and mold young
    people not a place of beauty and fashion contest.

  • Farakhan 1 month ago

    Thank you reading and seeing the sense in this piece.

    Much appreciated.

  • Kwame 1 month ago

    To the west, its world rule order, which all must respect irrespective of what define their national aspirations and interest.
    There is a little animal that a type of srim that lives in the shell of shell animals in the oce ...
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  • Wise man 1 month ago

    Hair cut should NOT be a question of national interest.
    We should be debating about the quality of education for the future of our country.
    Hairstyle doesn't improve the quality of our education. Western world policies imp ...
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  • Farakhan 1 month ago

    The direction of competition with the top among the top in the world is what the minister seeks to do.

    "Ensure discipline" in the learning institutions. The hair creates difficulties for students hence , removing it will ...
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  • KWABENA KASAPREKO. 1 month ago

    GHANA HAS ITS OWN TRADITIONS, CULTURES AND CUSTOMS, PERIOD !!! WE SHOULD NOT BE IMITATING WESTERN COUNTRIES. IMITATION OF WESTEERN COUNTRIES IS ONE REASONS WHY WE CANNOT FLUENTLY SPEAK OUR OWN LANGUAGES, WHEN WE ARE CONVERS ...
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  • Chief Whip 1 month ago

    I think you have really proven a point for maintaining low hair cuts in schools except following in the theory of Child development. Even aside the Psychological implications, for me, you have proven a point