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GCSE results row: high court to hear schools' appeal for judicial review

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GCSE results row: the alliance of schools and pupils claim Ofqual's decisions 'prejudiced the life chances of thousands of children'. Photograph: AlamyGCSE results row: high court to hear schools' appeal for judicial review

06 November 2012

Judge grants alliance permission to make case for regrading of controversial GCSE English papers taken this summer

Press Association

A high court judge has ordered an urgent hearing of a legal challenge over the summer's GCSE English controversy mounted by an alliance of pupils, schools and councils.

{sidebar id=10 align=right}Almost 400 individual cases are involved in the bid for a judicial review. Mr Justice Cranston decided there should be an open court hearing after privately considering the merits of the application for permission to seek a review. A two-day court hearing is expected to be fixed for the near future.

The alliance recently announced it had served court documents on England's exams regulator Ofqual, as well as the AQA and Edexcel awarding bodies. The documents set out their case for a regrading of GCSE English papers taken by pupils this summer.

The alliance is challenging a decision by the exam boards to raise the boundary needed to get a grade C between January and June, as well as what they claim was a failure by Ofqual to address the situation. It claims that as a result of the decisions an estimated 10,000 pupils who took their English GCSE exam in June missed out on a C grade.

A statement of claim submitted to the high court says: "The decisions have prejudiced the life chances of thousands of children. The immediate effects of the decisions include children being unable to progress in education, losing vocational opportunities and jobs and being unable to gain employment.

"The children affected by the decisions were entitled to be treated in a fair, consistent and rational manner by the defendants. They were not. The decisions are incompatible with the most elementary principles of fairness, rationality and good administration. They are unlawful and should be quashed."

The alliance includes 167 pupils, as well as 150 schools, 42 councils and six professional bodies. Ofqual responded to a pre-action letter sent by the alliance, vowing to "rigorously defend" its decisions over the exam results.

The row over the English exams broke out as national GCSE results were published in August. Ofqual's initial inquiry into the controversy, published in August, concluded January's GCSE English assessments were "graded generously" but the June boundaries were properly set and candidates' work properly graded. The regulator insisted it would be inappropriate for either of the sets of exams to be regraded. Instead, students would be given an extra chance to resit the GCSE this month.

A separate report, published last week, warned that teenagers had been let down by an exams system that is abused by teachers under intense pressure to achieve good grades. Teachers in some of England's secondary schools were guilty of "significantly" over-marking pupils' GCSE English work this summer in order to boost results, according to chief regulator Glenys Stacey. She laid blame for the debacle on intense pressure on schools to reach certain targets, which led to over-marking, as well as poorly designed exams and too much of an emphasis on work marked by teachers.

Source: Guardian UK

Nduom's Wife On NPP's Free SHS Policy

education

Mrs. Yvonne Nduom, wife of the flagbearer of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP)Nduom's Wife On NPP's Free SHS Policy

08 November 2012

Mrs. Yvonne Nduom, wife of the flagbearer of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP) says there is great difference between her husband’s promise of free education and that of the main opposition New Patriotic Party’s (NPP) free SHS.

Mrs. Yvonne Nduom says the PPP had already fine-tuned its education policy before the NPP came out with the modalities to achieve that goal. Speaking on Radio XYZ, Mrs. Nduom said Dr. Papa Kwesi Nduom and the PPP officials came out with the policy on making education free as far back as January before the NPP started trumpeting their “free senior high school” in the middle of the year.

In a bid to draw the line between the two similar promises, Mrs. Nduom said while the PPP says “free, compulsory, continuous, quality education from Kindergarten, [the NPP] says free secondary education.”

{sidebar id=12 align=right}She said the NPP promise is “an elitist policy because those parents who [benefit] have money to give their children for extra tutorials; they hire teachers [and] they send them to nice schools here. They are the ones who get access to these premier secondary schools and they are the ones who are going to benefit from the free education.”

Explaining the rationale behind the PPP’s promise, the management consultant said: “We all know that for ten years that we came out with this new educational system, 1.5 million children have failed the BECE. Those people they are not Ghanaians. They won’t get free SHS. We know that if you were to take one thousand students from class one, by the time they get to class six, 250 of them would have dropped out for various reasons.”

She explained that at the JHS level, another 60 percent of those who qualified to write the BECE will not make it to the SHS level, leaving just a handful of them going higher.

According to her, Dr Nduom’s policy intends to target the majority of students who otherwise may not make it through the educational ladder by expanding access and equity to accommodate both families who can afford and those who cannot.

“My husband says we will abolish BECE and also we know that the brain formation in children happens from two to seven, so he says free kindergarten. That is where you can mold their brains,” Mrs Nduom added.

She said free compulsory kindergarten and basic education will ensure that children go through the system and acquire at least 13 years of continuous free education as opposed to the current nine years.

Asked whether the country has the resources to bring such a vision to fruition, Mrs Nduom said “it can be done. It is the will. You have to decide; what is your priority?” She argued that countries such as India and Malaysia made it their priority to invest in their human resource through education that is how come they have developed that fast.

She said investors are not coming into the country in droves because the pool of human resource is non-existent and the government must create that base to attract more investors who are unwilling to come and for fear that they will spend more in training people.

Source: XYZ News

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Read Why John Mahama Must Accept Free SHS Now?

 

 

Latin lessons: What can we learn from the world’s most ambitious literacy campaign?

education

Photo Reporting: José Marti Primary SchoolLatin lessons: What can we learn from the world’s most ambitious literacy campaign?

07 November 2010

Tuesday afternoon in the José Marti Primary School means it's time for maths. A classroom full of wide-eyed eight-year-old boys and girls are poring over frayed workbooks in pairs while their teacher walks around peering over tiny shoulders. Each wears the standard Cuban primary-school uniform of burgundy shorts or mini-skirt and white short-sleeved shirt, and eager hands go up one after the other as the day's sums are completed.

{sidebar id=11 align=right}It is an industrious scene, and one that plays out daily at any of the numerous schools that dot the narrow streets of La Habana Vieja (Old Havana). The schools are old and cramped – this part of the capital is a World Heritage site, and subject to Unesco's building restrictions as well as the ongoing US blockade on materials that blights the country as a whole. Teachers must therefore use the city's many parks and plazas for PE lessons, while paper, books and other basic materials that British schoolchildren take for granted are also in short supply. Yet despite these and other problems, education in Havana – indeed, across Cuba – remains one of the wonders of this evolving socialist republic.

The statistics alone are enough to make the parent of the average British schoolchild green with envy: there is a strict maximum of 25 children per primary-school class, many of which have as few as 20. Secondary schools are striving towards only 15 pupils per class – less than half the UK norm.

Irrespective of your class, your income or where you live, education at every level is free, and standards are high. The primary-school curriculum includes dance and gardening, lessons on health and hygiene, and, naturally, revolutionary history. Children are expected to help each other so that no one in the class lags too far behind. And parents must work closely with teachers as part of every child's education and social development.

Expectations are high; indiscipline and truancy are rare; school meals and uniforms are free. Although computers in good working order may be scarce, it is not uncommon for schools to open at 6.30am and close 12 hours later, providing free morning and after-school care for working parents with no extended family. "Mobile teachers" are deployed to homes if children are unable to come to school because of sickness or disability.

Micro-universities which offer part-time and distance learning have been set up in the provinces over the past few years, as competition for the country's 15 universities has become so fierce that some require 90 per cent exam averages to guarantee entry. Adult education at all levels, from Open University-type degrees to English- and French-language classes on TV, is free and popular.

The vast majority of Cuba's 150,000 teachers have studied for a minimum of five years, half to master's level. And despite financial woes which prompted the government to recently announce one million public-sector job cuts, it has promised to keep investing in free education at all levels.

Cuba spends 10 per cent of its central budget on education, compared with 4 per cent in the UK and just 2 per cent in the US, according to Unesco. The result is that three out of five Cubans over the age of 16 are in some type of formal, higher education. Wherever you travel in Cuba, just about everyone can read and write, and many have one or more academic qualifications.

In a mere half-century, Cuba has developed one of the world's most successful free education systems, admired everywhere, from the UK to Canada to New Zealand. Yet, even though Cuba's 11 million citizens are enormously proud of the educational system that has nourished them for five decades, there is increasing concern that the country's classrooms are not preparing Cubans for life beyond education.

Sitting on a park bench in Central Havana, Augusto Perdomo, an economist, electrician and housing officer in his early forties, encapsulates the issue: "Education here is great; you can study again and again, whatever you like. But then, there is not much else." It is a thirst for opportunities, felt most intensely among the youth, which poses one of the biggest threats to the Cuban political system. Will education for education's sake be enough to unite the people for another 50 years, or will the government be forced to invite foreign investment, ideas and opportunities and the inevitable social upheaval these will entail?

'

In September 1960, a year after the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, prime minister of the fledgling government, stood before the United Nations assembly in New York and promised to wipe out illiteracy by the end of the following year – of its total seven million population at the time, more than a million adults were illiterate and less than half of all children had access to school. "Cuba will be the first country of America which will be able to say it does not have one person who remains illiterate," he declared. He dared to make such a bold pledge, just months after becoming leader, because preparations for universal literacy in Cuba had actually begun several years earlier.

High in the lush, foggy rainforests of the Sierra Maestra mountains in the south-east of Cuba, Castro and his fellow rebel leader Che Guevara spent two years living hidden among poor subsistence farmers, or campesinos, plotting the revolution. Here, hundreds of miles away from Havana – where the pro-government professional classes lived comfortably, enjoying private schooling and colour television – Guevara and Castro discovered that more than 40 per cent of adults were illiterate; there were no schools, no electricity and minimal access to healthcare.

The Sierra Maestra is part of the mainly rural region previously known as Oriente Province, which has a strong revolutionary history. It was here in 1895 that one of Cuba's great heroes, José Marti, was shot dead, aged 42. A poet, journalist, philosopher and political theorist, Marti dedicated his short life to the political, intellectual and cultural independence of all Latin Americans from Spanish colonialism and American expansionism.

It was his teachings that influenced the young Guevara and Castro as they transmitted messages of solidarity across the waves of Radio Rebelidad. But more significantly it was here that Marti's idea to bring the "light" of culture and the "bread" of literacy to peasants and newly freed slaves was made reality. Every day the rebel fighters made time to teach the uneducated campesinos with whom they lived and fought to read and write, in what Guevara termed the "battle against ignorance".

After the fall of Fulgencio Batista's regime in 1959, Castro wasted no time – 50 years ago this month, the revolutionary government had already began to mobilise the entire country, especially the youth, for what would become the world's most ambitious and organised literacy campaign.

Quickly realising that the country's educational system would buckle under the demands imposed by the drive to universal literacy, Castro used his imagination. Anyone, adult or child, who could read and write was encouraged to become an alfabetizador, or literacy teacher. René Mujica Cantelar, the current Cuban ambassador to the UK, volunteered as an alfabetizador in 1961 – one of 100,000 school-aged children to do so, the youngest being a girl of eight.

The youngest son of a barber and a housewife, Cantelar was 12 years old, just out of primary school, when he responded to the barrage of posters, newspapers, radio and TV adverts calling for volunteers to join the literacy brigadistas. "Those months after the Batista government fell were incredible," he recalls. "There was great euphoria on the streets of Havana. It was children like me, not our parents, who felt most involved, so when the call came for volunteers, I went to the nearest office, signed my name, and waited to be called."

The brigadistas were taken in buses to the beach resort of Varadero, a former playground for wealthy Americans and the mafia, 85 miles east of Havana, and given a maximum of two weeks' intensive training in how to teach and how to survive the harsh, rural conditions they were about to encounter.

Newspapers listed the names of the each new brigadista and showed pictures of the youngsters arriving from all over the country, but Cantelar's name never appeared: "I couldn't understand it; I was so desperate to be a part of the campaign, so I went back and found that my mum had come in and taken my name off the register," he laughs. Days later, having convinced his mother, he was on the bus to Varadero where thousands of youngsters were crammed into casinos, ballrooms, hotels and bars. Already-anxious parents were left terrified by the bloody Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961, just two days after the first training camp opened. But the US attack failed, and volunteer numbers swelled.

The intensive training reflected life to come: up at 5am, classes started at 6.30am; afternoons were spent hiking and in physical training. The youngsters were then sent off to live with families armed with a standard grey uniform, a warm blanket, a hammock, two textbooks – We Shall Read and We Shall Conquer – and a gas-powered lantern, so that lessons could be given at night after work ended.

Cantelar ended up on a 65 hectare farm in San José de las Lagas, a municipality near Havana. During the day he worked alongside his host family of four, planting, cultivating and harvesting maize, sweet potatoes and pumpkins. For two hours each night, he taught the old man and eldest son to read and write using the lantern for light.

Many of the young teachers ate no meat or eggs or drank fresh milk for weeks, but Cantelar had been lucky – his farm also kept pigs, chickens and cows. "I learnt so much in those three months, and that was the point: we were learning more than we taught."

Schools were suspended across the country from April 1961 so that every teacher could teach and co-ordinate the 100,000 volunteers, half of whom were girls. Thousands of adults were drafted in as teachers over the last few months of that year, in order to ensure its success – and avoid embarrassment for Castro. Never before, or since, has a country used masses of unqualified teachers in such a co-ordinated way. The daily newspaper, Revolucion, published sketch maps showing each village and town that conquered illiteracy, as it happened. Everyone who had the intellectual capacity to learn was taught: the oldest person was a woman aged 106, a former slave.

{sidebar id=10 align=right}Cantelar himself had mixed success: the old man dropped out after some weeks but his son, Ildo Estevez, learnt to read and write after three months and like all new literates, he wrote to Fidel, thanking him for the opportunity. Now aged 13, Cantelar joined a brigade in the northern province of Matanzas, teaching several families who worked in a salt farm, until the campaign was declared a success in December 1961: the illiteracy rate had been slashed from 25 per cent to less than 4 per cent within a year. Hundreds of thousands of alfabetizadores marched euphorically to the Plaza de la Revolucion on 22 December, carrying giant pencils, chanting, "Fidel Fidel tell us what else we can do". "Study, study, study!" came the reply. And they did.

Within months, a programme was set up for the new literates, now hungry for knowledge, to continue studying up to sixth grade, the equivalent of a primary education. Teacher-training was reformed and thousands of classrooms built; primary- and pre-school education were almost universally available in Cuba by 1970 (45 years ahead of the UN's 2015 deadline for its Millennium Development Goal).

College and university education expanded, became free, and started focusing on courses that reflected the country's skill shortages, and agricultural sciences, engineering, medicine and teaching degrees, for example, proliferated. Cuba's world-renowned healthcare system developed on the back of its educational reforms; there are now 23 medical schools in Cuba, up from three in 1959.

These changes happened at a furious pace, with the emphasis on quantity rather than quality at first, but today its defenders, such as Diosdada Vidal Valle, executive member of the education, science and sports union, claim that Cuba has a flexible education system which regularly reforms, often because of grass-roots pressure from parents and teachers.

So why did Cuba succeed where so many other literacy campaigns failed? The mass mobilisation of volunteer teachers and a system that used pictures depicting everyday scenes which people could relate to, discuss, and then learn to read and write about, were key factors, according to ' the doctor and educationalist Theodore Macdonald, honorary visiting professor at London Metropolitan University's Human Rights & Social Justice Research Institute, who has worked in, and written about, Cuba's education system. He believes that people were convinced of the need to read and write not just for their own sakes, but for the good of the country, which had lost huge numbers of skilled professionals, who had fled to Miami after the revolution. "The genius of the Cuban campaign was that they made it make a difference," he says. "It wasn't just about peasants becoming literate; it was about learning to read so they could join in politically and socially: there was a point to it. And then they wanted more."

The symbolic thank-you letters to Fidel, used by Unesco to evaluate the success of the campaign in 1964, are kept along with photographs and details of all 100,000 volunteers in a wonderful museum in La Ciudad Libertad, or the City of Liberty, which is situated in the former, vast Batista headquarters in the western suburbs of Havana. The former government offices and officials' homes are now home to bright, airy classrooms for several schools, colleges and universities, including three special schools for children with autism, learning disabilities and visual impairments.

Luisa Yara Campos, literacy museum director, teacher and committed socialist of some 40 years' standing, says: "Before 1959 it was the countryside versus the city. The literacy campaign united the country because, for the first time, people from the city understood how hard life was for people before the revolution, that they survived on their own, and that as people they had much in common. This was very important for the new government."

Over the past 50 years, thousands of Cuban literacy teachers have volunteered in countries such as Haiti, Nicaragua and Mozambique. Critics claim that this is motivated by the desire to promote socialist propaganda and the government's reputation in these countries. But Dr Jaime Canfux Gutiérrez, director of literacy at the Latin American and Caribbean Pedagogical Institute in La Ciudad Libertad, insists that this initiative is about promotion of Marti's principle of "literacy without borders". "This is about education for everyone as a human right, no matter who you are or where you live."

The Cuban programme continues to be adapted for use all over the world, including in Canada, Venezuela and among Maori people in New Zealand today. But, insists Professor Macdonald, the speed and extent of Cuba's advances in literacy struggle to be replicated elsewhere without the same political commitment to education and social change.

Furthering this argument, Bill Greenshields, the former president of the UK's National Union of Teachers, believes that the achievements of the Cuban education system are so inextricably linked to its socialist principles, that they remain unpalatable, and largely overlooked, by many governments not so disposed to Cuba's politics.

Indeed, even in Cuba, the great experiment has been beset by problems of late. In recent years, there has been an exodus of secondary-school teachers, seeking to earn "hard currency" by working with tourists as taxi drivers, guides or in hotels, according to Valle from the education union. Attempts to fill the gap by using intensive teacher-training courses for young people barely out of school, and introducing a generalist degree, attracted widespread criticism and have recently been abandoned.

The exodus is, in fact, a symptom of a wider problem, which has become more pronounced since visa restrictions were eased to encourage more tourists, and their dollars. Cubans meet these incomers, see their fashionable clothes, hear about their lifestyles, and many obviously want the same opportunities to travel and earn money. Some are even talking of a "crisis in education".

"A youngster sees that his dad is a doctor, his mum is a teacher, his uncle an engineer, and yet the family cannot afford a TV or nice clothes," says primary-school teacher Julio Gomez. "So they think, 'I'm better off working with tourists.' This is a problem for teaching, for our education [system], but also for the country."

Valle, however, is confident that the Cuban education system will not only survive, but will continue to reform and improve. "Here we are always seeking for a perfect system; that is the way it has been for 50 years. When we encounter problems, we introduce modifications; the next is always better than the last. It is true that many teachers have left because of the economic situation; wanting more money is a reasonable desire. But teaching remains a very respected profession. We have introduced a new minimum salary and modified the training, so I am confident that we will resolve this crisis as well."

Yet Professor Macdonald is less certain that the Cuban system can survive, at least within its own borders. "The Cuban model is at the vanguard of education, and health, but its future in a neo-liberal [market-driven] world is grim. There is an increasing shift towards appreciating and copying the Cuban system in Latin America and many other countries such as Malawi and Pakistan, but it is unlikely that [the original] will survive to see these changes. Cuba is like Moses in the wilderness. It will lead people to the Promised Land but it will never get there itself."

My part in a nation's education

by Dr Jorge Fiallo

Dr Jorge Fiallo, 63, adviser to the vice-president of the Latin American and Caribbean Institute of Pedagogy in La Ciudad Libertad, was 14 when he volunteered for the literacy campaign. "My father was a soldier in the Batista army and died fighting against Fidel's men's in 1958," he recalls, while looking through his archived records for the first time. "At the time I was living a comfortable life with my mother in a house in Havana, attending a private Catholic school, so I guess I should have been against the revolution, but I wasn't; I was still too young.

"You couldn't miss the call for teachers, and I went to Varadero in July for training. I was sent to a farm in Pinar del Rio to live with a very poor family of five. I stayed for 115 days. The men's work was dangerous, climbing up palm trees to chop down leaves to make roofs. I helped on the farm and then taught the three adults at night.

"I was always hungry. They ate so badly: maize and rice, nothing else. I used to spend my monthly 100 peso (£2.80) allowance on processed meat for us all. There was no electricity; the river for water was 150 metres away. I was so scared of the snakes that I slept in my hammock. Once I needed a doctor, but the hospital was 21km away: 10km by horse, then 11km by shared truck; I couldn't believe what their life was like. It was a truly extraordinary experience and changed me forever, in a good way."

Source: The Independent UK

Togbe Afede Endorses Akufo Addo’s Free SHS Policy

News

Photo Reporting: Togbe Afede & Nana Akufo-AddoTogbe Afede Endorses Akufo Addo’s Free SHS Policy

The Agbogbomefia of the Asogli State, Togbe Afede XIV, has described the New Patriotic Party (NPP) flagbearer, Nana Addo Dankw Akufo-Addo’s free senior high school policy as impressive and a message of hope.

Togbe Afede said, “We are impressed by your commitment to make basic education free up to senior high school.”

He added that the move would bring prosperity and opportunities to the masses and not the privileged few.

{sidebar id=10 align=right}He also commended Nana Addo for his vision and described his message of peace as music to the ears of chiefs and people in the Volta region.

The renowned chief said, “We are impressed about your commitment to peace and it is important to note that your message of peace is music to our ears.”

Togbe Afede, who is also the president of the Volta Regional House of Chiefs, made the remarks when Nana Addo and his entourage paid a courtesy call on him and a retinue of chiefs at his residence.

Nana was on his ‘Hope Restoration’ tour of the region.

He noted that peace was a pre-requisite for transforming Ghana into a model and modern economy as promised by Nana Addo. Togbe Afede also commended Nana Addo for his message which he described as “a message of hope”.

Togbe Afede, who is the founder of Africa World Airlines, lauded Nana Addo’s commitment to empower the youth of this country by ensuring a highly educated populace.

He therefore called on the youth to be serious with their education.

He also urged students to desist from seeing politics as the only means to success but rather be ingenious and create more opportunities for themselves and others.

Togbe Afede added that Nana Addo’s message to the youth was “strong”, urging him to get the youth to believe in themselves instead of engaging in unnecessary activities.

He noted that prosperity for Ghana could “become possible under the right leadership in this country”.

Togde Afede also commended Nana Addo for his recent visit to the house which he said was a “memorable” one.

He advised Nana Addo to surround himself with the right people to enable him to achieve his aspirations and visions for Ghana, if he is elected president on December 7.

Nana Addo, in his address, assured the chiefs of his genuine commitment towards his free SHS policy which he said came with quality and well trained and motivated teachers.

He emphasized that the free SHS promise was not a fluke but a promise he would keep.

He noted, “It is possible… I believe in Ghana and together we can make it happen.”

He implored Togbe Afede and all the other chiefs in the region to believe in it and make their subjects do same.

Nana Addo’s entourage comprised the regional chairman, Kenwuud Nuworsu, Elizabeth Ohene, a former minister of state, Joseph Kwaku Nayan, the only NPP MP from the Volta Region, and former envoy to Saudi Arabia Rashid Bawah.

The others were Dr. Archibald Letsa, NPP candidate for Ho, lawyer Ernest Gaewu, Ho West candidate, Mawutor Goh, former Ho MCE and Kofi Dzamesi, former Volta Regional Minister.

The entourage later moved to the Ho Polytechnic where Nana gave a lecture on his agric policy and then to Dzodze where he addressed a mammoth rally and introduced all the parliamentary candidates of the NPP in the region.

Source: Fred Duodu, Ho/Daily Guide

Gov't Approves School Fees For Second Cycle Institutions

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Lee Ocran: Education MinisterGov't Approves School Fees For Second Cycle Institutions

Government has approved GH¢388.84 as boarding fees for the first term first year students in public second cycle schools for the 2012-2013 academic year, Mr. Lee Ocran, Minister of Education has announced.

He said Day Students for the first year, first term will also pay GH¢152.50, while foreign students were required to pay a tuition fee of GH¢468.00 per term.

{sidebar id=11 align=right}Mr. Lee Ocran, made these known at a meeting with Conference of Heads of Assistance Secondary Schools (CHASS) in Accra on Thursday aimed to state government’s position clearer to parents as far as charging of school fees was concerned.

He said the Education Ministry had received a lot of complaints from parents that some heads of schools were charging between GH¢80.00 and GH¢1,200 in addition to the approved fees, thereby making it difficult for some of them to raise the money.

The Education Minister said government was subsiding sport, culture, and sanitation fees as well as electricity and water bills. The subsidy also covered textbook user fee, practical fee, tools and maintenance of mechanical for technical institutions, building maintenance as well as furniture maintenance.

Mr. Ocran appealed to heads of cycle schools to spread payment of school uniform, church uniform, school crest, medical examination, outing uniform, book fees, ceremonial dress, and compulsory core literature book over the three terms and not to lump them and slap them at once on parents.

He called on executives of the CHASS to police their colleagues properly to ensure that the right fees were charged in order not over burden parents.

Mr. Samuel Ofori-Adjei, Chairman of the CHASS, assured the Minister that the Executive would collaborate with their colleagues to implement the approved fees and spread all other fees over the three terms to help reduce any burden on parents.

Source: GNA/Ghana