Workshop on draft tertiary education policy held

Date:

A three-day workshop to deliberate on the draft Tertiary Education Policy Document has ended in Koforidua today.

The draft policy document seeks to serve as a reference material that would be a distillate of key government policies on tertiary education in the country.

Opening the workshop, the Minister of State in charge of Tertiary Education, Prof. Kwesi Yankah stated the whole project forms part of the Ministry of Education’s strong desire to transform the face of education in line with the national vision of the government.

He stated that the Ministry of Education was fully committed to improving quality higher education in Ghana, hence the policy document that would ensure institutional compliance with policy and minimise irregularities and deviations from normative practices.

Prof. Yankah indicated that the document provided an opportunity to realign occasional inconsistencies between provisions in the national constitution and provisions in university acts/statutes, adding that new and emerging realities were expected to be contained as seen in documentation on technical universities, colleges of education, private universities and associated policies.

He expressed appreciation to the committee that produced the draft policy document and thanked participants for honoring the invitation of the ministry.

Giving an overview of the document, Prof. Jonathan N. Ayertey stated that themes covered in the draft document included policies on institutional governance, equity and access, quality and relevance, admissions, entry requirements, credit conversion, the issue of relevance and academic programme development, partnership with industry; internationalisation, staff student ratio, financing tertiary education, gender, among others.

The ministry, in 2018, constituted a nine-member committee chaired by Professor Cliff Tagoe, to deliberate and in consultation with stakeholders, produce a draft policy document by bringing together all relevant existing documentations, distill relevant government policies, regulatory policies and legislative instruments and, taking into consideration, emerging realities on the tertiary landscape, propose appropriate policy guidelines that are consistent with national vision.

The committee was also to “in the face of emerging global realities, propose additional policies and guidelines considered essential in the promotion of national interest and smooth running of tertiary institutions in Ghana”.

The committee after several months of deliberations, submitted its draft report to the ministry in November, 2018.

It is upon this that the Ministry of Education, has organised a retreat for stakeholders within the tertiary space to discuss and fill the vacuum with an attempt to providing a broad guideline for policy formulation with regards to tertiary education.

By Times Reporter

Share post:

Subscribe

Popular

The 24-hour market project signals new era of commerce in Atwima Kwanoma – DCE 

Mrs Grace Agyemang Asamoah, the District Chief Executive (DCE) for Atwima Kwanoma,...

Lower Pra Community Bank records 61% profit growth 

The Lower Pra Community Bank PLC in the Shama District...

Ghana, UK sign multi-million pounds sterling  partnership to boost investments, growth  

Ghana and the United Kingdom have signed a landmark Growth...

President Mahama holds bilateral talks with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer

President John Dramani Mahama on Tuesday held a breakfast...

More like this
Related