GES urges public to report exam malpractice on hotlines

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 of all the campaigns that the service had embarked upon, “we still have some teachers and invigilators who are daring”.

“We want to remind them that we’ll catch them and they’ll be in trouble, because so far, we have some of the teachers convicted for examination malpractice. And if you are a teacher and you indulge in examination malpractice and you are caught, that is the end of your career with the GES,” she emphasised.

The Deputy Director-General of the GES said there was a need to safeguard the integrity of the country’s examinations in order to see the true learning outcomes, so students should be left alone to do their work.

“Let’s leave them, let them write the examination, and let’s see the true reflection so we can know what to do and how to improve upon whatever we are doing. But when we try to give them ‘apo’, we indulge in exam malpractice — it does not help us at all,” she said.

She added: “So once again, we are saying that let’s say no to exam malpractice; parents, guardians, teachers, and all our schools. Please, leave the students alone. Let them write the examination in peace”.

Commenting on Ghana’s return to the May-June WASSCE-SC, Prof. Dzisi said not writing the WASSCE with the other member countries of WAEC came at no cost to the government.

She said the Minister of Education, the Director-General of the GES, and the WAEC worked very hard to ensure that Ghanaian candidates wrote the WASSCE with their West African counterparts.

“So, it’s very significant to know that after five years, this is the first time that we are writing WASSCE-SC with other West African countries. So, we are all in line now, and that will not cost the country a lot of money.

“We have also prepared the students adequately for that, and we are very sure that we’ll get great results at the end of this examination,” she said.

For her part, Hajia Attah, among other things, wished the candidates good luck in the examination. She appealed to the invigilators not to assist any child in terms of copying during the examination.

“They shouldn’t send any foreign materials to aid them in the classroom. We have prepared them enough; a lot of teaching and learning went on.

“And then we are sure that the children themselves can write and make the grades they deserve. I also want to say that examination malpractice is not anything good. You get the certificates, and people doubt you. 

“We want people to be reassured that all the certificates that we are getting in Ghana are also competitive and we can use them in other countries, so let us write well. Let us stop examination malpractice,” she said.

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