Once again, the Nations is engulfed in a din over
changes being introduced at the secondary
educational level. There are several opinions, yet a close analyses
indicates, basically a for-or-against-or-I
told you so stance. Consequently, innovative ideas are drowned by the
entrenched howls. The alarming reality is that Ghana’s educational system is
stuck in the traditional mode. Majority of Ghanaians can perceive teaching and
learning only in the physical classroom, where a teacher delivers before learners.
Breach that reality, and the nation gets a panic attack, hence, the furore over
the intended double-track system.
That Information Technology has impacted heavily on
education is amply demonstrated in Resource-Based Learning (RBL), which
communities over the globe are utilizing in order to improve learning, as well
as expand access to education. RBL utilises virtual classroom, thereby, making teaching
and learning convenient processes. If our system had tapped RBL even a little,
the double-track approach would have been a smooth transition. Of course, in RBL
computers and other gadgets are required. Ironically, the concept of RBL was
conceived in Ghana about two decades ago.
In the nineties, the Ministry of Education introduced
ICT centres to designated secondary schools. Surrounding schools utilised the facility
for studies. The centres were resourced with computers and teachers. Currently,
most schools, if not all, have ICT centres. Until last year, a constituent of
tuition was allocated to ICT. Question: If one should visit any of the schools,
would one find the centres actively operational? Would the student:computer
ratio be conducive for effective learning? Would one find that centres have
Internet connectivity? Would one find that students have regular, open access
to the centres? Most important of all, would the students have an inkling about
the enormous resources buried in the computers?
The NDC Government recently introduced a one computer
per learner practice; at least, I saw pupils using such computers in my
neighbourhood. Communities also have ICT centres. Were all those measures not
motivated by the concept of RBL? Paradoxically, teaching and learning at all
levels get steeped in the physical classroom by the day. At the primary and
secondary levels, teachers are passionate about extra-classes, which compound
the time learners spend in the physical classroom, reducing potential time for
exploring RBL. Of course, extra teaching earns the teacher extra income; RBL
would reduce or erase that source, but one must not forget that the teacher earns
a salary for teaching.
My point is that we introduce
progressive concepts but fail to sustain or develop such to maximum benefits.
Even at the tertiary level, RBL remains a foreign concept. Many teachers limit
learners to plagiarised hand-outs, or books written by self or friends. If
learners research and demonstrate new ideas in feedback activity, or purchase not
the prescribed material, they might actually fail the course or get a minimum
grade. Instead of exposing students
to extensive intellectual material, apostles of handouts starve students of
overabundant learning resources.
In fact, most teachers are not RBL savvy, and they
deny learners the opportunity to explore such. Yet, 21st Century
education is technologically-based; Google is a rich resource. The painful
conclusion for one is that as a people, we are not dynamic. We steadfastly
choose to live in the past, rendering the present static in order to fulfil immediate
desires. Tomorrow will never come. We profess a concern for children and youth
but demonstrate pure selfishness. Thus when an innovative idea is introduced,
it is sabotaged.
May be I lack attention, but I am yet to hear the
Ministers of Education and Finance emphasize the RBL dimension in the
double-track dialogue. One minister lamely argued that the students would be in
the house fulltime, but for the Free SHS intervention; therefore, the
double-track system gives them an option to halve the time they would otherwise
spend at home. Wrong. The time spent at home cost the tax payer. Besides, if
the right structures are not put in place, the six months in school would be entirely
wasted. Please intervene with RBL!
The double-track move should be a collaboration
between parents, community and state. The average contemporary Ghanaian parent
continues to offload parental training to the teacher. The former bombards children
with material things, neglects training. Elsewhere, home-schooling has become a
trend, because parents are wary of the poor school environment. In Ghana,
parents fall over themselves to secure boarding facilities for children, glossing
some implications. It is about time the Government asked such parents: How have
you neglected your child(ren)? That should be followed with this statement: it
is about time you assumed your role as a parent; oversee six months of learning,
because your children would be assessed.
Government is going to share responsibility of
children with parents and community; it is ensuring that the resources invested
in are utilised in training children. Government is gradually complementing the
physical classroom with the virtual one. Learners would be in charge of their
learning. So the six months at home would be RBL time. If the Government has
not planned to that extent, then a crucial gap must be filled immediately.
If we had a national database that could tell the
income level of parents and guardians, those in good income brackets would be
required to purchase computers and Internet connectivity for their wards; the
state and other stakeholders would supply the real needy, so that all learners
would receive the full complement of RBL. Currently, every Ghanaian parent
would cry to Government for a computer. There must be a way out. The beauty of
RBL is that endless learning opportunities could be tracked by both teacher and
learner, be independently, ethically assessed. The planning has probably not
covered the full extent of RBL, but what prevents us from packaging it now? The
double-track system a potential waste? No, it is the potential pathway to 21st
Century education for Ghana, and worth every strategic investment.
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