Race into Ghana’s tertiary institution to heighten next year
The race for university admission is expected to
heighten next year when about 400,000 Free SHS beneficiaries are expected to
complete school and seek university admission.
The problem is compounded by the backlog of
students seeking admission into the country’s tertiary institutions. This
backlog of about 200,000 students, created by merging two batches of SHS 4 and
SHS 3 students who sat for the West Africa Senior High School Certificate
Examination in 2013, still exists.
This development puts pressure on Senior High
School graduates outside the Free SHS programme to do all they can to secure
admission into the country’s public and private tertiary institutions this
year, or risk competing with over 400,000 Free SHS beneficiaries for limited
spaces in tertiary institutions.
B&FT’s analysis of university admissions
revealed there is already a reduction of intake admissions by major
universities in the country, largely due to limited space to accommodate
students.
The reality, however, is that the Free SHS
beneficiaries graduating next year are more in number than the entire student
population of the 138 tertiary institutions in the country at the moment.
The 138 tertiary institutions, including
colleges of education and nursing training, have an entire student population
of 320,746 covering all batches. They have the capacity to admit about 100,000
students yearly as a result of limited infrastructure.
This means that next year these institutions may
not even be able to admit half of the over 400,000 students who are expected to
apply for admission into the various tertiary institutions.
The Free Senior High School policy will enter
its third year in September, and per the B&FT’s analysis the total student
population in secondary schools across the country could hit over one million
Before the Free SHS programme was introduced,
the total population of students in SHS stood at 432,780 per the 201 6 academic
year data – with GHe2,312 spent on each student per year by the government.
However, the first year of the programme’s
implementation saw the enrolment of over 400,000 students in various secondary
schools. Last year, about 500,000 students also benefitted from the programme.
If the programme continues as expected, there could be over one million
students accessing secondary education free of charge in the country.
The 2017 Education Sector Report indicates that
there is 95 per cent primary school enrolment, 85 per cent Junior High School
and 45 per cent gross enrolment in SHS education.
This means that five out of every 10 children
who start primary school in Ghana do not get the opportunity to attend SHS. But
this could significantly reduce as the Free SHS programme has encouraged a lot
of enrolment at the secondary school level.
The B&FT’s analysis shows that before the
Free SHS was introduced, almost half of Junior High School students who wrote
the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) could not enter secondary
school for various reasons — ranging from lack of funds to lack of
infrastructure to accommodate all qualified students in the same period.
In 2014/2015, for example, about 438,030
students wrote the BECE – but only 275,609 of them got annually.
The introduction of Free SHS in 2017, however,
brought in an additional 90,000 students, who would have missed out on SHS
education.
This increased the number of students for the
first time to 400,000; but this has put enormous pressure on the existing
infrastructure, which various commentators have urged the government to
resolve.