The Executive Director of African Education Watch (EduWatch), Kofi Asare, has disclosed that seven out of 10 main 6 pupils in rural areas don’t make it to Junior High School and miss out on having fun with the Free Senior High School coverage.
He stated the nation ought to be involved in regards to the rural-urban divide in fundamental training, which retains deepening.
“If you look at primary high school transition, that is the greatest point of the dropout. At the national level, about 92 percent of students from primary school are able to cross from primary school to junior high school,” he acknowledged in his opening remarks on the ongoing Media General National Policy Dialogue on Achieving Improved Basic Education Outcomes.
He famous that about 18 p.c of the pupils in disadvantaged areas don’t achieve transitioning to JHS1, as in comparison with about eight p.c who don’t cross to JHS1 in city areas.
He attributed this downside to a scarcity of infrastructure and insufficient faculty amenities in close by communities in rural areas.
He added that in sure communities, some main 6 pupils are made to report back to JHS 1 with their desks.
“In the disadvantaged areas, you discover that 82 p.c, which implies that 18 p.c are dropping out between P6 alone and junior highschool one.
“Now the reason for these dropouts and the poor survival especially in the deprived parts of the country are due to three main reasons, limited infrastructure and a lack of adequate primary schools are major factors in causing dropouts, and availability of teachers,” he acknowledged.
“There are schools in Kintampo North where one requires their own desks to be able to gain admission to a junior high school,” stated Kofi Asare.