FOGET 2019: WAEC Urges Parents to Reduce House Chores of BECE Candidates

FOGET President, Prosper Afetsi

Accra, Ghana, June 1, 2019//-The West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) has urged parents to reduce the house chores of their children who will be sitting for Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) in two week times.

According to the WAEC, creating space for their wards who gone through three-year of Junior High School (JHS) would enable them to come out with flying colours.

A representative WAEC, Augustina Henyo made the appeal when she was addressing BECE candidates at a programme dubbed “PASSCODE” put together byFoundation for Generational Thinkers (FOGET), an NGO in Accra.

The candidates, who now need more time to revise their notes in preparation towards the BECE and during, must not be overburden with household chores that would have negative effects on their performance, she stressed.

“Parents should reduce the household chores of their wards so that it will help them have enough time to prepare,” Madam Henyo, however, warned: “It doesn’t mean that when reduce household chores for you, you will use it to be doing something else.

A representative of WAEC, Augustina Henyo

“When they release that you are not using it to learn that privilege will be withdrawn. Sometimes, when they give you that privilege use it and manage your time very well. Have enough sleep and rest, don’t be reading too much because the brain also needs rest.”

She urged the candidates that examination is often classified in three steps, thus before (registration of candidates & subject and school selection), during (continuous tuition/ attending class) and after (completion of exams).

Madam Henyo therefore advised the candidates to form study/discussion groups to discuss the subjects and the topics during their revision period.

She also urged them to reduce entertainment activity, minimise time they spend on smartphones and internet, but should endeavour to use the internet to search for information that will improve their knowledge.

Touching on the dos and dons of the examination, Madam Henyo admonished that “When it gets to the BDTs, where it is written subject, don’t write BDT rather write Pre-tech, write visual arts, or write home economics – depending on what you are writing.

“So as if it is Ghanaian language, write Ga, write Ewe, write Adangbe, write Asante Twi, Akuapem Twi, Fanti Nzema, Kasem, Gonja, Dagbani, all those. Please indicate the name of the subject you are writing exams on, it is very important,” she stated.

The WAEC rep further urged them to be seated 30 minutes before starting time and should relax as well as be silent. The candidates are also required to read the rubrics, since every subject has its own instructions governing it.

The candidates are to devote their time to questions they can answer better by not attempting to answer all questions and at least 20 minutes should spend on answering a question.

She charged the candidates to take their time to write so that the handwriting will be eligible enough, “if you write all the beautiful ideas that you have and the examiner, who is going to mark cannot read, he/she cannot award you marks.”

She added that BECE is not a war, so they should not allow anybody to put any fear in them since they are capable of writing the papers and passing to get the school of their choice, “Don’t allow anyone to tell you this one if you don’t do it you would not pass, it is not the truth.”

Dr Mrs Gloria C. O. Dzeha, Acting Registrar-Central University, on her part condemned examination malpractice that is on an alarming rate.

Quoting from WAEC report, she said in 2009 malpractice identified was 2,317, 2011 was 4, 201in 2012, 2439 in 2013, 5,653 in 2014 and 8,051 in 2015.

According to her, the figures are frightening since it tells how serious the nation is getting with cheating in examination, saying “If this menace of cheating in examination is not addressed, it will have awful consequence on our country human resource and would breed corrupt future leaders because they have become used to cheating.”

BECE candidates at the programme

Prosper Dan Afetsi, President of FOGET added that the foundation is a youth orientated organisation that has mandated itself push and propagate youth agenda by building their capacities through engagements.

The passcode 2019 edition was organised in collaboration with Ghana National Association of Private Schools GNAPS), Greater Accra Zone five.

By Akutu Dede Adimer, African Eye Report

 

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