Wednesday, 2 October 2013

The parents' long goodbye

The approach road to the student village is a long traffic jam of family cars, stuffed full with boxes, pillows, nervous families, memories and expectations.
This is the very first day at university - parents taking their children and getting ready to say goodbye.
It's one of those big events that never makes the headlines but will have been ringed in the diaries of hundreds of thousands of families.
On motorways and trains, more than 421,000 youngsters will be making this symbolic journey. After months of anticipation, checklists on fridge doors, last meals at home, last drink with friends, it's now here.
At the University of Sheffield, a stream of parents arrive with their sons and daughters at the Endcliffe Student Village. There are balloons, music, banners and the upbeat banter of student radio in a well-orchestrated welcome.
It's like the first day at an academic holiday resort. Parents and their teenage children look around the newly-refurbished student union bar as if they are about to begin one last family trip.
But under the South Yorkshire autumn sunshine there's no escaping the poignancy. For parents, this is what they've always wanted for their children and many will have quietly dreaded. It's a bittersweet journey.
No one wants to spoil this big first day, but it's no secret that they'll be thinking about the empty room at home.
There are T-shirted volunteers all around ready to help anyone looking lost. They know the teenagers are going to have worries.
And what do the new arrivals most want to know about? Internet connection, of course. It's their most urgent concern, say the helpers. Not so much Generation Y as Generation Wi-fi.
Meanwhile their dads, looking misty-eyed, have the conversations that they have at times of big emotions. They talk huskily about parking problems and the fleeting nature of mobile phone signals.
It's a mixture of epic understatement and Alan Partridge as parents fill the long silences by talking about the ring roads that have brought them there.
Suitcases and boxes full of gadgets are lugged along neat paths in the shade of newly planted trees. There will soon be 3,000 youngsters living here. There's a beach-themed party already lined up and a whole week of ice-breaking activities.
There's a long gaggle of arrivals waiting to check in. There are girls who have travelled with clingy soon-to-be ex-boyfriends; there are siblings suddenly close to each other instead of fighting.
But the biggest group are mothers, fathers and a teenager now taller than them. They stand together like they might have done on the first day of primary school. If there was a Club 45 to 55, it would look like this.
Their estates and people-carriers look like the cars bought a few years ago for a young family, the ghosts of child seats still pressed into the upholstery.
The university has put on a friendly face to help the new students over this threshold.
In fact, universities have had a major collective make-over in their bid to attract students. There has been a campus building boom since the increase in tuition fees.
Alongside the rigorous academic stuff, universities are also selling a leisure experience. It's part-science park, part-theme park.
The student union bar at Sheffield has been re-vamped. Forget student unions with sticky carpets and punctured leatherette. It's now all clean, airy and comfortable and the bar manager at Sheffield says these days it's driven more by food than booze.
Even on their first day, it won't be an entirely unfamiliar environment for the new students. Before they arrive they will have been using social networking to get to know their future flatmates. They're bringing enough computer technology to launch a space mission, so keeping in touch with home should be easier than ever before.
There is still time for some instant re-invention. Starting at university is one of the most significant changes for any young person. They will have spent several weeks deciding the big academic questions, like what they should wear in the bar.
The first night is the stuff of myth. There are people you meet and then spend three years avoiding and people you meet on a corridor and then become friends with for the rest of your life. There will be freshers' week stories of excessive drinking, ineffective cooking and misguided outfits.
These new students are entering their own soap opera of romance, friendship and ambition. It's a huge adventure that they've worked hard for years to achieve and for which they'll be paying for many years afterwards.
But after the small talk over cups of coffee and a constant stream of text messages, there is no escaping where this is heading. For many families, if childhood has a final moment, this is it.
The door closes on a student's room and parents and children go their separate ways
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Include girls in basic school sports-GES

Mr Simon K. Kokofi, Head of Supervision at the Ho Municipal Directorate of Education, on Thursday called for the inclusion of girls in sporting activities at the basic school level.
He remarked that the current situation where girls were reduced to spectators at some sporting events was unacceptable, and called for a change.
Mr Kokofi made the call when he opened the seventh edition of Nunu Regional Sports Festival in Ho.
The two-day male only football event organized by Djan Wiltech and Associates attracted 30 primary and junior high schools and was meant to help discover talents.
Mr Kokofi said girls also needed to participate in physical activities just like boys, and must not be left out.
“We want all-rounded and holistic education for both sexes and gender parity must cover all aspects. When we develop only boys, then we defeat the purpose of these events,” he said.
Mr Kokofi therefore charged basic school heads in the Municipality to actively involve girls in physical activities and ensure that they participated in competitive events.
Mr Emmanuel Ola Williams, Chief Executive Officer, Djan Wiltech and Associates, said efforts were being made to include girls in subsequent events.
He said sports was no longer for entertainment alone, and urged participating schools and pupils to take advantage of the opportunity.
PZ Cussons, producers of Nunu Milk in the last seven years sponsored the Nunu Sports Festival, with regional champions gaining the opportunity to compete at the national level.
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Vodafone launches writing competition for kids

Vodafone Ghana in partnership with Samsung on Saturday launched a three-month writing competition for children below the age of 15 aimed at encouraging creativity and thoughtful spending.
Encouraging children to be thoughtful in their spending is essential in times of austerity measures and also help groom them into responsible adulthood.
Mrs Gifty Bingley, Senior Corporate Communication Manager at Vodafone said at the launch that children would write on what they could do with one Ghana cedi, and all entries assessed based on creativity, composition and grammar, clarity, originality and realistic ideas.
She added that the entries would have to include any used Vodafone top up card and could be dropped off at any Vodafone retail shop nationwide or mailed to the one Team at Vodafone.
Mrs Bingley said children whose writing proved to be the most creative and realistic, would receive Samsung Galaxy tablets in every two weeks with the ultimate winners receiving a full year scholarship in the grand finale.
She explained that entries from the bi-weekly winners would be examined again to pick the top three winners who would receive a full scholarship each for the grand finale.
Vodafone and Samsung will be giving away 50 fully connected tablets.
“At Vodafone we take pride in being innovative and creative and the One Ghana product is one such innovation, which redefines the market and sets the pace for others to follow,’ said Mrs Bingley.
Vodafone “One Ghana” product took the Ghanaian by storm in 2001 and at the recent CIMG awards “One Ghana” was singled out and acknowledged for its uniqueness.
Earlier this month Vodafone launched the new and improved offer with the addition of 100 free SMS, five minutes talk time on other networks and 20 megabytes of data to the original offer of 100 minutes for one Ghana Cedi.
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Ablakwa contradicts GES officials over BECE re-write policy

Deputy Education Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa says the Ministry has a policy that allows pupils who fail in their Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) to re-write when they fail to qualify to for placement into Senior High and Technical schools.
“...all those who fail you have an opportunity to repeat and write the BECE again, and that is why this year we have 500 students repeating to write the BECE again.’’
A total of 182, 000 candidates who sat for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) did not pass the core subjects and, therefore could not be placed in any of the public Senior High Schools in the country.
According a Deputy Director General of the Ghana Education Service, Charles Aheto Tsegah there is no progression after Junior High School which is why the GES does not have any policy for that.
“There is no progression after JHS that is why JHS is considered terminal it is not progression so you have a choice at that point because the system creates a situation here people do not necessary progress at that point,” he added.
Asked about the possibility of a policy which will allow pupils who fail to qualify for the Senior High and Technical school placement to re-write for better grades, Mr. Aheto-Tsegah said “this a consideration that is coming up now and I think that it is a worthy consideration because, if people want to go to secondary school and the only way they can go is to pass Maths or English then it is important that we find ways and means to get them to get the Maths and English or to write; it so it is worth considering. And I believe that we can look at the pros and cons of it and see how we can progress through that.”
However the contrary to the GES official’s position, the Member of Parliament for North Tongu said ‘’there is no examination system anywhere in the world where there is 100% pass mark and if students fail in an examination you do not just look at those who are failing and say there is a systemic crisis.’’
He said some parents and children do not take advantage of the re-write system. “...education is not a race, the fact that you re-write does not mean you have failed.’’
The Minister also said anybody who wants to re-write BECE have to go back to school for a year in other to have a continuous assessment.
He also stated that the BECE re-write policy has been in place for more than ten years.
Mr Okudzeto Ablakwa said the assertion by the general public that the about 50% of pupils who failed their basic education exam will be thrown onto the streets is false.
‘’What I am simply saying is that it is too early to draw conclusion that we throwing hundreds of thousands of students onto the street...’’
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Deputy Education Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa says the Ministry has a policy that allows pupils who fail in their Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) to re-write when they fail to qualify to for placement into Senior High and Technical schools.
“...all those who fail you have an opportunity to repeat and write the BECE again, and that is why this year we have 500 students repeating to write the BECE again.’’
A total of 182, 000 candidates who sat for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) did not pass the core subjects and, therefore could not be placed in any of the public Senior High Schools in the country.
According a Deputy Director General of the Ghana Education Service, Charles Aheto Tsegah there is no progression after Junior High School which is why the GES does not have any policy for that.
“There is no progression after JHS that is why JHS is considered terminal it is not progression so you have a choice at that point because the system creates a situation here people do not necessary progress at that point,” he added.
Asked about the possibility of a policy which will allow pupils who fail to qualify for the Senior High and Technical school placement to re-write for better grades, Mr. Aheto-Tsegah said “this a consideration that is coming up now and I think that it is a worthy consideration because, if people want to go to secondary school and the only way they can go is to pass Maths or English then it is important that we find ways and means to get them to get the Maths and English or to write; it so it is worth considering. And I believe that we can look at the pros and cons of it and see how we can progress through that.”
However the contrary to the GES official’s position, the Member of Parliament for North Tongu said ‘’there is no examination system anywhere in the world where there is 100% pass mark and if students fail in an examination you do not just look at those who are failing and say there is a systemic crisis.’’
He said some parents and children do not take advantage of the re-write system. “...education is not a race, the fact that you re-write does not mean you have failed.’’
The Minister also said anybody who wants to re-write BECE have to go back to school for a year in other to have a continuous assessment.
He also stated that the BECE re-write policy has been in place for more than ten years.
Mr Okudzeto Ablakwa said the assertion by the general public that the about 50% of pupils who failed their basic education exam will be thrown onto the streets is false.
‘’What I am simply saying is that it is too early to draw conclusion that we throwing hundreds of thousands of students onto the street...’’
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Govt settles arrears of lecturers

The government has paid university and polytechnic lecturers their book and research allowances which were in arrears.
A deputy minister of Education in charge of Tertiary Education, Mr Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, who announced this at a news conference in Accra yesterday, said the money would be paid in full because the processes for the payment of the arrears had been completed.
Some heads of polytechnics and universities, he said, had started taking their money, adding, “We can say in confidence that the book and research allowances have been paid in full.”
Background
On August 1, 2013, lecturers in public universities began a strike to back their demand for the payment of all interim market premium arrears for 2012 and 2013 owed them by the government.
They also demanded the payment of their book allowances, usually paid at the beginning of an academic year, and the correction of an anomaly in the book allowance paid to polytechnic lecturers and university lecturers.
After the government released the market premium arrears of GH¢25 million to be paid to the lecturers, they went on strike again, demanding book and research allowances.
On September 5, the government agreed with the University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG) to pay the allowances due the university lecturers since 2012.
The government further committed itself to pay university lecturers the difference between their allowances and those of lecturers in other analogous tertiary institutions, using the internally generated funds (IGF) of the universities.
Placements
Touching on the placement of BECE candidates in senior high schools, Mr Ablakwa said it was ongoing.
He said all candidates would get their placement by the end of the process.
Donations
Meanwhile, five institutions have presented various items towards the National Best Teacher Award in Accra.
They include the Rlg Foundation, which presented a saloon car, a desktop computer, a laptop and a printer, all valued at GH¢50,000; Fidelity Bank, a cheque for GH¢2,000; Afram Publications Ghana Limited, a cheque for GH¢12,000 and books worth GH¢20,000,
Others are SIC Life Company Limited, 24 double-door fridges, over a hundred ‘T’ shirts and life cover insurance for the overall best three teachers, and Vidya Book Stall, which donated textbooks worth GH¢₡6,000.

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