Eduwatch: Free SHS bill prioritizes political legacy over sustainable reform
Written by GliveRadio Accra on June 12, 2024
Africa Education Watch (Eduwatch), a prominent educational policy think tank, has raised concerns regarding the government’s proposed Free Senior High School (SHS) Bill, suggesting it’s being positioned more as a political legacy than a sustainable educational reform.
The bill, set to be presented to Parliament soon, aims to regulate the policy and ensure its sustainability.
The policy, a key initiative of the Akufo-Addo administration, aims to eliminate financial barriers to secondary education by covering fees, textbooks, boarding, and meals.
While the initiative has received praise for its role in increasing access to education, especially for girls, Eduwatch argues that the timing of the bill and the government’s approach imply a focus on political gains rather than long-term educational benefits.
Speaking in an interview with Umaru Sanda Amadu on Eyewitness News on Citi FM on Tuesday, the Executive Director of Eduwatch, Kofi Asare said the Free SHS policy had already been covered under the Pre Tertiary Education Act for which reason he did not understand why the government wanted to have a new law on it.
He also noted that the bill was the least of the challenges the policy faced that required urgent attention.
“I am a bit lost because in December 2020 Parliament passed a law called the Pre Tertiary Education Law which is Act 10(49). This law which was assented on 29th December 2020 has free SHS captured under section 3 which says that ‘Secondary education in its different forms including TVET shall be free and accessible to all eligible candidates. So this provision in the pre-tertiary education law is to give legal effect, is to give binding effect.”