Myjoyonline News
 Home Page
 General News
 Business
 Politics
 Sports
 Health
 Education
 Articles/Features
 Science & Technology
 Entertainment
 Travel/Tourism
 Africa & International
 Nations Cup 2008
 
 
Stop imitating foreign values
Previous Page
 
Children need to be taught their culture
Children need to be taught their culture
 
 
 
 
 
 
Participants at a workshop on developing standards and indicators for early learning in Ghana, on Monday at Koforidua, demanded the embedment of African imaginative and artistic values in Ghana’s educational policy.

They also call for the inclusion of Ghanaian moral principles and creative values in Ghana’s educational policy to prevent the youth from imitating foreign values, which were often at variance with African norms and ethical standards.

The participants, including journalists, social workers and educationists also advocated that minors should be exposed to time-honoured artistic norms.

The workshop was organized by the Ministry of Women and Children’s Affairs, as part of government’s effort to design effective early childhood learning standards to assess children’s developmental progress and parental judgment of children’s developmental milestones.

Participants proposed that such policy should place emphasis on developing stronger sense of reasoning and logic in minors to enable them to differentiate rational thinking from sentimental ideas to enable children become good scientists.

The National Coordinator of Early Childhood Care and Development at Ministry, Mrs Ruth Addison, told GNA after the workshop that the policy aimed at bridging the gap between elitist schools and public schools to ensure uniformity in standards in the country.

She said it would help the Ministry to strategize and help teachers identify social needs of children by building their capacity to help them detect any impairment that children might be suffering.

In addition, a component of the policy would focus on helping demystify myths about slow-learners and help build their sense of confidence to enable them to perform well instead of labelling them as stupid.

Mr Djabah Mensah, chairman of the Eastern Regional Multi-sectoral Committee for the Protection of the Child, expressed satisfaction about the context of the proposed policy as it emphasized on early childhood development as an important foundation for national development.




Source: GNA



       

 
  Popular Stories


Search Our Website
 
 
 
OTHER EDUCATION STORIES
   HIV/AIDS positive teachers attend workshop
   Kwashieman Presby Church re-launches its scholarship scheme
   USAG establishes scholarship scheme to support needy students
   Aquinas Old Students set up Endowment Fund
   13th UEW congregation lecture held in Winneba
   Development partnership project launched at Legon
   Jirapa-Lambussie District needs more teachers
   Education reform requires highly trained teachers
   Prof. Adei: Scholarship discrimination should cease
   Varsity sacks 12 students
   Parents unhappy with computerised selection system
   Stop imitating foreign values
   Man arrested for forging KNUST admission letter
   Parents want school investigated
   Government buses for Koforidua schools