This was only my third day in the South Dayi District and Kpeve Model Basic School was my first school visited in my attempt to integrate into the District for a volunteer experience that will span over the next few months.
In a short conversation with the class teacher, she mentioned the obvious congestion in the class as the most pressing challenge. To most people reading this, it will appear counterintuitive to say the congestion in the class is not as a result of inadequate number of teachers. The reality however is that the District Education Directorate had assured the school of posting new teachers to them if the school’s management ever made a request. The actual challenge – the lack of classroom space.
In a dialogue with the assistant head teacher, Stephen, I was awed by the achievements of the school over the past few years at both the regional and national levels. A national best teacher award (kindergarten category) won by the current headmistress, a national best student (Basic School category), first runner up of the national GH4stem Juneos challenge and many more.
The story of the school’s exploits in the GH4Stem Juneos challenge was intriguing. Mawumenyo, a son of a fisher, who represented the school designed an artificial fish to serve as a pirate detector to give cell phone alerts to fishers like his dad whenever illegal fishers intruded their area. Check it out here: https://fb.watch/ib-_SgFcOt/. Stunning right?
And to imagine that this is an invention of a basic school student whose school has no science practical equipment, let alone a science laboratory, only begs one question – what if these young ones experience an education where the suitable teaching and learning materials/equipment exist?
Among the challenges Stephen mentioned are computers for their computer lab, a library, science practical equipment, and above all, a classroom block to reduce the congestion as some classes are currently over 70 students.
Are you an education enthusiast?
Do you care about the quality of the human resource of Ghana’s future?
Do you fantasize of a moment when our young ones are globally competitive in technology, medicine, engineering etc.?
If your answer is “yes” to any of these questions, then avert your mind to the typical Ghanaian classroom in the underserved schools and if you have the wherewithal to support any school, don’t relent.
Guess what is on my mind concerning these challenges.
A community-led development approach, the CorpsAfrica development style.
Watch this space………