report - Ministry of Education
Transcription
report - Ministry of Education
REPUBLIC OF GHANA MINISTRY OF EDUCATION EDUCATION SECTOR PERFORMANCE REPORT AUGUST 2013 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table of Contents List of tables and figures........................................................................................................ 4 List of acronyms .................................................................................................................... 7 Executive Summary............................................................................................................... 9 1 2 3 INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................... 14 1.1 Structure of the Report .......................................................................................... 14 1.2 Data and reporting................................................................................................. 15 1.3 Monitoring of Aide Memoire Activities from 2012 ................................................... 19 BASIC EDUCATION .................................................................................................... 24 2.1 Access .................................................................................................................. 26 2.2 Gender .................................................................................................................. 37 2.3 Quality ................................................................................................................... 40 SECOND CYCLE EDUCATION ................................................................................... 54 3.1 Senior High School................................................................................................ 56 Access ............................................................................................................................. 56 Gender............................................................................................................................. 59 Quality ............................................................................................................................. 61 3.2 Technical and Vocational Institutes ....................................................................... 66 Access ............................................................................................................................. 66 Gender............................................................................................................................. 67 Quality ............................................................................................................................. 67 4 INCLUSIVE AND SPECIAL EDUCATION .................................................................... 69 4.1 Inclusive Education – Mainstreaming .................................................................... 70 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 2 Ministry of Education, 2013 4.2 5 6 7 8 Special Schools and Units ..................................................................................... 71 NON-FORMAL EDUCATION ....................................................................................... 73 5.1 Non-formal Education Division .............................................................................. 74 5.2 Distance learning and open schooling ................................................................... 75 5.3 COTVET ............................................................................................................... 76 TERTIARY EDUCATION.............................................................................................. 78 6.1 Access .................................................................................................................. 79 6.2 Quality ................................................................................................................... 82 EDUCATION MANAGEMENT ...................................................................................... 84 7.1 EMIS ..................................................................................................................... 85 7.2 Decentralised management of pre-tertiary education ............................................ 85 7.3 Teacher Absenteeism ........................................................................................... 87 7.4 Ghana Partnership for Education Grant ................................................................. 91 7.5 Education Sector Working Group – donor mapping exercise ................................. 92 EDUCATION FINANCE................................................................................................ 95 8.1 Trends in Education Expenditure ........................................................................... 96 8.2 GoG Expenditure 2012 ........................................................................................ 100 8.3 Expenditure from other sources........................................................................... 102 8.4 Unit Cost Analysis ............................................................................................... 103 REFERENCES .................................................................................................................. 105 Glossary of education indicators ........................................................................................ 106 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 3 Ministry of Education, 2013 List of tables and figures Tables Chapter 1 - Introduction Table 1. Number of schools captured in the EMIS schools census Chapter 2 – Basic Education Table 2. Kindergarten Schools - number Table 3. Kindergarten enrolment statistics Table 4. Primary Schools - number Table 5. Primary enrolment statistics Table 6. JHS Schools - number Table 7. JHS enrolment statistics Table 8. Repetition rates in Basic Education Table 9. Enrolment in private education in basic schools Table 10. Enrolment in first year, private and public schools Table 11. Gross Enrolment Ratios and Gender Parity Indices in basic education Table 12. Key Targets for Quality of Education Table 13. Distribution of national BECE results by subject, 2012 Table 14. BECE ‘above average’ rates by deprived and non-deprived districts, 2012 Table 15. Completion rates at Primary and JHS Table 16. Numbers of teachers in basic education (public and private schools) Table 17. Teachers indicators in public basic schools, by level Table 18. Regions with the highest and lowest percentages of trained teachers in public basic schools Table 19. Teacher distribution at the basic level, using maximum and minimum PTRs, 2012/13 Table 20. Teacher statistics for public and private schools, 2012/13 Table 21. Core textbooks per pupil, public basic schools Table 22. Pupil to classroom ratios in public basic schools Table 23. Pupil to seating place ratios in public basic schools Table 24. Progress of Schools under Trees projects, at January 2013 Chapter 3 – Second Cycle Education Table 25. Gross enrolment ratios in second cycle education Table 26. Number of senior high schools by type Table 27. SHS enrolment statistics Table 28. Gender equality indicators at SHS Table 29. WASSCE Examination pass rates by subject and gender, 2012 Table 30. WASSCE Examination pass rates by region and subject, 2012 Table 31. Completion rates – data comparisons Table 32. Indicators of quality at SHS public schools Table 33. Teacher statistics, public and private SHS schools Table 34. Institutions and enrolment in TVET, 2011/12 and 2012/13 Table 35. Enrolment statistics for TVET, 2012/13 Table 36. Female enrolment in TVET, 2011/12 and 2012/13 Table 37. Teachers in TVET institutions, 2011/12 and 2012/13 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 4 Ministry of Education, 2013 Chapter 4 – Inclusive and Special Education Table 38. Enrolment of children with special educational needs in mainstream schools Table 39. Children enrolled in special schools Table 40. Enrolment in special schools by type of school, 2012/13 Chapter 5 – Non-formal Education Table 41. Learners enrolled in NFLP by Year and Gender Table 42. Learner enrolment in local language literacy NFLP, 2012, by region and gender Table 43. National Apprenticeship Programme by region, 2012 Chapter 6 – Tertiary Education Table 44. Progress against ESP 2010-2020 targets for Tertiary Education Table 45. Number of public and private tertiary institutions, 2010/11 and 2011/12 Table 46. Enrolment in tertiary education, by year Table 47. Student enrolment for distance learning by institutions, 2007/08 – 2011/12 Table 48. Enrolment in Science and Technical Programmes, by year Chapter 7 – Education Management Table 49. Districts submitting SRC data, May 2013 Table 50. Teacher attendance at the district level (41 deprived districts) Table 51. Top 5 and bottom 5 districts' teacher attendance rates, by level of education Table 52. Districts’ Annual Programmes of Work – allocation of funds by pillar Table 53. Districts’ Annual Programmes of Work – allocation of funds by level of education Chapter 8 - Education Finance Table 54. Trends in Education Resource Envelope and Expenditure as a share of GDP and Total Public Spending (GH¢) Table 55. Trends in expenditure by level of education Table 56. Education resource envelope and item expenditure 2012 Table 57. Expenditure by Level of Education and Item 2012 Table 58. GoG Expenditure by level of Education and item, 2012 Table 59. GoG Budget Execution Rate 2012 Table 60. Expenditure by level of Education from other sources, 2012 Table 61. Unit costs by level of Education Figures Chapter 1 - Introduction Figure 1. Population estimates for 2010 and 2011, using the 2000 census and 2010 census Figure 2. Basic gross enrolment ratios using the 2000 and 2010 census population projections Figure 3. National population estimates for age zero to 18 years, 2010 PHC Figure 4. Allocation of newly trained teachers by region, 2012 Chapter 2 – Basic Education Figure 5. Kindergarten enrolment ratios – data comparisons Figure 6. KG Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 Figure 7. Enrolment by grade in KG Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 5 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 8. Figure 9. Figure 10. Figure 11. Figure 12. Figure 13. Figure 14. Figure 15. Figure 16. Figure 17. Figure 18. Figure 19. Figure 20. Figure 21. Figure 22. Figure 23. Figure 24. Figure 25. Figure 26. Figure 27. Primary enrolment ratios – data comparisons Primary Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 Enrolment in Primary by grade JHS enrolment ratios – data comparisons JHS Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 Enrolment by grade in JHS Retention rates in Primary and JHS education Gender parity index at basic level – data comparisons Gender Parity Index at basic education by region, 2012/13 Distribution of BECE results by gender (Female F, Male M), 2012 Maths BECE results by gender, 2012 Distribution of English BECE results by region, 2012 Distribution of English BECE results for deprived and non-deprived districts, 2012 Completion rates - data comparisons Pupil-teacher ratios in public basic schools Pupil-to-trained-teacher ratios in public basic schools, by region Numbers of surplus teachers in public basic schools in 2012/13, using ESP 2010-20 PTR targets Numbers of surplus teachers in public basic schools in 2012/13, Core textbook to pupil ratios over time Core textbook to pupil ratios in public basic schools, by region Chapter 3 – Second Cycle Education Figure 28. Number of senior high schools by region, 2012/13 Figure 29. SHS enrolment ratios – data comparisons Figure 30. SHS placement: students presented, qualifying and placed in SHS, 2008 to 2012 Figure 31. Enrolment by grade at SHS Figure 32. Gender Parity Index at SHS – data comparisons Figure 33. Completion rates at SHS – data comparisons Figure 34. WASSCE pass rates by subject, 2006 to 2012 Figure 35. Distribution of WASSCE scores across schools: proportion of schools’ candidates who qualify for tertiary education Figure 36. Distribution of those students who qualify for tertiary education across schools Chapter 6 – Tertiary Education Figure 37. Female enrolment in public tertiary institutions Figure 38. Highest qualification of full time teaching staff in tertiary institutions, 2011/12 Chapter 8 - Education Finance Figure 39. Proportion of total expenditure by level of education Figure 40. Expenditure by item, 2012 Figure 41. GOG budget execution rate for 2011 and 2012 Figure 42. Annual percentage change in unit cost Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 6 Ministry of Education, 2013 List of acronyms ABFA ADPR APTI APW AUDEM BECE CBT CENDLOS CHASS CoE COTVET DANIDA DfID EMIS ESP ESPR FGER GAR GER GES GETfund GEU GH¢ GIMPA GIZ GNAT GoG GPEF GPEG GPI GSFP GSS GSTDP HIPC HIV/AIDS IE INSET ISE JHS JICA KG KOICA MDRI MGER MoE MoFEP NAB Annual Budget Funding Amount Annual District Performance Report Association of Principals of Technical Institutions Annual Programme of Work Advisory Unit of Decentralised Education Management Basic Education Certificate Examination Competency Based Training Centre for National Distance Learning and Open Schooling Conference of Heads of Assisted Secondary Schools College of Education Council for Technical and Vocational Education and Training Danish Development Agency Department for International Development Education Management Information System Education Strategic Plan Education Sector Performance Report Female Gross Enrolment Ratio Gross Admission Ratio Gross Enrolment Ratio Ghana Education Service Ghana Education Trust Fund Girls Education Unit Ghana Cedis Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration German Development Corporation Ghana National Association of Teachers Government of Ghana Global Partnership for Education Fund Ghana Partnership for Education Grant Gender Parity Index Ghana School Feeding Programme Ghana Statistical Service Ghana Skills and Technology Development Project Highly Indebted Poor Country Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome Inclusive Education In-service education and training Inclusive and Special Education Junior High School Japan International Cooperation Agency Kindergarten Korea International Cooperation Agency Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative Male Gross Enrolment Ratio Ministry of Education Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning National Accreditation Board Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 7 Ministry of Education, 2013 NAP NAR NCTE NEA NER NFED NFLP NVTI ORELT PASS PHC PHD PTR PTTR SDF SHS SMC SpED SRIMPR STDs SWG TVI UNESCO UNICEF USAID UTDBE WAEC WASSCE WEL WFP National Apprenticeship Programme Net Admission Ratio National Council for Tertiary Education National Education Assessment Net Enrolment Ratio Non-formal Education Division National Functional Literacy Programme National Vocational Training Institute Open Resource for English Language Teaching Participatory Approach to Student Success Population and Housing Census Doctor of Philosophy Pupil-teacher ratio Pupil-trained teacher ratio Skills Development Fund Senior High School School Management Committee Special Education Division Statistics, Research, Information Management and Public Relations Sexually Transmitted Diseases Sector Working Group Technical and Vocational Institute United Nations Education, Science and Cultural Organisation United Nations Children’s Fund United States Agency for International Development Untrained Teacher Diploma in Basic Education West African Examinations Council West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination Workplace Experience Learning World Food Programme Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 8 Ministry of Education, 2013 Executive Summary This report reviews the performance of the Education sector in Ghana over the year 2012/13. It refers to progress achieved since the previous National Education Sector Annual Review (May 2012) and makes use of the most recent data, including the report of the 2012/13 annual school census under the Education Management Information System (EMIS). This Performance Report is the first to make use of the statistics from the 2010 Population and Housing Census (PHC) for the 2012/13 indicators. The statistics and projections from the 2010 PHC show some differences are difference from the 2000 PHC. This has implications for education indicators such as enrolment and completion rates. As a result, care must be taken when looking at the trends in indicators that employ population statistics as the denominator. In order to present and understand a fair analysis of the progress in education, the 2010 and 2011 indicators have been re-calculated using the 2010 PHC and are shown in charts in this document. A review of progress of last year’s Aide Memoire activities shows that some progress has been made on the recommendations. These include (i) the Complementary Basic Education policy, (ii) the School Report Cards, (iii) data analysis training and planning workshops to improve districts’ alignment of budgets with national priorities (v) the issue of allowing BECE candidates to re sit exams has been resolved to some extent, in that junior high school graduates who wish to resit will have go back to their schools to register. Basic Education Progress has been made in increasing access across the levels of basic education, with all enrolment indicators improving in 2012/13. As the sector hits the peak of enrolling all children of school age, it is important to note that increasing effort in terms of interventions will be required to achieve relatively little. In the light of this, pragmatic strategies become very important. In this endeavour, accessing the last out-of-school children may be increasingly difficult and the indicators become very sensitive to the expansion of coverage of private schools in the census and to the accuracy of the underlying population projections. However, the number of out-of-school children has witnessed impressive reductions. The MICS 20062011 report showed that the number of out-of-school children (aged 6 to 11) fell by 46% from 513,000 in 2006 to 278,000 in 2011. Gross enrolment numbers and ratios for Basic Education 2008/9+ 2009/10+ 2010/11+ 2011/12+ 2012/13 KG 1,338,454 1,440,732 1,491,450 1,543,314 1,604,505 Primary 3,710,647 3,809,258 3,962,779 4,062,026 4,105,913 JHS GER 1,285,277 2008/9+ 1,301,940 2009/10+ 1,335,400 2010/11+ 1,385,367 2011/12+ 1,452,585 2012/13 KG 92.9 97.3 98.4 99.4 113.8 Primary 94.9 94.9 96.4 96.5 105.0 JHS 80.6 79.5 79.6 80.6 82.2 Enrolment Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 9 Ministry of Education, 2013 + 2008/9 to 2011/12 use the 2000 PHC population estimates.2012/13 use the 2010 PHC. Private provision of basic schooling continues to increase, with first year admissions to private schools growing faster than to public schools. This could, however, reflect the increasing coverage of private schools in the annual school census. Gender parity has been surpassed in KG, representing a higher proportion of girls than boys in school for the 4 to 5 year-old age group. Gender parity is almost achieved at the Primary level, with a GPI of 0.99, and there is still a way to go for JHS where the GPI is 0.93. BECE results show that boys performed better than girls in all core subjects except English, where the reverse is true. At the regional level, Greater Accra and Ashanti tend to have the highest performance, with Upper East, Northern and Upper West having high numbers of below average students. Completion rates increased at both Primary and JHS, now at 112.4 and 70.1 respectively. 1 The drive to increase the share of trained teachers is showing results, with the numbers of trained teachers growing at all three levels, the percentage of teachers who are trained increasing, and also the pupil to trained teacher ratio falling across basic public schools. Pupil to teacher ratios also reduced this year (indicating fewer pupils per teacher), which could suggest an inefficient use of resources (teachers) if there are more teachers than considered optimal. The number of core textbooks per pupil stands at 1.2 and 0.9 for Primary and JHS public schools respectively, still some way off the target of 3. Progress has been made regarding the ratios of classrooms and seating places to pupils at all three levels of basic public schools, thus improving the facilities for pupils to aid learning. Second Cycle Upon completion of Junior high schools, graduates have the opportunity to transit into senior high schools or technical and vocational education training institutes. The number of students enrolled in senior high schools increased in 2012, although the rate of increase is less than the population projection leading to a slight reduction in the gross enrolment ratio from 37.1 to 36.8. The proportion of SHS students who are female increased to 45.9%, but the gender parity index remains low at 0.86. The completion rate for males is almost 6 percentage points higher than for females. 1 Further studies are required to review the current calculation of completion rates. Ghana uses a standardised approach to calculation as used by many countries, though Ghana must endeavour to make a case for consideration at the international level (through education forums in Africa and beyond) Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 10 Ministry of Education, 2013 WASSCE pass rates improved in 2012 compared with 2011 in all the subjects except for English, where the results fell. The pass rate was higher for males than for females in each of the four core subjects. A number of indicators of teaching quality showed a worsening situation in 2012/13. In public SHS schools the pupil-teacher ratio and pupil to trained teacher ratios decreased in 2012/13, suggesting that there are more teachers available in schools. However the proportion of SHS teachers who are trained decreased by 0.5 percentage points to 86.9%. The number of textbooks per pupil fell for English (0.66), Maths (0.67) and Science textbooks (0.63). The 45 Technical and Vocational Institutions under the GES has 36,830 students enrolled in 2012/13. Overall enrolment in TVET decreased by 1.3% from the previous year, but this may be due to inconsistent coverage of institutions. GES TVET institutions have highly qualified teachers, where 94.8% have a technical qualification and 80.9% are trained as teachers. The gross enrolment ratio decreased in second cycle education as a whole (SHS and TVET) when compared with 2011 (see the table below). However, this is likely due to the upwards adjustment in the population estimate used for 2012/13. Gross enrolment ratios in second cycle education Enrolment 2011/12+ 2012/13 SHS 758,468 842,587 TVET 62,303 61,496 Total 820,771 904,212 2,044,848 2,291,267 GER* 2011/12 2012/13 SHS 37.1 36.8 TVET* 3.0 2.7 Population 15-18 Total 40.1 39.5 + 2011/12 uses the 2000 PHC population estimates.2012/13 uses the 2010 PHC. *The GER is based on the population of 15 to 18 year olds, although TVET courses are usually three years whereas SHS is four years. Inclusive and Special Education The Education Strategic Plan has a strategic goal to provide education for excluded children ... by including them, wherever possible, within the mainstream formal system or, only when considered necessary, within special units or schools. As part of this, the policy of Inclusive Education places children with mild and moderate disabilities in mainstream public schools. Since the end of 2011, the Inclusive Education programme has expanded from 29 districts in seven regions to 46 districts in all ten regions. In 2012/13 the number of pupils in mainstream basic schools recorded as having special educational needs fell by 16%. This could likely be due to inconsistencies in recording the number of children with special needs. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 11 Ministry of Education, 2013 Children with severe and profound disabilities are enrolled in segregated special schools or special units attached to mainstream schools. The number of students enrolled in special schools in 2012/13 was 6,180, a decrease from 6,432 the year before. This decrease could be due to difficulties in capturing enrolment data from all the special schools in Ghana. Non-Formal Education In 2012 the National Functional Literacy Programme, led by Non-Formal Education Division, established 2,056 classes under Batch 18. This accounted for 51,257 learners, of which 64% are female, demonstrating the sector’s commitment to particularly target women. The National Apprenticeship Programme (NAP), led by the Council for Technical and Vocational Education and Training, grew from 1,600 apprentices in 2011 to 5,000 in 2012 in the trade areas of Garments, Cosmetology, Electronics, and Auto Mechanics. Tertiary Education The National Council for Tertiary Education (NCTE) continued to expand access to quality tertiary education in 2012. Enrolment in public universities decreased from 115,452 in 2010/11 to 109,278 in 2011/12. However enrolment in the polytechnics, Colleges of Education and private tertiary institutions increased. The proportion of students enrolled in science and technical programmes has increased in both public universities and polytechnics, now standing at 39.1% in these institutions combined. Education Management A technical review of EMIS carried out in 2012 found critical issues regarding the strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats of the EMIS Data management system. A recommendation of the report has led to development of a dedicated webpage for the EMIS database. The page allows users to download raw data and ready-to-use tables. The GES is reviewing and building the capacity for decentralised management. Training on reporting requirements and analysis is being provided, and recommendations are being considered to further improve district reporting. The three new bodies to strengthen decentralised management are at various levels of progress, with the National Inspectorate Board more advanced than the National Teaching Council or National Council on Curriculum and Assessment. Teacher absenteeism continues to be a strong obstacle to quality teaching and learning in Ghana, particularly in public basic schools. The School Report Cards now being rolled out with district-level software will allow schools and districts to better monitor schools’ progress in aspects including teacher attendance. A preliminary analysis of data from 41 deprived districts in the first term of 2012/13 showed on average a teacher attendance rate of 80%. The Ghana Education Sector Working Group was successful in its application to the Global Partnership for Education Fund in 2012, establishing the Ghana Partnership for Education Grant (GPEG). GPEG is a three year grant for US$75.5 million, implemented by the Ghana Education Service in 57 deprived districts in eight out of ten regions. The project Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 12 Ministry of Education, 2013 development objective is to improve the planning, monitoring and delivery of basic education services in the deprived districts of Ghana. In March 2013 an exercise was carried out to map the interventions of the key donors on the Education Sector Working Group. Donor activity was found to cover the priority areas of the Education Strategic Plan, to be directed either at specific districts (often deprived) or at national level management and no duplication was found. Education Finance Spending on education continued its increasing trend in 2012, with a total expenditure of GH¢ 6.0billion in 2012, up from GH¢ 3.6billion in 2011. In 2012 education expenditure was equal to 8.4% of GDP. The largest source of funding is the Government of Ghana (76% of all funds), however of this 97% is allocated to compensation, leading to heavy reliance on other sources to pay for goods and services and assets, which make up 21% and 5% of total expenditure respectively. Whilst all levels of education saw an increase in expenditure between 2011 and 2012, subsectors which saw a substantial increase in share of the total spending were pre-primary, JHS and SHS. Primary level education had a notable decrease in its proportion of spending, from 34.6% to 25.9%, however in absolute terms its spending increased. There was an overrun in GoG expenditure from the allocated budget in all items of spending: compensation, goods and services and assets. The execution rate of expenditure against budget was particularly high for assets at 2,412%. This was largely accounted for by the reallocation of planned expenditure from GETfund into GoG funds, particularly for Schools Under Trees and SHS infrastructure. Analysis of unit costs showed that costs per pupil increased for all levels of education between 2011 and 2012. The largest increase was in Pre-Primary (KG and crèche), which increased by 327% in 2012. Unit costs increase as the level of education increases, from GH¢ 341 per pupil in Pre-Primary up to GH¢ 2,693 in Tertiary (2011 expenditure). Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 13 Ministry of Education, 2013 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 Structure of the Report The report is structured to reflect the Education Strategic Plan 2010-2020. The introduction continues with a description of the data sources and intricacies of the EMIS data for 2012/13, particularly due to the new population figures and re-classification of the deprived districts. It also reviews progress on priority activities included in the Aide Memoire from the 2012 National Education Sector Annual Review. Chapter 2 covers Basic Education, organized along the core priorities of Access, Gender and Quality of education. Basic Education includes KG, Primary and JHS schools. Second Cycle Education is the focus of Chapter 3, also looking at Access, Equity and Quality. Here, the chapter is divided according to the different types of second cycle education: senior high schools and technical vocational education and training. Chapter 4 provides an overview of delivery of Inclusive and Special Education, which operates as part of pre-tertiary education.2 This includes mainstreaming children with mild to moderate special needs in mainstream schools, and providing special schools and units for children with severe disabilities. Non-formal education is covered in Chapter 5. The Non-Formal Education division continued with the National Functional Literacy Programme in 2012/3; open and distance learning was expanded by CENDLOS; and COTVET continued the National Apprenticeship Programme. Chapter 6 focuses on tertiary education, looking at enrolment and numbers of institutions in both public and private tertiary institutions. Improving education management is a major priority for the sector, and this is covered in Chapter 7. There are a number of activities being carried out to strengthen education management at the national and decentralized levels, including the use of the EMIS and the three-year Ghana Partnership for Education Grant. This Chapter also details activities of the donor partners in the Education Sector Working Group. Chapter 8 provides a summary of the education sector’s finances in 2012. A list of references is provided after Chapter 8, and is followed by a Glossary explaining how the education indicators are calculated in this report. 2 Inclusive and Special Education is treated as a focal area to indicate the importance the sector attaches to responding to the needs of perons with special educational needs Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 14 Ministry of Education, 2013 1.2 Data and reporting The data presented in this report was the most recently available as at April and May 2013. For Basic and Secondary schools, the majority of data comes from the EMIS annual school census, and BECE and WASSCE data come from WAEC. Data on other Agencies/Divisions have come from reports of the respective Agencies. Results from the 2011 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) carried out between September and December 2011 are referred to for further detail on access and out-of-school children (UNICEF, 2013). The numbers of basic and senior high schools responding to the EMIS census are given in Table 1 below. For public schools it is assumed to be a 100% response rate, but we do not know the coverage rate for private schools. Table 1. Number of schools captured in the EMIS schools census Kindergarten 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Public 11,827 12,481 13,263 13,505 13,305 % change 2011/12 to 2012/13 -1.5% Private 4,612 4,990 5,538 5,410 5,972 10.4% Total 16,439 17,471 18,801 18,915 19,277 Primary 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Public 13,510 13,835 14,431 14,360 14,112 1.9% % change 2011/12 to 2012/13 -1.7% Private 4,371 4,722 5,292 5,473 5,742 4.9% Total 17,881 18,579 19,723 19,833 19,854 JHS 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Public 7,656 7,969 8,462 8,336 8,818 0.1% % change 2011/12 to 2012/13 5.8% Private 2,557 2,799 3,247 3,231 3,618 12.0% Total Senior High schools Public 10,213 10,768 11,709 11,567 12,436 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 493 496 511 515 535 7.5% % change 2011/12 to 2012/13 3.9% Private 177 201 209 242 293 21.1% Total 670 697 720 757 828 9.4% New population data This report makes use of the 2010 census data for the first time. Up until 2012, the Ministry of Education was using population projections based on the 2000 census, using the national annual growth rate of 2.7 percent (Ghana Statistical Service). The GSS carried out the National Population and Housing Census in 2010 (PHC). The results of the 2010 PHC its respective estimated annual growth rates show some differences from the 2000 PHC. This has presented the sector with some challenges in the calculation of sector indicators that use the population as denominator (e.g. enrolment ratios and completion rates). Figure 1 below shows the population estimates for a selection of school-going ages. It shows the population estimates for 2010 and 2011 using the old (2000) and new (2010) census Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 15 Ministry of Education, 2013 projections. The Education Sector Performance Reports for 2011 and 2012 used these old projections (2010 and 2011 data)3. Figure 1. Population estimates for 2010 and 2011, using the 2000 census and 2010 census The bars labelled ‘old’ are using the 2000 census, and these estimates were used in the EMIS data for 2010/11 and 2011/12. The bars labelled ‘new’ are using the 2010 census. The indicators for 2012/13 onwards will use 2010 census projections. Throughout this report Figures are shown which include the indicators reported in previous ESPRs, using the 2000 census projections. However to allow fair comparison with recent trend, the indicators have been recalculated for 2010/11 and 2011/12 using the 2010 PHC. Figure 2 below demonstrates this. The block lines are the indicators calculated using the 2000 census projections and as reported in previous years. The dashed lines show the indicators recalculated using the 2010 census projections, and include the 2012/13 indicator results. 3 Thus the trend in previous performance reports will be different from the ones that employed the 2010 PHC data sets. For the younger age groups, those aged 6 to 12, the previous projections were in fact an over-estimate of population. For children aged 12 and over, we start to see that the projections were not so far off. As the ages increase we find that we had in fact been under-estimating the population. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 16 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 2. Basic gross enrolment ratios using the 2000 and 2010 census population projections Conforming with the population projections in Figure 1, Figure 2 shows that at KG, the 2010 PHC data significantly increases the GER as the population estimate has fallen. This also happens at Primary, though less dramatically. If the 2010/11 and 2011/12 indicators were not recalculated and shown here, it would appear that GER increased considerably in 2012/13 for KG and Primary. In fact, the Primary GER fell slightly this year. At JHS, where the population estimates were less far off, the GER barely changes using the new data, and in fact was found to be over-estimated in 2010/11 as the JHS population turned out to be higher than the 2000 census projections estimated. The effect of the 2010 PHC data can be seen when looking at district-level net enrolment ratios. By definition, the NER should not go above 100. However, in 2012/13 at KG there are 44 districts with an NER above 100, and at Primary 40 districts have NERs above 100. Limitations with the 2010 PHC data The 2010 PHC data shows very volatile numbers in each year of age, with a significant peak of ten year-olds, as seen in Figure 3. Care must be taken with considering indicators which use an age group of just one year, such as admission rates (e.g. Primary gross admission rate uses the population of six year-olds as the denominator) or completion rates (e.g. primary completion rate uses the population of 11 year-olds). This problem is reduced when taking the population of a wide group (such as six to 11 year-olds in the Primary GER). The SRIMPR Division of MoE is investigating with GSS the possibility for smoothing out the data across ages. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 17 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 3. National population estimates for age zero to 18 years, 2010 PHC Source: SRIMPR, MoE; originally from GSS Another issue with the data relates to projections. An annual growth rate is applied to each age– shifting the graph up rather than along. This means that there will always be a spike of ten year-olds and a dip in 11 year-olds, rather than the spike of ten year-olds becoming 11 next year, then 12 the year after and so on. This can be seen in the lines for 2011 and 2012 in Figure 3 above. Again, the EMIS team are discussing this with the GSS. Deprived Districts The Ministry of Education has operated with the concept of deprived districts in one form or other since 2004. In response to recommendations in previous annual reviews, in 2012 the criteria for deprived districts was reviewed and updated. The new criteria include both Ghana's poverty index4 (share of population below the poverty line) as well as education indicators. The education indicators are: 4 retention in primary education (enrolment in P6/enrolment in P1 based on all schools), retention in the basic cycle (enrolment in JHS3/enrolment in P1 based on all schools), share of girls enrolled in P6 (all schools), share of girls enrolled in JHS3 (all schools), pass rate in BECE English, and share of trained teachers in the public primary schools. Based on district-level poverty index, 2003 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 18 Ministry of Education, 2013 The bottom third (57) of the districts, ranked according to the criteria listed above, are used as the deprived districts throughout this report, making this the first year the ESPR has used the new deprived districts definition. Indicators for 2011/12 have been calculated for the new set of 57 deprived districts, using the 2011 population projection (from the 2010 census), in order to compare 2012/13 indicators with the year before. 1.3 Monitoring of Aide Memoire Activities from 2012 The National Education Sector Annual Review 2012 culminated in the signing of an Aide Memoire between the Ministry of Education and development partners which sets out priority activities for the coming year. A review of progress of these activities is given below, categorized by the thematic areas of the ESP. Basic education I. II. III. Implementation of the Complementary Basic Education (CBE) policy The CBE policy was reviewed and shared at a policy workshop in February 2013. The final policy is due to be launched in the coming months. DFID has approved and hired a management consultant in collaboration with GES to implement the CBE to target the first 120,000 out-of-school children. A CBE management team, in collaboration with the GES and MoE, has reviewed and confirmed proposals of ten implementing partners for CBE. A steering committee has been established and has commenced operations. Ensure completion of School Report Cards (SRCs) The School Report Card data capture format template and software for data entry were updated. In 2012/13 SRCs were rolled out in the 57 deprived districts. This consisted of installation of the software and training for district personnel in each of the district offices. The circuit supervisors were trained to assist head teachers in completing the SRC data capture format template. All public basic schools in the deprived districts were administered the SRC template, and returned them completed to the districts. Districts then generated electronic SRCs to be returned to schools, and a collated report which was sent to GES Headquarters. Initial monitoring visits to schools and districts in May 2013 implied that heads, assistant head teachers and teaching staff were well informed about the use of the SRC in preparing the School Performance Improvement Plan and monitoring progress at the school level. Strengthen and review School Based Assessment (SBA) The common framework for the School Based Assessment (SBA) was reviewed and finalized in 2012. The SBA has been budgeted for but no funds have been released for the training of District Education personnel to mainstream the assessment model. UNICEF supported the Curriculum Research and Development Division to carry out training of Trainers in the 30 districts across the country where UNICEF operates. In order to improve educational accountability the Assessment Services Unit (ASU) is planning to develop standardized tests for each grade level to be used to assess the level of achievement of pupils at the end of an academic year. However, nonavailability of funds is the key challenge. ASU has recommended that part of the GETFund should be allocated for assessment so that assessment activities will be Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 19 Ministry of Education, 2013 carried out on time, allowing a timely release of results which can improve teaching and learning. IV. Improve teacher capacity and pupil learning achievement in literacy This activity was specifically linked to reviewing the Maths and Science modules of the Untrained Teacher Diploma in Basic Education. A consultant was hired to work with Teacher Education Division for this review. The first year modules have been completed and already distributed to the current cohort of UTDBE students. Second, third and fourth year modules are scheduled to be reviewed in the coming months. Secondary education V. VI. Provide a more flexible placement system to allow more students to seek a second chance This activity suggested exploring the possibility of letting pupils transfer results and re-sit the BECE at any school. Because Continuous Assessment Scores (CASS) form part of the total scores used for the grading of candidates at the BECE, candidates who intend to re-sit the examination have to register with their former schools. WAEC note that until the policy of the use of CASS and the Stanine grading system for BECE are reviewed, candidates will have to continue to re-sit for the examination with their former schools. Improve teaching of Science and Mathematics This activity was specifically to provide Science and Maths INSET training for SHS teachers, and increase the coverage of science camps. In the year to now, 83 more schools were provided with science supplies for teaching and learning. In May 2013 a four-week INSET was provided for 186 science teachers and 63 laboratory technicians from 62 SHS. Science items, training manuals and the training programme have been repackaged to correspond more with the SHS science curriculum and examination syllabus. Non-formal education VII. Development of Non-Formal Education (NFE) policy The Mass Literacy and Social Change Programme Policy Document (MASSLIP, 1989) was reviewed and revised. The new draft was presented to Regional Coordinators in a senior management meeting. Inclusive and Special Education VIII. Reverse negative attitude of public towards the disabled This activity was to undertake a sensitisation campaign to raise awareness of education issues for students with special educational needs. SpED have Special Education Officers in the Regional and District Education Offices. These officers attend parent-teacher association meetings at schools in order to sensitise parents and schools in the needs of children with special needs. SpED have Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 20 Ministry of Education, 2013 also sought to address public awareness by sending officers to churches and by appearing on GTV to discuss issues of special needs. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 21 Ministry of Education, 2013 IX. Expand Inclusive Education programme Since July 2012, the Inclusive Education programme has been expanded to 12 new districts with the support of UNICEF. This means the Inclusive Education Programme has now reached 46 districts spread across all ten regions. Tertiary Education X. National Output Based research fund under NCTE The research fund has been established with seed funding of two million cedis from the GETFund. XI. Promote the use of new technologies in teaching and learning NCTE will be using the success stories from the TALIF (Teaching and Learning Innovation Fund) to improve the pedagogy of lecturers at universities. Education Management XII. XIII. XIV. XV. Teacher Professional Development Policy approved and implementation plan developed The pre-tertiary teacher professional development plan, and its associated implementation plan, has been approved by the GES management, and GES Council. The plan was launched by the Minister in June 2013. Provide training for EMIS officers. Provide training in data analysis at the district level for Statistics Officers and Directors in non deprived districts. As happens every year, training was conducted by SRIMPR for all scheduled offices of 170 districts. Frequent staff turnover at the district officers and movement between roles in the office continue to present challenge to the upgrading of officers’ skills. Additional training on data analysis for the non-deprived districts and the new districts has not yet been possible. Ensure budget priorities are in line with national policy priorities This activity was included to ensure that districts’ operational plans (ADEOPs) and budgets are aligned with national policies. Led by the Advisory Unit of Decentralised Education Management (AUDEM) in the GES, a consortium of trainers was organised to implement the comprehensive training programme on District Education Operational Planning and Performance Review (DEOPPR). The consortium includes resource persons from CEPS, GIMPA, IEPA, NCRIBE. Training was carried out in March and May 2013. District annual plans have been evaluated and found to be aligned with national priorities in the education strategic plan. Review study leave data and investigate distance learning opportunities to replace study leave A review of data sets from the Human Resource Management Division (HRMD) of the GES indicates that majority of the teachers on study leave return for re-posting. However, whether the current teachers in the field are adequate is another question. An analysis of pupil-teacher ratios for KG, Primary and Junior High schools against Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 22 Ministry of Education, 2013 XVI. the minimum and maximum norms, as in section 2.3, reveals that public school teacher vacancies require a review. The Ministry could make efficiency savings if the PTR norm is adhered to. This will reduce the wage bill considerably. Data also indicate that as at 2012, the numbers of staff in management at the GES head quarters, Regional offices and district offices require a review to ensure efficiency savings. There are currently viable alternatives to supporting fulltime teachers on study leave. Resorting to the use of distance programmes will not only reduce the wage bill but also ensure that the teachers are available in the class to teach whilst at the same time pursuing further studies. This is being considered by NCTE. Enhance availability of teacher deployment data HRMD hold data on the deployment of teachers after graduating in the pre-service Diploma in Basic Education from the Colleges of Education. Teachers are allocated by GES headquarters to the regional offices, based on the vacancies notified and requested. These in turn depend on the vacancies reported by districts, and in turn by head teachers. In 2012; 8,781 newly trained teachers were deployed into schools in Ghana. Their allocation by region is given below. Figure 4. Allocation of newly trained teachers by region, 2012 XVII. Ensure smooth roll out of GIFMIS system The GIFMIS secretariat of the education sector has been established and is located in the Ministry. The secretariat received GIFMIS training from the Controller and Accountant General’s Department. This is being rolled out to the Ministry’s agencies through onthe-job training. It is expected that the Ministry’s agencies, including regions and districts, will have their own GIFMIS secretariats in future. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 23 Ministry of Education, 2013 2 BASIC EDUCATION Summary Progress has been made in increasing access across the levels of basic education, with all enrolment indicators improving in 2012/13. As the sector hits the peak of enrolling all children of school age, it is important to note that increasing effort in terms of interventions will be required to achieve relatively little. In the light of this, pragmatic strategies become very important. In this endeavour, accessing the last out-of-school children may be increasingly difficult and the indicators become very sensitive to the expansion of coverage of private schools in the census and to the accuracy of the underlying population projections. However, the number of out-of-school children has witnessed impressive reductions. The MICS 20062011 report showed that the number of out-of-school children (aged 6 to 11) fell by 46% from 513,000 in 2006 to 278,000 in 2011. Private provision of basic schooling continues to increase, with first year admissions to private schools growing faster than to public schools. This could, however, reflect the increasing coverage of private schools in the annual school census. Gender parity has been surpassed in KG, representing a higher proportion of girls than boys in school for the 4 to 5 year-old age group. Gender parity is almost achieved at the Primary level, with a GPI of 0.99, and there is still a way to go for JHS where the GPI is 0.93. BECE results show that boys performed better than girls in all core subjects except English, where the reverse is true. At the regional level, Greater Accra and Ashanti tend to have the highest performance, with Upper East, Northern and Upper West having high numbers of below average students. Completion rates increased at both Primary and JHS, now at 112.4 and 70.1 respectively. 5 The drive to increase the share of trained teachers is showing results, with the numbers of trained teachers growing at all three levels, the percentage of teachers who are trained increasing, and also the pupil to trained teacher ratio falling across basic public schools. Pupil to teacher ratios also reduced this year (indicating fewer pupils per teacher), which could suggest an inefficient use of resources (teachers) if there are more teachers than considered optimal. The number of core textbooks per pupil stands at 1.2 and 0.9 for Primary and JHS public schools respectively, still some way off the target of 3. Progress has been made regarding the ratios of classrooms and seating places to pupils at all three levels of basic public schools, thus improving the facilities for pupils to aid learning. 5 Further studies are required to review the current calculation of completion rates. Ghana uses a standardised approach to calculation as used by many countries, though Ghana must endeavour to make a case for consideration at the international level (through education forums in Africa and beyond) Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 24 Ministry of Education, 2013 Key activities carried out by the Ghana Education Service in Basic Education this year include: 1,658,084 free school uniforms and 32,400,000 exercise books were distributed to needy pupils; 5,467,808 basic school pupils benefitted from the capitation grant; 26,915 girls received food rations and 179,900 pupils benefitted from the feeding programme; The Girls PASS Programme, a USD 9.2 million grant aimed at providing scholarships to 55,000 girls was inaugurated. GES and DFID reached an agreement to collaborate and reach 150,000 out of school children and provide complimentary basic education. 376,859 candidates received the subsidy allowing them to sit the BECE; Teacher upgrading continued through In-service and Competency based training, as well as enrolling 12,900 untrained teachers on the Untrained Teachers Diploma in Basic Education (UTDBE) programme. 32,000 children from 42 districts benefitted from the Teacher Community Assistant Initiative (TCAI) programme. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 25 Ministry of Education, 2013 2.1 Access KG The number of kindergarten schools increased from 18,915 to 19,277 in 2012/13 (see Table 2). However, this was mostly due to an increase in the number of private KGs, which offset a fall in the number of public KGs. The number of public KGs fell by 200, which could be due to factors such as combining two schools (e.g. A and B schools), and cleaning the data. Table 2. Kindergarten Schools - number Kindergarten 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Public 11,827 12,481 13,263 13,505 13,305 Private 4,612 4,990 5,538 5,410 5,972 Total 16,439 17,471 18,801 18,915 19,277 Enrolment numbers in KG increased in line with recent trends, adding around 61,191 pupils on 2011/12 and now standing at 1.6 million (Table 3). The GER increased to 113.8 in 2012/13. Official age enrolment also continued to increase, giving an NER of 74.8. Results from the 2011 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) shows that 38% of pre-school attendance is children aged six years and over, meaning they are over the appropriate age for KG (UNICEF, 2013). Table 3. Kindergarten enrolment statistics 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 KG GER 92.9 97.3 98.4 99.4 KG NER 63.6 58.7 60.1 64.2 Deprived Dist* 2011 /12 2012 /13 113.8 109.6 111.6 74.8 73.3 75.6 Enrol. KG 1,338,454 1,440,732 1,491,450 1,543,314 1,604,505 448,307 Enrol KG 916,455 869,552 911,305 996,232 1,054,967 299,816 (4-5 yr) * NB 2011/12 Deprived districts indicators are calculated using the 2010 PHC data. 468,412 317,060 Figure 5 shows that in re-calculating the previous two years’ enrolment ratios for using the 2010 PHC data, the enrolment rates for those two years (2010/11 and 2011/12) were found to be higher. In addition, 2012/13 did still see an increase on the previous year. Deprived districts in 2012/13 have a lower gross but higher net enrolment ratio for KG than at the national level, at 111.6 and 75.6 respectively. This implies that formal and particularly public schooling through KG education is more patronized in the deprived communities whilst private or home delivery of KG increases in the urban centres. As with the national level, deprived districts saw an increase in GER and NER in 2012/13. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 26 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 5. Kindergarten enrolment ratios – data comparisons Gross and net enrolment ratios at KG vary widely amongst regions, as shown in Figure 6. Western Region and Brong Ahafo both have a GER above 140, and the highest NERs at 102 for Western and 88 for Brong Ahafo. (In fact the NER should not go above 100, so this demonstrates the caution that must be taken with the new population data.) Greater Accra has by far the lowest GER (66) and NER (44), most likely due to a tendency for parents in this region to find private childcare arrangements for their children before sending them to Primary. Figure 6. KG Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 Figure 7 shows that enrolment in each grade has been increasing over the last five years. However the number of pupils enrolled in KG1 has remained almost 200,000 higher than those in KG2, showing the substantial drop-out between the two year groups. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 27 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 7. Enrolment by grade in KG In 2012 the GES developed an operational plan for scaling up quality KG. The plan lays emphasis on activity-based, child-centred and child-led learning. The top priority is to train the existing KG teachers and assistants in the new vision and pedagogy for KG, as well as the newly trained Early Childhood Education teachers coming from Colleges of Education and universities. Whilst the focus is on quality, access plays a part too, with plans to increase public awareness of the need for age-appropriate KG, learning materials and resources, establishment of National KG Standards, and a strategy for identifying and providing for children with special needs. Primary The number of primary schools increased only marginally to now total 19,854, continuing last year’s trend of a fall in the number of public primary schools but an offsetting increase in private schools (Table 4). The fall in public schools is due to a number of factors including the move away from shift systems, combining two schools (such as A and B schools) and cleaning any duplicates from the data. Table 4. Primary Schools - number Primary 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Public 13,510 13,835 14,431 14,360 14,112 Private 4,371 4,722 5,292 5,473 5,742 Total 17,881 18,579 19,723 19,833 19,854 Looking at enrolment ratios alone, it appears that increasing access has continued with great success in 2012/13 as both the gross and net enrolment ratios have increased (105 and 84.1 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 28 Ministry of Education, 2013 respectively) (Table 5). However, the actual numbers enrolled show that appropriate age enrolment has fallen on 2011/12. The abrupt increase in GER and NER reflect the sharply reduced population data for 6 to 11 year olds. Figure 8 shows that when accounting for the new population estimates, the GER and NER actually fell slightly in 2012/13. MICS 2006-2011 data presents a longer trend analysis, which shows that between 2006 and 2011 the number of six to eleven year olds who were out of school (not currently attending school) decreased by 46%, from 513,000 to 278,000 (UNICEF 2013b). Admission into primary 1 sees a similar trend to overall enrolment ratios. The admission ratios increase on the previous year, both for total admission (107.8) and admission of 6-year olds (79.3). However, Figure 8 shows that when accounting for the adjustment to population data, the admission ratios actually fell on the year before. Table 5. Primary enrolment statistics 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Primary GER 94.9 94.9 96.4 96.5 Primary NER 88.5 83.6 77.8 Primary GAR 102.9 101.3 Primary NAR Enrol. Primary Enrol Primary (6-11yr) 72.1 Deprived Districts 2011/12 2012/13 105.0 100.9 98.8 81.7 84.1 85.3 81.1 99.6 97.8 107.8 112.8 107.7 71.1 71.0 71.0 79.3 81.2 79.3 3,710,647 3,809,258 3,962,779 4,062,026 4,105,913 1,078,321 1,082,973 3,461,087 3,356,743 3,201,541 3,439,573 3,286,472 911,139 888,935 Figure 8. Primary enrolment ratios – data comparisons The MICS 2011 data shows that by the age of 10 about 90% of children have entered primary school, and this figure climbs to about 95% by age 14. This result strongly suggests Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 29 Ministry of Education, 2013 that most children in the country now have access to a primary school, and the percentage of truly excluded children (and communities) continues to decline. Enrolment ratios are lower for deprived districts than for the national level, and saw a decrease in 2012/13 as compared with 2011/12. The GER varies by region between 118 in Western Region down to 93 in Greater Accra, and NER follows a similar pattern. It could be that the lower levels of access in Greater Accra are due to the greater opportunity cost of education – there are opportunities for children to gain at least informal employment outside or unpaid within the home within the vicinity of Accra. Figure 9. Primary Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 As would be expected, the numbers enrolled in each grade of Primary decrease as the grades get higher. This is shown in Figure 10. However we can also see that the gap between grades has been closing over time, with far more pupils enrolled in P6 in 2012/13 (almost 600,000) than in 2008/9 (around 500,000). Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 30 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 10. Enrolment in Primary by grade JHS The number of JHS schools increased in 2012/13, both public and private, bringing the total to 12,436 (Table 6). Table 6. JHS JHS Schools - number 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Public 7,656 7,969 8,462 8,336 8,818 Private 2,557 2,799 3,247 3,231 3,618 Total 10,213 10,768 11,709 11,567 12,436 The growth in enrolment seen in recent years continued, as did the increase in appropriate age enrolment (Table 7). The new population estimates for children aged 12 to 14 are very similar to the old estimates, so the GER and NER are little-changed, now at 82.2 and 47.8 respectively. First year admission ratios appear to have fallen in 2012/13, giving a GAR of 86.4 compared with 88.1 last year. The population estimate for 12-year olds has decreased using the 2010 census data. This means that calculating admission ratios with the new population data shows they were lower than originally reported. In 2012/13 first year admission numbers increased. As a result this raised the gross admission ratio slightly (using the new population data). However, appropriate age admission (NAR) fell slightly even when the new population data is accounted for, to 41.0. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 31 Ministry of Education, 2013 The deprived districts have poorer access indicators, with the GER 13 percentage points lower than the national level at 68.9 (compared with 82.2). Between 2011/12 and 2012/13 deprived districts saw improvements in gross enrolment and admission ratios, but falls in net ratios, suggesting that those who are not aged 12 to 14 are enrolling at a faster rate than those who are 12 to 14. Table 7. JHS enrolment statistics 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 JHS GER 80.6 79.5 79.6 80.6 JHS NER 47.8 47.5 46.1 JHS GAR 84.6 86.6 JHS NAR Transition to JH1 Enrol. JHS Enrol JHS (12-14yr) 43.6 Deprived districts 2011/12 2012/13 82.2 67.4 68.9 46.1 47.8 35.4 34.8 86.3 88.1 86.4 65.7 67.5 43.8 43.9 44.5 41.0 30.2 27.2 - 94.6 92.4 89.5 94.5 - 83.5 1,285,277 1,301,940 1,335,400 1,385,367 1,452,585 287,753 301,870 762,898 778,855 772,979 792,491 844,835 151,245 152,606 Figure 11. JHS enrolment ratios – data comparisons At the regional level, the GER ranges from 89.7 in Greater Accra down to 72.6 in Northern Region (see Figure 12). At NER, the three northern regions have the lowest indicators, with an NER of only 32.8 in Upper East. This is quite a reversal from the pattern in KG and Primary, where the northern regions appeared to have relatively good enrolment ratios and Greater Accra was consistently having the poorest performance. One possible explanation is that some parents from other regions choose to send their children to schools in Greater Accra for JHS, so raising the NER in Greater Accra. The divergence between GER and NER shows that particularly in the northern regions children in JHS are not of the appropriate age, most likely starting school later than encouraged. This highlights the difficulty in keeping children in school past Primary level at the correct age in the northern regions. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 32 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 12. JHS Gross and Net Enrolment Ratio by region, 2012/13 Enrolment by grade is shown in Figure 13 below, indicating that whilst enrolment has generally seen an upward trend, there is still a large gap between the numbers entering JHS (JH1) and those completing (JH3). Figure 13. Enrolment by grade in JHS Pupil retention and repetition Retention rates are a way to follow a cohort. They are a proxy for what proportion of students who enter a level of education make it to the final grade of that level the correct number of Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 33 Ministry of Education, 2013 years later (see the glossary for definitions).6 Figure 14 indicates that there has been deterioration in retention rates at Primary and JHS over the last five years. The retention rate for Primary in 2012/13 was 81%, indicating that the number of pupils enrolled in P6 in 2012/13 is only 81% of those who entered P1 in 2007/8 (who should be in P6 now). This rate has fallen from 91.8% in 2008/9. Similarly, the number of JHS3 pupils account for only 78.5% of JHS1 pupils in 2010/11. This has fallen from 90.8% in 2008/9. There is an understandable rationale for JHS retention to be lower for Primary – as pupils get older, the opportunity cost of their time increases as they could be engaged in increasingly productive activities. It might make sense therefore for more pupils to drop out before completing JHS3. However, it is unclear why the numbers failing to reach JHS3 should be increasing over recent years. It will be important to investigate what is causing this deterioration in retention, leading to fewer pupils making it through the full course of basic education. Figure 14. Retention rates in Primary and JHS education Repetition rates tell us what proportion of the pupils in a level of education are repeating that grade. Table 8 shows that in 2012/13, 2.3% of KG pupils were repeating a class, and the steady decline in recent years indicates an improvement if fewer pupils need to repeat the grade. Primary pupils are also seeing a decline in repetition, with only 2.6% of pupils repeaters in 2012/13 compared with 3.8% five years ago in 2008/9. 6 Here there is no adjustment for repeaters. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 34 Ministry of Education, 2013 The proportion of pupils in JHS who are repeating is also declining, from 3.7% in 2011/12 to 3.3% in 2012/13. Table 8. Repetition rates in Basic Education Repetition rates (%) 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 KG 3.1 2.9 2.9 2.7 2.3 Primary 3.8 3.5 2.9 2.8 2.6 JHS 3.1 3.0 3.8 3.7 3.3 Private provision 2012/13 sees a continuing shift towards enrolment in private schools. Enrolment in private schools increased much more than in public schools this year in Primary and JHS, and enrolment actually decreased in public KG schools. As a result, the percentage of enrolment in private schools is now 23.6% at KG, 23.1% in Primary and 20.3% in JHS, signifying at least one in five children go to private schools (see table 9). Table 9. % enrolment in private education KG Primary JHS Enrolment in private education in basic schools 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 19.4 19.5 20.8 22.2 18 18.6 19.3 17.2 17.4 17.6 Deprived dist 2011/12 2012/13 23.6 8.9 9.7 22.1 23.1 7.7 7.8 19.0 20.3 6.1 6.7 First year enrolment data (Table 10) shows that parents are choosing to start their children in private basic schools more than in previous years. Admissions into Primary 1 for example increased in private schools by 5.5%, from 174,814 in 2011/12 to 184,468 in 2012/13. However, public school P1 admissions actually fell by 2.1%, from 572,584 to 560,386. Table 10. Enrolment in first year, private and public schools KG 1 2011/12 2012/13 % change Public 695,013 710,271 2.2 Private 180,405 196,671 9.0 Total 875,418 906,942 3.6 Primary 1 2011/12 2012/13 % change Public 572,584 560,386 -2.1 Private 174,814 184,468 5.5 Total 747,398 744,854 -0.3 JHS 1 2011/12 2012/13 % change Public 424,935 442,936 4.2 Private 97,747 110,143 12.7 Total 522,682 553,079 5.8 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 35 Ministry of Education, 2013 This shift can reflect a number of social factors, for example a growing preference for private education, or private schools opening up to serve communities where insufficient public schools existed. However, part of the increase in private enrolment will be a result of increased coverage of private schools in the annual school census. This year 15,332 private basic schools responded to the school census, compared with 14,114 last year (an increase of 8.6%). We cannot say what the coverage rate is without accurately knowing the total number of private schools. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 36 Ministry of Education, 2013 2.2 Gender The ESP 2010-2020 has a policy objective to Bridge the gender gap in access to education. Data on access shows that progress was made towards gender equality in 2012/13. The gender parity index increased at KG and Primary levels, actually surpassing the target of 1 for kindergarten. The GPI fell slightly at JHS level. These changes partly reflect the change in underlying population data. Figure 15 shows that the old population data underestimated the GPIs for KG and Primary levels. This is because the girls’ population decreased more significantly using the 2010 census than for boys, making the girls’ GER rise more than that of boys and hence the GPI (a ratio of FGER to MGER) has risen. Thus, more girls are being sent to KG than boys (giving a GPI of more than 1), and at primary the GPI is higher than previously estimated. At JHS the population was actually underestimated for girls yet overestimated for boys using the old census data. With the new population data, the girls GER worsens and hence GPI does also. This means that whilst the official GPI indicator shows a decrease this year, there was actually an improvement in GPI in 2012/13 when using 2010 PHC data due to a big increase in girls’ enrolment in JHS. Table 11. Gross Enrolment Ratios and Gender Parity Indices in basic education 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Depr Dist 2012/13 FGER 92.2 96.5 97.5 98.4 115.3 112.7 MGER 93.5 98.1 99.2 100.4 112.4 110.6 GPI 0.99 0.98 0.98 0.98 1.03 1.02 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Depr Dist 2012/13 FGER 92.79 93.03 94.7 94.9 104.5 97.2 MGER 96.97 96.7 98 97.9 105.5 100.3 GPI 0.96 0.96 0.97 0.97 0.99 0.97 JHS 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Depr Dist 2012/13 FGER 76.93 76.3 76.4 78.1 79.2 65.4 MGER 84.05 82.5 82.6 83 85.2 72.0 GPI 0.92 0.92 0.93 0.94 0.93 0.91 KG Primary Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 37 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 15. Gender parity index at basic level – data comparisons The MICS 2006-2011 data supports the finding that success is being achieved in gender goals. The results for six to fourteen year olds show that girls have marginally higher participation rates than boys in 2011, which is different from 2006 when the reverse was true (UNICEF, 2013). Figure 16. Gender Parity Index at basic education by region, 2012/13 Figure 16 shows that there is quite some disparity in bridging the gender gap across the regions. At all three levels of education, Upper West has the highest GPIs: KG 1.06, Primary 1.05 and JHS 1.06, and interestingly Upper East comes a close second for JHS. The Northern Region is at the other end of the scale, with a GPI of only 0.85 at JHS (0.98 at KG and 0.92 at Primary). Analysis by UNICEF in 2012 shows that at the regional level there are Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 38 Ministry of Education, 2013 specific differences in attendance by gender (data from Ghana Demographic and Health Survey, 2008) (UNICEF and UIS, 2012). Girls are more likely to attend school in the Upper West and Volta regions, with boys more likely in the Northern region. A number of sociocultural barriers to girls’ participation in education are identified. These include negative beliefs towards girls’ roles and value of education, early marriage, teenage pregnancy and gender-based violence. The report goes on to recommend the following strategies to tackle these barriers: gender responsive teacher training; community sensitization and mobilization; incentive packages (e.g. take home ration programme); girls camps/vacation clubs; and the enforcement of child rights, protection laws and protocols. Girls also tend to underperform when compared with boys at the Basic level. BECE results from 2012 show that boys tend to achieve higher scores than girls in the core subjects Maths, Science and Social Studies, though the reverse is true for English (see Figure 17). A report for the World Bank in 2012 looked at influences on 2009 NEA test scores in English and Mathematics for boys and girls (Joseph and Wodon, 2012). The analysis found that access to basic infrastructure and better school facilities tends to have larger beneficial impacts for girls than boys, and that illiteracy at household level tends to hurt girls more than boys. The Girls Education Unit in the GES leads on achieving gender parity in education. Key activities in 2012 include: Provision of scholarships to 3,000 girls in the three northern regions through the Basic Education Scholarship Programme. The scholarship supported the beneficiaries with school uniforms, school sandals, schoolbags and stationery, and provided teaching and learning materials to the school. In addition mentoring camps and awards were organised to build confidence and motivation. Over 600 girls took part in a 10-day camp to gain life skills such as leadership, HIV/STDs, communication and decision-making. Camps were held for 50 boys and 150 girls separately to promote positive attitudes towards female education and career opportunities. Capacity building was carried out for 180 Regional and District Girls’ Education Officers in the Child Friendly School concept and practice. The Girls PASS Programme, a USD 9.2 million grant aimed at providing scholarships to 55,000 girls was inaugurated. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 39 Ministry of Education, 2013 2.3 Quality The following table lists the key targets for indicators relating to quality. A number of indicators will be discussed in the following sections. Measures of learning outcomes at Basic Education are limited, and so many of the quality indicators relate to inputs such as teachers and textbooks. Table 12. Key Targets for Quality of Education Indicator % Preschool Teachers Trained % Primary Teachers Trained % JSS Teachers Trained KG Pupil Teacher Ratio (PTR) Primary Pupil Teacher Ratio (PTR) JSS Pupil Teacher Ratio (PTR) Primary Completion rate JHS Completion rate Primary core textbook-to-pupil ratio JHS core textbook-to-pupil ratio Target 95.0% 95.0% 95.0% 45:1 45:1 35:1 by 2015 by 2015 by 2015 by 2015 by 2015 by 2015 100% 100% By 2015 By 2015 3:1 3:1 By 2012 By 2012 NEA The National Education Assessment is the only standardised test currently undertaken in Ghana, though as it is a biennial assessment and was last carried out in 2011the results from the 2011 NEA were reported in the 2012 ESPR. In 2013 the NEA is being repeated and the first national sample of the Early Grade Reading and Maths Assessments (EGRA/EMGA) at P2 is being carried out. An analysis was carried out in 2012 using the 2009 NEA test scores to find the main determinants of NEA scores, using data from the EMIS as explanatory variables (Joseph and Wodon, 2012). Some key findings were: Having trained teachers does matter for test scores, but the effect is not very large, at only one to two percentage points. This means that a school with all its teachers having the appropriate degree will have an increase in test scores of up to two percent versus a school without trained teachers. The presence of female teachers also matters – and the magnitude of the impact is larger, often at two to three percentage points. The availability of textbooks does not seem to make a difference for English test scores, but it does matter for mathematics, although the effect is not large. The presence of toilets increases test scores by about half to one percentage point. The impact of having drinking water is larger, at one to two percentage points. Access to electricity seems to have an even larger positive impact, estimated at three percentage points for English, although the effect is smaller for mathematics. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 40 Ministry of Education, 2013 School meals, capitation grants, and more frequent meetings of the school management committee are all associated with negative effects on test scores when the effect is statistically significant. This could be an endogeneity problem, whereby schools with meals and capitation attract new students who have not benefited from as many years schooling, or the programmes are targeted at schools which have not been performing as well. BECE In 2012 376,859 JHS students were registered for the BECE examinations. Of those, 376,001 qualified for entry into SHS, of which 375,123 (99.8%) were placed in SHS (see note in section 3.1 on 2012 SHS placement). BECE scores are derived using the students’ raw test scores and the overall distribution of scores, such that results are assigned a value from 1 (the highest) to 9 (the poorest performers) (the ‘stanine’ system). In each year the grades are identically distributed such that 4% of students receive a 1, 7% a 2 and so on, fitting 54% of students into grades 4, 5 and 6. As a result these grades show the students’ relative performance against their peers rather than their absolute performance. This means that the proportion of students receiving a particular grade should be the same every year, and it is not possible to compare grades across years7. It is however possible to analyse the results distributionally, to compare how certain groups of students do relative to their peers, in a single year. Previous performance reports have shown the proportion of students scoring between 1 and 5, but for more in-depth presentation this year the analysis categorises the results into three groups: ‘above average’ (scores 1 to 3), ‘average’ (scores 4 to 6) and ‘below average’ (scores 7 to 9). In all cases these are shown as a proportion of the students who wrote the exams. The data comes from the West African Examinations Council and SRIMPR, MoE. Table 13 shows the percentage of students nationally who received ‘above average’, ‘average’ and ‘below average’ scores in the four core subjects for BECE 2012. It can be seen that in each subject, 54% of students achieved average (scores 4, 5 and 6) which matches the distribution discussed above. The above and below average categories both contain around 23% of students. Table 13. Distribution of national BECE results by subject, 2012 Subject Above average Average Below average English 23% 54% 23% Maths 23% 54% 23% Science 25% 54% 22% 7 See previous ESPRs for this explanation, which was reviewed by discussion with GES Basic Education Division. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 41 Ministry of Education, 2013 Social Studies 23% 54% 23% Gender analysis of BECE Figure 17 looks at the results by gender. It can be seen that in all subjects except English, more males achieve above average than females. Figure 18 shows this in more detail just for Maths results. Figure 17. Distribution of BECE results by gender (Female F, Male M), 2012 Figure 18. Maths BECE results by gender, 2012 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 42 Ministry of Education, 2013 Regional analysis of BECE The results can be analysed region by region to see whether some regions are performing better than others. If all regions were identical, then they would all see the same bell-shaped pattern of scores as the national pattern. Instead, what Figure 19 shows is that some regions do better than others. Figure 19 shows the distribution of scores within a region amongst the three categories, just for English. The blue bar (the left of each trio) represents above average, red is average (the middle), and green is below average (the right of each trio). Greater Accra has by far a higher proportion of ‘above average’ students than the national average – at almost 45%. The Ashanti region comes in as the region having the next largest proportion of above average performers. Regions with a very high proportion of below average students are Upper East, Northern and Upper West. Figure 19. Distribution of English BECE results by region, 2012 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 43 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 20. Distribution of English BECE results for deprived and non-deprived districts, 2012 Figure 20 also shows that the deprived districts have a higher share of average and below average performers than the non-deprived districts. Table 14 shows that this is true for all four subjects – the deprived districts have a much lower proportion of students receiving above average grades than then non-deprived districts. This is unsurprising since BECE ‘pass rates’ (those with scores 1 to 5) are one of the indicators used in defining the deprived districts. Table 14. BECE ‘above average’ rates by deprived and non-deprived districts, 2012 English Maths Science Social Studies Deprived districts 11% 13% 10% 15% Non-deprived districts 26% 26% 25% 25% National 23% 23% 22% 23% The standardised scoring system of the BECE means that there is no annual assessment by which students’ learning outcomes can be compared year-on-year to measure progress or stagnation. This means we are unable to measure national performance, and schools and districts are unable to gauge their own performance and hold teachers fairly to account. Some districts are already aware of this and trying to introduce district-wise standardised tests in all schools in their districts. Another possibility would be to release the raw test scores of the BECE, rather than only the stanine derived scores, in order for schools and students to see how they have performed in absolute terms rather than relative to that year’s cohort. Completion rates Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 44 Ministry of Education, 2013 Ghana uses a definition of completion rates recommended by the World Bank (see glossary), and the results this year are very reliant on the use of the PHC 2010 population data. Completion rates significantly improved at the primary level, surpassing the target of 100% (Table 15).8 However, a large portion of this annual increase was due to the population adjustment, as can be seen in Figure 21. At JHS completion rates increased by over 3 percentage points, a good improvement but not fast enough to meet the target of 100% by 2015. In the deprived districts completion rates are marginally higher at the primary level (114.2) than the national level (112.4), and saw a slight fall from the previous year. This is not the result which would be expected from the deprived districts, raising the question about the accuracy of the population estimates. Completion rates at JHS in the deprived districts are over ten percentage points below the national level, at 59.9, indicating that these districts struggle to keep students in school up to JHS3. There was a two percentage point improvement on 2011/12, showing that progress is being made. Caution must be exercised in using these completion rates as they are heavily dependent on the underlying population estimates of one age group (11 and 14 year-olds respectively). Table 15. Primary JHS Completion rates at Primary and JHS Deprived Dist 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Target 2015 2011/12 2012/13 86.3 87.1 91.6 93.7 112.4 100 114.4 114.2 75 66 66.9 66.8 70.1 100 57.9 59.9 Figure 21. Completion rates - data comparisons 8 It is often expected that a completion rate should not be greater than 100%. However the completion rate can exceed 100% if there are many overage students in the last grade of primary school. PBME Division will review the choice of completion indicators for use in next year’s Performance Report. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 45 Ministry of Education, 2013 Teachers At all three levels of basic education, the number of trained teachers increased in 2012/13 (Table 16). This increase was most noticeable in KG schools, where there were 19% more trained teachers in 2012 than in 2011. Table 16. Numbers of teachers in basic education (public and private schools) KG 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 % change 2011/12 to 2012/13 Trained 12,920 14,868 17,701 19% Untrained 28,564 27,549 27,522 0% Total 41,484 42,417 45,223 7% Primary 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 % change Trained 62,926 64,367 69,082 7% Untrained 61,433 58,786 60,517 3% Total JHS 124,359 2010/11 123,153 2011/12 129,599 2012/13 5% % change Trained 54,802 59,001 64,593 9% Untrained 28,537 26,846 29,204 9% Total 83,339 85,847 93,797 9% In 2012/13 the pupil-teacher ratios in public basic schools fell at all three levels, moving further away from the target PTRs in Volume 2 of the ESP 2010-20 (see Figure 22 and Table 17). PTRs are now 37 in KG, 33 in Primary and 16 in JHS. Low PTRs mean there are more teachers and smaller class sizes than is required, which could indicate inefficient use of resources. However, in some small schools and communities it may be necessary to have smaller class sizes, so the target should be seen more as a maximum. The deprived districts tend to have much higher PTRs than the national level, demonstrating the difficulty in attracting teachers to these districts. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 46 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 22. Pupil-teacher ratios in public basic schools Progress towards the target that 95% of teachers should be trained was made at all three levels, including in the deprived districts (Table 17). The increase was most pronounced at KG, which now has 51.6% of its teachers trained but is thus still furthest from the target. JHS had the smallest increase in its percent of trained teachers, from 82.9% to 83.7%, however it still gained over 5,000 trained teachers and it is the closest level to the 95% target. Reaching the 95% demonstrates the potential difficulty in attracting trained teachers to some schools, or in reaching the final few untrained teachers with programmes such as the Untrained Teacher Diploma in Basic Education. It looks unlikely that KG or Primary will meet the 95% trained teacher target by 2015. Table 17. Teachers indicators in public basic schools, by level KG 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Target* - 2015 PTR 37 34 37 38 37 PTTR 117 105 96 85 72 % Trained 31.3 32.2 38.8 44.8 51.6 Primary 34 31 34 34 33 PTTR 59 53 54 52 48 58.4 58.2 62.8 66.3 69.4 JHS 2012/13 45 54 54 183 159 95 29.7 34.3 40 39 83 78 47.7 49.7 21 20 30 27 70.1 72.1 45 95 * PTR 18 15 17 17 16 PTTR 23 20 22 20 19 76.7 72.8 78.4 82.9 83.7 % Trained 2011/12 * PTR % Trained Deprived Districts 35 95 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 47 Ministry of Education, 2013 *Targets from ESP 2010-2020 Volume 2 The situation with teachers varies significantly across districts and regions. At the regional level, Greater Accra has the highest proportion of trained teachers in all three levels of basic schooling, and Upper East has the lowest. However, looking at pupil to teacher ratios, Ashanti has some of the lowest, suggesting it is well-endowed with teachers, and the three northern regions have the highest, reflecting the difficulty in attracting teachers to these areas (as with the deprived districts in table 17 above). The Western region also has notably high PTTRs, as shown in Figure 23. Table 18. Regions with the highest and lowest percentages of trained teachers in public basic schools Percentage of trained teachers KG Primary JHS Highest region: Greater Accra 79 95 96 Lowest region: Upper East 32 48 70 Figure 23. Pupil-to-trained-teacher ratios in public basic schools, by region Teacher gaps The situation of teacher gaps in the regions depends on the target or ‘norm’ PTR being used. The ESP 2010-2020 Volume 2 contains the following targets for PTRs: KG 45, Primary 45, JHS 35. These can be seen as maximum targets, and the ESP 2003-15 provides minimum targets: KG 25, Primary 35 and JHS 25. Figure 24 shows that using the ESP 2010-20 targets, in all regions there is a surplus of teachers in Primary and JHS, and in eight out of ten regions there is a surplus of KG teachers. This means, according to the norm, fewer teachers are needed and they could be Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 48 Ministry of Education, 2013 more efficiently distributed (with the caveat that some small schools will require high numbers of teachers). Figure 24. Numbers of surplus teachers in public basic schools in 2012/13, using ESP 2010-20 PTR targets Figure 25 shows a different picture of the situation when the sector applies the minimum PTRs (KG 25; Primary 35 and JHS 25)9. Here it can be seen that all regions are lacking enough KG teachers, and half of the regions are in short supply of Primary teachers. Figure 25. Numbers of surplus teachers in public basic schools in 2012/13, GNECC’s 2013 policy brief on teacher gaps uses the minimum PTRs and 2011/12 EMIS data to indicate that public basic schools are over staffed by as high as over 6000 teachers (GNECC, 2013). Table 19 updates this analysis to 2012/13 data to compare teacher 9 As noted in ESP 2003-2015 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 49 Ministry of Education, 2013 distribution, requirement and difference (surplus or deficit of teachers) using minimum and maximum PTRs. With the 2012/13 data and the minimum PTRs, the overall surplus rises to 15,000 teachers, and is over 70,000 when the maximum PTRs are used. Table 19. Teacher distribution at the basic level, using maximum and minimum PTRs, 2012/13 Total Trained % PTR teachers teachers trained Norm Enrolment PTR PTTR Req’mt Surplus (deficit) Maximums KG 1,226,132 33,108 17,070 52% 45 37 72 27,247 5,861 Primary 3,156,572 94,905 65,889 69% 45 33 48 70,146 24,759 JHS Basic National 1,157,827 72,777 60,906 84% 35 16 19 33,081 39,696 5,540,531 200,790 143,865 72% 42* 28 39 130,474 70,316 KG 1,226,132 33,108 17,070 52% 25 37 72 49,045 (15,937) Primary 3,156,572 94,905 65,889 69% 35 33 48 90,188 4,717 JHS 1,157,827 72,777 60,906 84% 25 16 19 46,313 Basic 5,540,531 200,790 143,865 72% 30* 28 39 185,546 National * National PTR norms calculated as weighted average of the norms for KG, Primary and JHS 26,464 Minimums 15,244 Private schools Table 20 shows that private schools tend to have smaller class sizes and hence lower pupilto-teacher ratios than public schools. However, they have much lower proportions of trained teachers, for example at JHS public schools 84% of teachers are trained, whereas in private schools only 18% are. Table 20. KG Teacher statistics for public and private schools, 2012/13 PTR PTTR Trained teachers Public 37 72 52% Private 31 600 5% 35 PTR 91 PTTR 39% Trained teachers Public 33 48 69% Private 27 297 9% Total 32 59 53% Total Primary JHS PTR PTTR Trained teachers Public 16 19 84% Private 14 80 18% Total 15 22 69% A note on allocation of newly trained teachers from the Colleges of Education is included in section 1.3, reviewing progress on the Aide Memoire 2012 activities. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 50 Ministry of Education, 2013 Curriculum and Text Books In Primary and JHS schools there should be three core text books per pupil: English, Maths and Science. In 2012/13, progress was made towards this target at the primary level in public schools, however the core textbook ratio fell for JHS schools (Table 21). There was no central procurement of textbooks carried out in 2012, so the increase could be due to purchase of textbooks at the school level (e.g. with support from NGOs or PTAs), or due to inconsistent interpretation of the question in the census, with some schools including other reading materials as textbooks. Table 21. Core textbooks per pupil, public basic schools 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 KG 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.3 0.3 Primary 1.6 1.6 1 0.9 1.2 JHS 2.1 1.5 0.9 1.1 0.9 Target – 2015 Deprived dist 2011/12 2012/13 0.3 0.3 3 0.8 1.1 3 1.0 0.9 Figure 26. Core textbook to pupil ratios over time Ashanti and Central regions have the most core textbooks per pupil at Primary, and Eastern and Western at JHS. Upper West and Northern regions have the fewest core textbooks per pupil at Primary, and Upper East and Upper West are the least endowed at JHS. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 51 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 27. Core textbook to pupil ratios in public basic schools, by region Class size and Furniture The number of pupils per classroom fell slightly in 2012/13 for all levels of public basic schools (Table 22), suggesting that drives to provide more infrastructure have outpaced increases in enrolment. Similarly, the number of pupils per seating place fell marginally at all levels, improving the learning environment for pupils (Table 23). The deprived districts have higher pupil to classroom and seating ratios than the national level, indicating the inadequate provision of infrastructure in these districts. There was an improvement (a lowering) of these ratios from 2011 to 2012 at KG, Primary and JHS in deprived districts. Table 22. Pupil Classroom Ratio Pupil to classroom ratios in public basic schools 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 KG 53.5 57.4 63.7 64.3 Primary 39.8 40 41.9 38 37.1 38.9 JHS Table 23. Pupil seating ratio KG Primary Deprived District 2011/12 2012/13 61.0 89.7 83.0 42.3 39.6 45.5 42.1 38.7 37.7 45.2 42.8 Pupil to seating place ratios in public basic schools 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2 2 2 2 1.3 1.4 1.4 1.4 Deprived District 2011/12 2012/13 1.8 3.0 2.7 1.3 1.6 1.5 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 52 Ministry of Education, 2013 JHS 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.3 1.2 Data from January 2013 shows that there were 7,869 schools in need of infrastructure support: of these, 409 were running shift systems, 4,696 had dilapidated structures, and 2,764 were classified as schools under trees. The Ministry of Education and GETfund projects to build new structures for schools under trees is ongoing, with the status shown in table 24 below. At January 888 GETfund and 80 MoE schools under trees structures had been completed. Table 24. Progress of Schools under Trees projects, at January 2013 Total Completed Ongoing 1,837 888 949 MoE 432 80 352 Total 2,269 968 1,301 Getfund Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 53 Ministry of Education, 2013 3 SECOND CYCLE EDUCATION Summary Upon completion of Junior high schools, graduates have the opportunity to transit into senior high schools or technical and vocational education training institutes. The number of students enrolled in senior high schools increased in 2012, although the rate of increase is less than the population projection leading to a slight reduction in the gross enrolment ratio from 37.1 to 36.8. The proportion of SHS students who are female increased to 45.9%, but the gender parity index remains low at 0.86. The completion rate for males is almost 6 percentage points higher than for females. WASSCE pass rates improved in 2012 compared with 2011 in all the subjects except for English, where the results fell. The pass rate was higher for males than for females in each of the four core subjects. A number of indicators of teaching quality showed a worsening situation in 2012/13. In public SHS schools the pupil-teacher ratio and pupil to trained teacher ratios decreased in 2012/13, suggesting that there are more teachers available in schools. However the proportion of SHS teachers who are trained decreased by 0.5 percentage points to 86.9%. The number of textbooks per pupil fell for English (0.66), Maths (0.67) and Science textbooks (0.63). The 45 Technical and Vocational Institutions under the GES has 36,830 students enrolled in 2012/13. Overall enrolment in TVET decreased by 1.3% from the previous year, but this may be due to inconsistent coverage of institutions. GES TVET institutions have highly qualified teachers, where 94.8% have a technical qualification and 80.9% are trained as teachers. The gross enrolment ratio decreased in second cycle education as a whole (SHS and TVET) when compared with 2011 (see Table 25). However, this is likely due to the upwards adjustment in the population estimate used for 2012/13. Table 25. Gross enrolment ratios in second cycle education Enrolment 2011/12+ 2012/13 SHS 758,468 842,587 TVET 62,303 61,496 Total 820,771 904,212 2,044,848 2,291,267 GER* 2011/12 2012/13 SHS 37.1 36.8 TVET* 3.0 2.7 Population 15-18 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 54 Ministry of Education, 2013 Total 40.1 39.5 + 2011/12 uses the 2000 PHC population estimates. *The GER is based on the population of 15 to 18 year olds, although TVET courses are usually three years whereas SHS is four years. In 2012 the Ghana Education Service provided subsidies for 697,917 SHS and 51,487 TVET students from 548 second cycle institutions Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 55 Ministry of Education, 2013 3.1 Senior High School Access The number of SHS schools in Ghana increased by 9.4% between 2011 and 2012, now at 828 (Table 26). There were 20 new public SHS, bringing the total to 535. Ashanti and Central regions have the most SHS schools, and Upper West and Upper East have the fewest. Table 26. Number of senior high schools by type 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 Public 493 496 511 515 535 Private 177 201 209 242 293 Total 670 697 720 757 828 SHS Figure 28. Number of senior high schools by region, 2012/13 The number of students enrolled in Senior High Schools increased in 2012 to 842,587 (Table 27). The reported gross enrolment ratio fell by 0.3 percentage points to 36.8, and the net enrolment ratio remained unchanged at 23.6. However, when indicators are recalculated using the new population data, it appears they were previously overestimated and in fact in 2012 there was an improvement in both GER and NER (see Figure 29). The transition rate from JHS 3 into SHS 1 increased this year, from 50.7% in 2011/12 to 61.2% in 2012/13. This can largely be explained by the increase in entry to SHS this year as the GES made more places available for JHS graduates into SHS 1 (see discussion of SHS placement below). Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 56 Ministry of Education, 2013 Private schools are seeing a gradual decline in their proportion of SHS enrolment, now at 8.5%, down from a recent peak of 10.8% in 2009/10. Table 27. SHS enrolment statistics 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 GER 33.9 36.1 36.5 37.1 36.8 NER 17.7 18.5 24.3 23.6 23.6 490,334 537,332 728,076 758,468 842,587 Transition rate from JHS3 to SHS1 % 51.4 52.2 57.5 50.7 61.2 % of pupils in private education 10.0 10.8 8.9 8.8 8.5 Enrolment Figure 29. SHS enrolment ratios – data comparisons Placement into SHS In 2012 376,001 qualified for entry into SHS, of which 375,123 (99.8%) were placed in SHS. However, this is a significant increase on the number placed the previous year (199,895 in 2011). Figure 30 below shows the numbers of students who were presented for SHS (i.e. who sat the BECE), those who qualified, and those who were placed since 2008. Note that whilst placement increased to 375,123, it does not mean all of these students then enrolled and accessed SHS. Enrolment in SHS 1 in 2012/13 was reported in EMIS as 228,795, of which 213,507 were in public schools and 15,288 in private schools. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 57 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 30. SHS placement: students presented, qualifying and placed in SHS, 2008 to 2012 Secondary Education Division in the GES increased the number of places available as schools will soon be moving from four year groups to three, making more space for students in each year group. In the past the requirement for qualification into SHS was a BECE score of 1 to 6 in the four core subjects, and an aggregate score over 6 subjects (including the four core subjects) of 30 or below. In 2012, however, entrance to SHS depended on the number of places available on the programme chosen, which was then filled up according to the raw scores of the students. This relaxing of the requirements is the reason for the significant increase in students qualifying in 2012 compared with previous years. Figure 31 shows the number of pupils enrolled in each grade of SHS nationally. The sharp increase in the number of students in SH1 is clearly visible. SH2 and SH3 have undergone more sporadic shifts, with the rise and fall of SH2 being played out in SH3 the years after. However the much higher numbers in SH2 in 2012/13 than SH1 in 2011/12 suggest a large number of repeaters. In the past three years the number of students enrolled in SHS4 has increased. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 58 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 31. Enrolment by grade at SHS Gender Enrolment and achievement remains unequal for boys and girls in senior high schools. In 2012/13 the proportion of SHS enrolment made up of girls increased marginally to 45.9% (see Table 28). The GPI in 2012/13 stands at 0.86, a slight worsening on last year when it was 0.87 but this is removed when adjusting for the new population data (see Figure 32). The transition rates show us that the lower female enrolment in SHS is to some extent an overhang from JHS 3 – over the years male and female transition rates into SHS1 are very similar. In fact in 2012/13, females had a higher transition rate at 62.2% than males at 60.3%, making female JHS graduates slightly more likely to have entered SHS than males. Table 28. Gender equality indicators at SHS Details 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 % female enrolment – SHS 44.3 44.7 45.4 45.3 45.9 GPI 0.84 0.85 0.87 0.87 0.86 Transition rate JHS3 to SHS1 % - Male 51.7 52.3 56.7 50.9 60.3 Transition rate JHS3 to SHS1 % - Female SHS Completion rate – Male 51.1 52.1 58.4 50.4 62.3 - 35.8 34.6 37.4 33.9 - 29.8 31.1 31.1 28.1 SHS Completion rate – Female Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 59 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 32. Gender Parity Index at SHS – data comparisons More boys finish SHS than girls do, as shown by the higher completion rates (those in SHS4) for boys than girls. The indicators show a fall in completion this year, however this reflects an upward adjustment in the population estimates which revises the previous completion rates down (see figure 33). Once this adjustment is made, it can be seen that completion rates improved substantially for boys and girls in 2012/13. Figure 33. Completion rates at SHS – data comparisons Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 60 Ministry of Education, 2013 Pass rates are higher for boys than for girls in the four core WASSCE subjects (see Quality below). Quality WASSCE In 2012 the WASSCE was sat by 174,461 students in Ghana. Pass rates improved in 201210 compared with 2011 in all the subjects except for English, where the results fell (see Figure 30). This comes after a considerable increase in pass rates in English the year before. The general upward trend in pass rates could be related to the move to a four-year SHS which affected the 2011 and 2012 cohorts. The pass rate was higher for males than for females in each of the four core subjects. The gap was most distinct in Maths and Integrated Sciences (Table 29). Table 29. WASSCE Examination pass rates by subject and gender, 2012 Male pass rate Female pass rate Total pass rate English 69% 67% 68% Mathematics 55% 44% 50% Integrated Science 61% 52% 57% Social Studies 88% 86% 87% The results varied geographically (Table 30). In all four core subjects, the Northern region had the lowest pass rate. In English the pass rates ranged from 76% in Eastern region down to 48% in Northern region. Notably Upper West performed far above average in Integrated Sciences, with a 70% pass rate compared with 57% nationally. In Maths all the pass rates were lower than for other subjects, ranging from 57% (Eastern) down to 34% (Northern). Table 30. WASSCE Examination pass rates by region and subject, 2012 English Mathematics Integrated Science Social Studies Eastern 76% 57% 64% 91% Greater Accra 73% 43% 57% 83% Brong Ahafo 70% 56% 58% 90% Volta 68% 38% 50% 79% Ashanti 68% 53% 57% 90% Central 68% 48% 54% 88% Western 66% 55% 56% 91% Upper West 65% 54% 70% 89% Upper East 62% 54% 66% 91% Northern 48% 34% 41% 72% 10 Data comes from West African Examinations Council and SRIMPR. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 61 Ministry of Education, 2013 Total 68% 50% 57% 87% Figure 34. WASSCE pass rates by subject, 2006 to 2012 Looking at the school level data shows that there is great inequality in results across schools. Figure 35 shows that at the school level, in 2012 there was an improvement in the proportion of students qualifying for tertiary education (receiving an aggregate score of 6 to 24). In 2012 62% of schools had less than one-fifth of students qualifying, compared with 72% in 2011. Schools with over 80% of students qualifying increased from 4% in 2011 to 7% in 2012. However, the results are still very concerning, as 79% of schools had less than 40% of students qualifying. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 62 Ministry of Education, 2013 Figure 35. Distribution of WASSCE scores across schools: proportion of schools’ candidates who qualify for tertiary education NB * indicates the categories begin just above the starred number, for example 20 would fall into band 0 – 20 and 20.1 would fall into band 20* - 40. Figure 36 has divided all the senior high schools into five quintiles based on the number of their candidates who qualified for tertiary education. It shows that 66% of the students who qualified for tertiary education came from the top 20% of schools. The lowest 20% of schools only produced 1% of the students qualifying for tertiary. Figure 36. Distribution of those students who qualify for tertiary education across schools Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 63 Ministry of Education, 2013 Completion rates, teachers and learning materials As discussed under gender above, in 2012/13 the completion rate decreased to 31.0. However, when the completion rates are recalculated for 2010/11 and 2011/12 using the 2010 census population projections, it can be seen that the previous indicators were an overestimate (Table 31). With the new calculations, the completion rate has been steadily increasing each year. Table 31. Completion rates – data comparisons 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 Completion rate (2000 data) 32.9 34.3 Completion rate (2010 data) 22.6 27.0 31.0 Completion rate (official indicator) 32.9 34.3 31.0 Table 32 shows a number of indicators relating to teaching quality. In public SHS schools the pupil-teacher ratio and pupil to trained teacher ratios decreased in 2012/13, suggesting that there are more teachers available in schools. The proportion of teachers who are trained decreased by 0.5 percentage points to 86.9%. The number of textbooks per pupil fell for English (0.66), Maths (0.67) and Science textbooks (0.63). There was improvement in the provision of classroom furniture, as the number of pupils sharing desks and seats fell, with pupil to seat and desk ratios now at 1.16 and 1.18 respectively. However the number of pupils per classroom increased from 50.4 to 56.0, reflecting the increase in enrolment. Table 32. Indicators of quality at SHS public schools 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 PTR 22.2 21.1 27.31 24.4 23.4 PTTR 25.6 24.6 32.0 27.9 27.0 % Teachers trained 86.8 85.9 85.3 87.4 86.9 Textbook per pupil English 1.03 0.94 0.56 0.74 0.66 Textbook per pupil Maths 0.97 0.93 0.58 0.75 0.67 Textbook per pupil Science 0.64 0.72 0.48 0.68 0.63 Pupil Classroom ratio 42.7 45.8 53.3 50.4 56.0 Pupil seating ratio 1.2 1.2 1.32 1.3 1.16 Pupil desk ratio 1.2 1.4 1.32 1.3 1.18 Whilst private SHS schools have more teachers in the classroom, they have fewer trained teachers and hence a higher PTTR than public schools (Table 33). The percentage of teachers who are trained is 86.9% in public schools but only 55.0% in private schools. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 64 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 33. Teacher statistics, public and private SHS schools PTR PTTR % trained Public 23.4 27.0 86.9 Private 16.5 30.0 55.0 Total 22.6 27.2 83.2 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 65 Ministry of Education, 2013 3.2 Technical and Vocational Institutes Access According to the EMIS census, in 2012/13 there were 61,496 students enrolled in technical and vocational institutes (TVIs), of which 79% were enrolled in public TVIs (see table 34). The number enrolled in public TVIs increased by 4.6% on 2011/12. However, the numbers enrolled in private TVIs fell by 19%, giving a 1.3% reduction in enrolment altogether. The shift from private to public may also reflect a take-over of some private institutes by the public sector. There is ongoing difficulty with coverage of Technical and Vocational Education and Training institutes in the EMIS census.11 Difficulty in ensuring coverage is highlighted by the report from Darvas and Palmer (2012), which states there are approximately 200 public TVIs, yet EMIS only included 107 this year. The GES has at present 45 TVIs, however there are a number of institutions which fall under other Ministries, making it harder to ensure full coverage. Further, it is even more challenging to capture all of the private institutions. Still, it is unexpected to see such a large decline in the number of TVIs captured in 2012/13 than in 2011/12 (252 down to 181). This difficulty in data capture contributed to the move for EMIS to start recording and reporting GES separately, for which this is the first year. Table 34. Institutions and enrolment in TVET, 2011/12 and 2012/13 2011/12 2012/13 % change Public institutions 141 107 -24.1 Private institutions 111 74 -33.3 Total institutions 252 181 -28.2 Enrolment Public 46,694 48,845 4.6 Enrolment Private 15,609 12,651 -19.0 Total enrolment 62,303 61,496 -1.3 2011/12 figures come from the TVET 2011/12 National Profile. Table 35 shows the breakdown of enrolment across the types of institutions. In 2012/13 there were 36,830 students enrolled in the 45 GES TVET institutions, making up the large part of the public enrolment. Table 35. Number of institutions Enrolment statistics for TVET, 2012/13 GES Public Total Private TOTAL 45 107 74 181 11 There were also found to be inconsistencies between the TVET figures reported in the EMIS TVET National Profile 2011/12, the TVET Report for 2011/12, and the ESPR 2012. The figures quoted here for 2011/12come from the National Profile and match the EMIS census data. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 66 Ministry of Education, 2013 Enrolment 36,830 48,845 12,651 61,496 % full time 89.1 90.6 93.1 91.1 Darvas and Palmer (2012) note that only 5 to 7% of JHS graduates can expect to find a place in either public or private TVET institutes. This access is in part due to limited demand, both because of low social and economic demand. TVET is not as popular as general education, carrying low prestige and an image that it does not open great opportunities into the labour market - this is demonstrated by static enrolment in TVET over the last decade, whilst SHS has grown markedly (from 301,120 in 2002/3 to 842,587 in 2012/13). On the economic side, there is insufficient demand from industry for skilled labour, and Ghana is stuck in a low skill equilibrium. So whilst youth unemployment remains a key social and political challenge, promises that provision of skills to youth will ease new school leavers’ unemployment does not address the persistent challenges in the labor market and in private sector development. Gender Females make up the smaller part of enrolment in TVET, with only 31.4% of the enrolment altogether, compared with 45.9% at SHS. There are a higher proportion of females in private institutions, at 55.4%, than in public TVIs at only 25.2%. The proportion of females in public TVIs increased from 2011/12. Table 36. % female enrolment Female enrolment in TVET, 2011/12 and 2012/13 2011/12 2012/13 Public institutions 19.7 25.2 Private institutions 61.4 55.4 Total institutions 30.2 31.4 2011/12 figures come from the TVET 2011/12 National Profile. Quality In 2012/13 the TVET pupil-teacher ratio fell for both public and private institutions, with both having an average of less than 20 students in each class. The proportion of teachers who have professional training is far higher in the public institutions (73.2%), and higher still in the GES (80.9%), than in the private institutions (39.0%). A very high proportion of the teaching staff have a technical qualification, with 94.8% in the GES institutions and 91.5% in TVET institutions overall. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 67 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 37. Teachers in TVET institutions, 2011/12 and 2012/13 2011/12 PTR Public (all) 21.1 Private TOTAL GES 20.8 21.0 17.4 80.9 % trained teachers 78 54.7 72.1 % teachers with 94.8 95.8 86 93.3 technical qualification 2011/12 figures come from the TVET 2011/12 National Profile. 2012/13 Public Private (all) 17.7 19.3 TOTAL 18.0 73.2 39.0 66.6 91.6 91.0 91.5 COTVET was established to coordinate the supply of TVET, but Darvas and Palmer (2012) argue there is a need for better coordination of the demand side, i.e. to better engage with the private sector, and to collect more demand-side data, including at both the national and institutional level. They find that there is poor relevance of formal TVET to the needs of the labour market, noting that curricula are too theoretical, retaining highly skilled instructors is difficult, and students are not encouraged to acquire the required practical experience through industrial placements. Other market links such as industry liaison officers, training for the informal sector, short courses, and post-training support are almost absent. Institutes lack the autonomy needed to respond to market changes. Further information on the activities of COTVET in skills development is given in Chapter 5. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 68 Ministry of Education, 2013 4 INCLUSIVE AND SPECIAL EDUCATION Summary The Education Strategic Plan has a strategic goal to provide education for excluded children ... by including them, wherever possible, within the mainstream formal system or, only when considered necessary, within special units or schools. As part of this, the policy of Inclusive Education places children with mild and moderate disabilities in mainstream public schools. Since the end of 2011, the Inclusive Education programme has expanded from 29 districts in seven regions to 46 districts in all ten regions. In 2012/13 the number of pupils in mainstream basic schools recorded as having special educational needs fell by 16%. This could likely be due to inconsistencies in recording the number of children with special needs. Children with severe and profound disabilities are enrolled in segregated special schools or special units attached to mainstream schools. The number of students enrolled in special schools in 2012/13 was 6,180, a decrease from 6,432 the year before. This decrease could be due to difficulties in capturing enrolment data from all the special schools in Ghana. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 69 Ministry of Education, 2013 4.1 Inclusive Education – Mainstreaming As outlined in the ESP 2010-2020, the Ministry, led by the Special Education Division (SpED), has a policy of Inclusive Education, which places children with mild and moderate disabilities in mainstream public schools. Additional provisions are made where feasible and appropriate. Table 38 shows that in 2012/13 the number of pupils in mainstream basic schools recorded as having special educational needs fell by 16%. This could likely be due to inconsistencies in recording the number of children with special needs. Table 38. Enrolment of children with special educational needs in mainstream schools12 2006/7 2007/8 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 KG 5,886 3,129 3,284 3,413 3,123 3,636 2,901 Primary 20,730 11,613 11,081 11,035 9,804 11,112 9,847 JHS BASIC TOTAL 8,113 4,172 4,399 3,814 4,489 5,027 3,848 34,729 18,914 18,764 18,262 17,416 19,775 16,596 Analysis by UNICEF using the 2010 National Population and Housing census indicates the inequitable access to school that children with special needs face. Whilst around 10% of children with no disability were not attending school, for children with a disability this increases to around 19%. The proportion of children out of school increases further for children with speech disabilities (over 30%) and physical or intellectual disabilities (each over 26%). Since the end of 2011, the Inclusive Education (IE) programme has expanded from 29 districts in seven regions to 46 districts in all ten regions. The IE programme includes training for district staff, headteachers and teachers in working with children with special educational needs and the appropriate pedagogy, and sensitisation for community members. Teachers then provide school-based INSET for their colleagues. As part of IE, five districts have been provided with basic screening tools for assessment of basic impairments, and another seven will soon follow. SpED are also coordinating situation needs assessments at the district level, to identify the challenges, activities and responsibilities for achieving inclusive education within the district. 12 The data for 2012/13 is taken from EMIS and refers to children in public and private schools who did not consider themselves to be a special school. Children are categorised as having an impairment (visual, hearing or speech), or being physically or intellectually disabled. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 70 Ministry of Education, 2013 4.2 Special Schools and Units Table 39. Enrolment in Special Schools – Total Children enrolled in special schools 2006/7 2007/8 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 5,092 5,654 6,308 6,900 5,504 6,432 6,180 Children with severe and profound disabilities are enrolled in segregated special schools or special units attached to mainstream schools. Table 39 shows that the number of students enrolled in special schools in 2012/13 was 6,180, a decrease on the year before (source: SpED). This decrease could be due to difficulties in capturing enrolment data from all the special schools in Ghana13. A breakdown of enrolment by type of special school is given in Table 40. Table 40. Enrolment in special schools by type of school, 2012/13 Type of special school Number of schools Enrolment Education for the hearing impaired 14 4,069 Education for the visually impaired 6 660 Education for the intellectually disabled 11 831 Integrated senior high schools 10 620 Total 36* 6,180 *The total schools is less than the sum because some schools cover more than one unit/type of education. The special schools receive full government funding (tuition and feed) and receive Feeding Grants. Pupils in the special units do not receive additional funding, and only receive feeding if the school is part of the Ghana Schools Feeding Programme. SpED would like the unit schools to be included automatically in any expansions of the GSFP or for these schools to be covered by the Feeding Grant. Whilst enrolment of children with special educational needs has been increasing, a report by UNICEF (2012) notes the socio-cultural barriers which still stifle enrolment of children with disabilities. There are high levels of stigmatization associated with disability in Ghana, which can lead parents to hide children at home and prevent them attending school. A low value is often placed on the capacity and potential of children with special education needs. Those children who are in school may not receive the adequate support and attention from teachers, and facilities which are not disability friendly can cause children to drop out from school. Special Education Programmes SpED carried out a number of additional activities in 2012, for example: 13 As at June 2013, four Special Schools had not submitted their updated enrolment data to SpED. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 71 Ministry of Education, 2013 205 resource teachers were trained on management of students with low vision. Teaching and learning materials including assistive devices and Braille materials worth GH¢ 1.9 million were provided for students with special needs in inclusive education settings. Hearing aids and ear moulds were provided for 6,000 students in schools for the deaf. Sensitization workshops to promote inclusive education were organized in twelve districts across the country. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 72 Ministry of Education, 2013 5 NON-FORMAL EDUCATION Summary The ESP 2010-2020 strategic goal for non-formal education is to provide opportunities for those outside the formal education system to have free access to meaningful high-quality user-friendly education and training, whether through inclusive or complementary provision, approved or informal apprenticeships, distance education or technical and vocational skills development initiatives. In 2012 the National Functional Literacy Programme, led by Non-Formal Education Division, established 2,056 classes under Batch 18. This accounted for 51,257 learners, of which 64% are female, demonstrating the sector’s commitment to particularly target women. The National Apprenticeship Programme (NAP), led by the Council for Technical and Vocational Education and Training, grew from 1,600 apprentices in 2011 to 5,000 in 2012 in the trade areas of Garments, Cosmetology, Electronics, and Auto Mechanics. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 73 Ministry of Education, 2013 5.1 Non-formal Education Division The mandate of NFED is to provide non-formal education to all Ghanaians especially women and the rural poor aged 15 years and above. Their focus has been on basic functional literacy. The National Functional Literacy Programme (NFLP) is a 21-month cycle of teaching and learning in local language literacy (15 Ghanaian languages). Since it began in 1992, 18 batches have been enrolled with over 2.9million learners, of which 62% are female. In 2012 NFED continued with the NFLP: In Batch 18, 2,056 classes were established, with 51,257 learners enrolled. Of those enrolled 64% are female, demonstrating NFED’s commitment to particularly target women. Of the 2,056 classes, 1,400 were facilitated by volunteers. Classes were spread across all ten regions. The regions with the highest enrolment as a proportion of the population were Northern, Upper West and Upper East. This conforms with the 2010 census findings that the three northern regions have less than 50% literacy in the population aged 11 years and older. The Batch 18 enrolment data is reported by supervisors to NFED. It has not been possible to carry out monitoring visits to verify the figures, or to accurately monitor drop-out rates since 2010 due to lack of funds. Table 41. Batch Year Learners enrolled in NFLP by Year and Gender Enrolled male female total % Female 13 2006/ 08 12,164 19,204 31,368 61% 14 2007/ 09 11,573 19,612 31,185 63% 15 2008/ 10 14,813 24,041 38,854 62% 16 2009/ 11 17,224 24,796 42,020 59% 17 2010/ 12 18,904 31,777 50,681 63% 18 2012/ 14 18,459 32,798 51,257 64% 19** 2013/ 15 14,000 21,000 35,000 60% **Batch 19 (2013/2015) figures are targets since recruitment is ongoing. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 74 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 42. Learner enrolment in local language literacy NFLP, 2012, by region and gender Enrolment male female total As % of region population 280 1054 5556 6610 0.14% Brong Ahafo 150 2341 1597 3938 0.17% Central 150 805 2518 3323 0.15% Eastern 246 2043 4900 6943 0.26% Greater Accra 130 579 2062 2641 0.07% Northern 300 3995 4029 8024 0.32% Upper East 240 2321 3765 6086 0.58% Upper West 258 2973 3229 6202 0.88% Volta 155 1041 2832 3873 0.18% Western 147 1307 2310 3617 0.15% 2,056 18,459 32,798 51,257 0.21% 36% 64% Region Classes Ashanti Total Gender split Recruitment for Batch 19 in 2013 has started, with a target of 35,000 learners. This year, NFED is expanding the programme to include 30,000 learners in English language literacy, and 5,000 learners in local language literacy. Recruitment happens at the local level and is encouraged to have a bias of 60% female enrolment. Other recent activities at NFED include: Training of 1,400 volunteer facilitators. Broadcast of complementary learning programmes on 18 community radio stations nationwide. Partnership with International Labour Organisation to develop a curriculum and training for out-of-school children in cocoa-growing areas. Initial development of a draft Non-Formal Education Policy document, which will be shared at a stakeholder workshop in 2013. Preparation of a Cabinet Memo in order for NFED to attain Agency status. Finalizing the Scheme of Service document for Public Service Commissions’ approval. NFED is interested in developing the occupational skills of its learners to enable them to access employment and entrepreneurial opportunities. 5.2 Distance learning and open schooling Another aspect of non-formal education as in the ESP 2010-2020 is open and distance learning, as overseen by the Centre for National Distance Learning and Open Schooling Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 75 Ministry of Education, 2013 (CENDLOS). In 2012, key activities towards promoting and expanding distance education include: Production and transmission of audio-visual lessons in SHS 3 Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Integrated Science of half-hour duration on GTV. 73 prison inmates of the CENDLOS Nsawam and Kumasi Prison study centres sat for examinations including BECE, WASSCE and NVTI. 27 teachers from selected Junior High Schools were trained in Open Resource for English Language Teaching (ORELT); 21 Principals, administrators and lecturers from five Colleges of Education were trained in dual-mode delivery methodologies. 5.3 COTVET The Council for Technical and Vocational Education and Training coordinates and oversees all aspects of TVET in the country. This includes formulation of policy on skills development. Whilst TVET in Ghana is often associated with the outcomes of formal public TVET, in fact this sector only accounts for less than 10% of technical and vocational skills acquired (Darvas and Palmer, 2012). Some of Ghana's TVET comes from education, of which some is regulated by other Government agencies; some is privately provided and the majority comes from on the job training in informal apprenticeships. Darvas and Palmer note that the informal apprenticeship system is the largest provider of skills training, training in excess of 440,000 youth at any one time; there are about 4 informal apprentices for every trainee in formal public and private training centers combined. The National Apprenticeship Program (NAP) attempts to support informal apprenticeship training in Ghana, a relatively small-scale program serving about 1% of the 440,000 youth in informal apprenticeship. In 2012 COTVET ran competency based training (CBT) for five technical institutes in Electronics, Electrical Installation, Welding and Fabrication, Auto Mechanics, Mechanical Engineering, Catering, and Fashion and Designing. In total 80 industrial stakeholders were trained in Workplace Experience Learning (WEL), and 26 CBT graduates were employed in WEL schemes. National Apprenticeship Programme The National Apprenticeship Programme (NAP) grew from 1,600 apprentices in 2011 to 5,000 in 2012 in the trade areas of Garments, Cosmetology, Electronics, and Auto Mechanics. The regional breakdown of NAP is given below. COTVET aims to have 8,000 people trained under NAP in 2013. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 76 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 43. Region National Apprenticeship Programme by region, 2012 Female Male Total Greater Accra 650 370 1,020 Ashanti 660 340 1,000 Volta 300 150 450 Central 275 155 430 Northern 280 140 420 Eastern 210 200 410 Western 280 90 370 Brong Ahafo 250 100 350 Upper East 250 100 350 Upper West Total 120 80 200 3,275 1,725 5,000 Skills Development Fund The Skills Development Fund is a challenge fund established to ensure sustainable financing of technical and vocational skills development. In 2012, 623 proposals were submitted to the SDF, of which 59 were recommended to the SDF committee and eventually 22 were approved. Darvas and Palmer (2012) argue that in the long term, the SDF will only be sustainable if financed by a levy on industry and enterprises in general. The levy would take the form of a payroll tax for both public and private sector entities. For the levy to be successful in Ghana, employers must be incentivized to participate, through tax credits for instance. In addition, the levy should not be limited to industries, but also include small and microenterprises and the government. In the meantime the SDF is supported by seedfunding from the World Bank and DANIDA. The World Bank funding comes from the Ghana Skills and Technology Development Project (GSTDP). The GoG also contributed funds to the SDF from GETfund. Ghana Skills Development Initiative (GSDI) The Ghana Skills Development Initiative (GSDI) provides technical assistance to COTVET, selected trade associations and training institutions. In order to upgrade the skills and qualifications in traditional vocational training, the project supports COTVETs’ innovative approach to introduce quality standards for the apprenticeship system. Furthermore GSDI helps Trade Associations and vocational schools to develop and offer additional short-term training courses for Apprentices and Master Crafts persons. German Development Corporation (GIZ) are providing 6million euros in technical assistance. In the first phase three regions are being piloted: Greater Accra, Volta and Northern; and five sectors: Electronics, Automotive, Tailoring & dressmaking, Cosmetology & hairdressing, and Construction. Special attention is given to women’s skills development not only by supporting traditional female trades, but also by promoting women’s involvement in male-dominated trade areas. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 77 Ministry of Education, 2013 6 TERTIARY EDUCATION Summary The ESP 2010-2020 strategic objective for Tertiary is to Increase equitable access to high quality tertiary education that provides relevant courses to young adults within Colleges of Education, Polytechnics and Universities, and for research and intellectual stimulus. The National Council for Tertiary Education (NCTE) continued to expand access to quality tertiary education in 2012. The annual census of tertiary institutions is currently ongoing so this report presents data up to 2011/12.14 Progress against the key targets in the ESP 2010-2020 (Volume 2) is shown in the table below. All indicators have been met ahead of time. Table 44. Progress against ESP 2010-2020 targets for Tertiary Education Targets 2011/12 Annual intake in CoEs 5,000 by 2015 9,373 (public CoEs) Annual intake in polytechnics 10,000 by 2015 Annual intake in universities 12,000 by 2016 13,966 13,464 public universities 23,291 private institutions 40% by 2015 40.6% 20,000 by 2020 9,807 % of all tertiary new entrants which are female Tertiary non-teaching staff The National Council for Tertiary Education (NCTE) continued to expand access to quality tertiary education in 2012. Enrolment in public universities decreased from 115,452 in 2010/11 to 109,278 in 2011/12. However enrolment in the polytechnics, Colleges of Education and private tertiary institutions increased. The proportion of students enrolled in science and technical programmes has increased in both public universities and polytechnics, now standing at 39.1% in these institutions combined. 14 Data comes from NCTE’s National Summary of Statistics for Accredited Tertiary Education Institutions, 2011/12 Academic Year (unless otherwise stated) Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 78 Ministry of Education, 2013 6.1 Access The number of institutions accredited increased from 136 in 2010/11 to 142 in 2011/12. Table 45. Number of public and private tertiary institutions, 2010/11 and 2011/12 Institution 2010/11 2011/12 Public Universities/university colleges 7 6 Public Specialized/Professional Colleges 7 9 Chartered Private Tertiary Institutions 3 3 Private Tertiary Institutions 51 55 Polytechnics 10 10 Public Colleges of Education 38 38 Private Colleges of Education 3 3 Public Nursing Training Colleges 13 10 Private Nursing Training Colleges 4 5 Public Colleges of Agric 3 Total 136 142 Enrolment in public universities decreased from 115,452 in 2010/11 to 109,278 in 2011/12. However enrolment in the polytechnics, Colleges of Education and private tertiary institutions increased. Table 46. Enrolment in tertiary education, by year 2006/7 2007/8 2008/9 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 Public Institutions 117,140 154,446 168,793 179,998 185,268 202,063 Public Universities 88,445 93,973 102,548 107,058 115,452 109,278 Polytechnics 28,695 34,448 38,656 46,079 43,113 47,294 26,025 27,589 26,861 26,703 27,580 Colleges of Education (Public) Specialized/Professional Institutions* * * * * * 14,951 Other* * * * * * 2,960 32,275 59,899 Private Institutions * Enrolment in Private Universities * * * * 32,275 56,581 Other* * * * * * 3,318 217,543 261,962 Total tertiary enrolment * Data not available for previous years, so does not necessarily indicate zero enrolment. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 79 Ministry of Education, 2013 Of the public institutions, female enrolment (the proportion of students who are female) is highest in the Colleges of Education at 42%. In 2011/12 the proportion of female students fell slightly in the public universities and polytechnics. Figure 37. Female enrolment in public tertiary institutions Colleges of Education The ESP 2010-2020 sets a target for an annual intake of 5,000 in the CoEs by 2015. This target has been well met, with 9,373 new entrants enrolled in the CoEs in 2011/12, of which 42.7% were female. The deployment of newly trained teachers to basic schools in 2012 is discussed in section 7.5. Distance education In adherence to the Government’s commitment to open and distance education opportunities, in 2011/12 enrolment in the Distance Education Programme increased by 19.5% over the previous year. Table 47. Student enrolment for distance learning by institutions, 2007/08 – 2011/12 Source: NCTE Budget Performance for 2012 and Outlook for 2013 Institution 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 U.G 906 2,562 4,816 7,210 8,331 KNUST 322 1,041 2,186 3,165 4,787 UCC 13,637 17,096 13,586 19,007 29,914 UEW 7,954 11,295 17,001 23,607 20,264 TOTAL 22,819 31,994 37,589 52,989 63,296 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 80 Ministry of Education, 2013 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 81 Ministry of Education, 2013 6.2 Quality Teaching staff The public universities have the highest proportion of full time teaching staff with PHD level qualifications, at 38%. In the polytechnics and private institutions offering degree programmes, more than 60% of full time teaching staff have Masters. In the Colleges of Education, the largest portion of staff have Bachelor’s degrees (49%), followed by Masters (35%). Figure 38. Highest qualification of full time teaching staff in tertiary institutions, 2011/12 Promoting Science and Technical Education The proportion of students enrolled in science and technical programmes has increased in both public universities and polytechnics to give an overall rate of 39.1% (see Table 48). The generally low proportion enrolled in sciences may be due to the high popularity of other subjects such as business and education. Data on the field of study of all tertiary students shows that only 15.5% are enrolled in programmes of ‘arts/social sciences’. Table 48. Enrolment in Science and Technical Programmes, by year 2007/8 2008/9 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 35.6 36.9 34.6 30.7 39.1 Public Universities 34.0 41.4 Polytechnics 22.8 33.8 Enrol. in science and technical disciplines (%) Public Universities and Polytechnics Source: NCTE Budget Performance for 2012 and Outlook for 2013 Other key activities to expand the tertiary sector in 2012 included: Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 82 Ministry of Education, 2013 The National Accreditation Board (NAB) increased the private accredited tertiary institutions, leading to 184 accredited programmes. This supports the objective to increase enrolment and cost-sharing at tertiary level. A Central Research Fund was set up with GH¢ 2m from GETfund as seed money. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 83 Ministry of Education, 2013 7 EDUCATION MANAGEMENT Summary A technical review of EMIS carried out in 2012 found critical issues regarding the strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats of the EMIS Data management system. A recommendation of the report has led to development of a dedicated webpage for the EMIS database. The page allows users to download raw data and ready-to-use tables. The GES is reviewing and building the capacity for decentralised management. Training on reporting requirements and analysis is being provided, and recommendations are being considered to further improve district reporting. The three new bodies to strengthen decentralised management are at various levels of progress, with the National Inspectorate Board more advanced than the National Teaching Council or National Council on Curriculum and Assessment. Teacher absenteeism continues to be a strong obstacle to quality teaching and learning in Ghana, particularly in public basic schools. The School Report Cards now being rolled out with district-level software will allow schools and districts to better monitor schools’ progress in aspects including teacher attendance. A preliminary analysis of data from 41 districts in the first term of 2012/13 found that on teachers have only around 80% attendance on average. The Ghana Education Sector Working Group was successful in its application to the Global Partnership for Education Fund in 2012, establishing the Ghana Partnership for Education Grant (GPEG). GPEG is a three year grant for US$75.5 million, implemented by the Ghana Education Service in 57 deprived districts in eight out of ten regions. The project development objective is to improve the planning, monitoring and delivery of basic education services in the deprived districts of Ghana. In March 2013 an exercise was carried out to map the interventions of the key donors on the Education Sector Working Group. Donor activity was found to cover the priority areas of the Education Strategic Plan, to be directed either at specific districts (often deprived) or at national level management and no duplication was found. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 84 Ministry of Education, 2013 7.1 EMIS A technical review of EMIS carried out in 2012 found critical issues regarding the strengths, weakness, opportunities and threats of the EMIS Data management system (Mehta, 2012). The review was based on field visits to four regional and eight district offices of education, and discussions with MoE/SRIMPR officers. Some key recommendations coming out of the review are given below. Carry out wider publicity (using the electronic and print media) of the annual school census in order to expand the coverage to more private schools. In order to build technical capacity at the district level, it is suggested that software is developed for training. This itself requires renovation of EMIS rooms with computer facilities, anti-virus and internet access. The National Information Technology Agency could be approached for this. Quality assurance of the questionnaires could be done by giving circuit supervisors responsibility for ensuring correct and complete responses, and by carrying out sample checks. In view of the problems that the District EMIS is facing with regard to database backup, time-series database, visits of national EMIS twice a year to districts and absence of a reporting module, the idea of web-based data processing (data entry and dissemination) for EMIS can resolve many of the limitations. However, this requires upgrading of hardware, software and expertise of EMIS teams to manage the system. In response to this finding, a dedicated webpage has been developed by SRIMPR and the GES with ready-to-use tables online. The webpage allows downloading of raw data which can be used by researchers for empirical studies. The districts may also download and use the database through their EMIS software. Ready-to-use tables which are required to develop the Annual District Performance Reports can also be made available. Strengthen dissemination and utilisation of the EMIS results by building capacity at all levels. In particular, build the regional EMIS units, and train circuit supervisors in interpretation of the School Profile to allow communication of the results to teachers and communities. This will then assist planning at the school level. The final point reinforces the findings of a workshop held by the EMIS team with head teachers. They found that headteachers were improperly (or not at all) briefed by district statistics officers and circuit supervisors in completing the data capture format and in interpreting the School Profile.15 7.2 Decentralised management of pre-tertiary education GES 15 A workshop for 30 headteachers was held on the Schools Record Management System in August 2011. The workshop went through the annual school census questionnaire. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 85 Ministry of Education, 2013 The Advisory Unit of Decentralised Education Management (AUDEM) in the GES carried out an analysis of the districts’ annual performance reports (ADPRs) in 2011/12 as compared with 2010/11. The ADPRs were assigned scores based on a set of evaluation questions, such as using the updated template, accurate data, answering all questions and analysis of indicators. Some key conclusions are given below: In 2012, all but one district submitted their ADPR to the regional offices and headquarters, giving a great improvement in submission rate from 79.4% to 99.4%. Overall, the quality slightly deteriorated on the year before. Looking by regions, Upper East achieved the highest score, with Greater Accra the lowest. Northern Region had the greatest improvement. Positive scores were found for questions which suggested an enhanced understanding of reporting requirements. However, ability to analyse the indicators and report on the financial status of the district had deteriorated over the year. The report then makes a number of recommendations for improving the ADPRs: Regional Directors should be given the ability to apply financial sanctions to their districts who fail to comply with reporting requirements. AUDEM’s training programme on District Education Operational Planning and Performance Review (DEOPPR) should be continuously provided and use practical examples. Trainees should be required to contribute to the ADPR and check and sign the final version. The evaluation scores could be distributed to use peer pressure as motivation to improve. There should be progress with creating online data entry and access to the EMIS database, in order to improve consistency of data reporting. Management activities carried out under the GES in 2012 include: A total number of 952 top management personnel from 119 districts received management training at GIMPA whilst an additional 238 officers also received training in procurement at the same institute. School Management Committees (SMC) and School Boards were provided with management training programmes to enable them to function effectively and efficiently. Progress of the new agencies The Education Act 2008 (Act 778) included the establishment of three new bodies to support the decentralised management of quality pre-tertiary education: the National Inspectorate Board, the National Council on Curriculum and Assessment, and the National Teaching Council. A brief note on their progress and status up to May 2013 is given below. National Inspectorate Board (NIB) The NIB is responsible for the external and independent monitoring and evaluation of school quality and performance at the pre-tertiary level. As part of efforts to improve the quality of education delivery through a more effective system of periodic inspection and supervision of schools, the following key milestones were attained in 2012: Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 86 Ministry of Education, 2013 a. A revised school inspection framework, survey instruments and quality indicators, and guidelines for school inspection and code of conduct for inspectors have been finalised. b. Twenty Lead Inspectors have been appointed to head the inspection panels of the Board. c. Over 300 Team (Part-Time) Inspectors have been identified as inspection panel members through a nation-wide selection process and trained on the use, analysis, and interpretation of the newly-developed inspection instruments. d. Key education sector stakeholders (GES, GNAT, CHASS, APTI, Regional and District Directors of Education, etc.) have been briefed on the mandate of the Board and their views solicited and incorporated into both the quality indicators for evaluating school performance and the inspection guidelines and protocols. In the coming year NIB will be disseminating booklets of the quality indicators to all basic schools, training the inspectors and carrying out flash unannounced inspection visits to schools. National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NCCA) and National Teaching Council (NTC) The NCCA was established to advise the Minister of Education on issues of curriculum and assessment at the pre-tertiary level of education. The National Teachers Council (NTC) is responsible for registration and issuance of license to teachers. The NCCA is made up of representatives of 21 member organisations and the NTC is made up of 15 members. Activities to date include: a. Since its inauguration in January 2012, the NCCA has met three times, and will continue to meet at least quarterly. The NTC has only met once, in February 2012. Ensuring regular meetings has been inhibited by the lack of funds released to the Ministry. b. The Human Resources Division of MoE in collaboration with the Public Services Commission has interviewed applicants for the Executive and Deputy Executive Secretaries of both the NCCA and NTC. c. The Ministry has allocated an office for use by both NCCA and NTC, which has been renovated and furnished. The office is not yet occupied as the secretariat is still being recruited. USAID provided each of the three new agencies with five computers, yet to be installed in the NCCA/NTC offices. d. The NCCA has set-up operational procedures including four sub-committees: Assessment; Curriculum; Textbooks and teaching and learning materials; and Finance and Administration. The first annual report with recommendations from the NCCA has been drafted. 7.3 Teacher Absenteeism Teacher absenteeism continues to be a substantial barrier to quality education in Ghana. Recently the sector has initiated the first comprehensive tool to collect data and regularly monitor the level of absenteeism - the School Report Card. This will be completed for the first and third semesters each year, and the results presented on the school noticeboard to raise transparency and accountability. See below for a review of the first SRC data collected in 2013. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 87 Ministry of Education, 2013 At a local level, districts are well aware of the problems of teach absenteeism and lateness, as reported in their Annual District Performance Reports. For example, Savelugu-Nanton in the Northern Region made the following points in its ADPR 2013: Absenteeism was found to be pronounced in the first week of the semester, on Fridays and Mondays due to most teachers commuting from Tamale. These teachers therefore had a tendency to start the weekends on Friday and return on Monday. Pay-week and payment schedules of financial institutions were found to affect absenteeism. Lateness to schools was found to be due largely to the teachers who commute and rely on getting free means of transport to school. Poor commitment and dedication to work by teachers was found to be the underlying cause of teacher absenteeism. Circuit supervisors' reports included regular occurrences of teacher absenteeism and lateness; poor teacher preparation for lessons; poor use of instructional hours; and headteachers' lack of will to apply appropriate sanctions to recalcitrant teachers. The Greater Accra Annual Regional Review 2013 also mentions teachers commuting long distances due to lack of accommodation as a reason for absenteeism and lateness, as well as giving traffic as a reason. Research into the quality of education in the three northern regions undertook observations at 54 schools in six districts, and found a number of reasons given by headteachers for teacher absenteeism (Associates for Change, 2013). Some common ones were teacher sickness, attending social issues, salary issues (including delay and collection), distance education, transport, workshops/meetings, and lack of decent accommodation. It was felt that lack of enforced disciplinary procedures by the District Education offices, as well as very little onsite supervision by circuit supervisors, was a contributor to the lack of commitment from teachers. Savelugu-Nanton in its ADPR identified measures to help curtail the problem of teacher absenteeism, poor punctuality and performance. Such measures include unannounced mass school monitoring visits by staff of the directorate and mass unannounced rotational visits by all Circuit Supervisors to one circuit once in a week. The objective of these visits is to inspect lesson notes preparation, use of instructional hours, and teacher absenteeism to take the appropriate corrective sanctions. Teacher Absenteeism in the School Report Cards School Report Cards (SRCs) and the new district-level software were rolled out in public basic schools in the 57 deprived districts of Ghana in April 2013. They were filled in for the first semester 2012/13 (September to December 2012). This analysis corresponds to the SRC data received for 41 districts for which district-level summaries were available in early June 2013. Table 49 gives the number of districts who responded, by region. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 88 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 49. Region Ashanti Brong Ahafo Eastern Northern Upper East Upper West Volta Western Total Districts submitting SRC data, May 2013 Districts with district summaries 1 6 1 15 6 7 4 1* 41* Total deprived districts 4 8 1 19 8 8 5 4 57 * Bia from Western Region also submitted SRCs but the district summary was not available at the time of writing. Data on teacher attendance Schools had to fill in the following information for each teacher: number of days present, number of days absent with permission, number of days absent without permission 16. The district level summaries show the total number of days teachers were present, and the total number of days teachers were expected (i.e. 70 days per teacher for one semester). Together these can give a total attendance rate. Table 50 below gives the key indicators: the overall attendance rate (for the sum total of the 41 districts), the average district, the highest and the lowest district. Table 50. Teacher attendance at the district level (41 deprived districts) Overall attendance rate Average district attendance rate Highest district attendance rate Lowest district attendance rate KG 78% 78% 90% 65% Primary 79% 79% 90% 66% JHS 82% 81% 91% 58% Table 50 shows that the average district teacher attendance rate increases marginally as the level of education increases, from 78% at KG, to 79% at Primary and 81% at JHS. This implies that at all three levels, teachers are absent roughly 20% of the time, or in other words one day per week. From the district summaries it is not possible to tell what proportion of the absenteeism was granted permission. The highest recorded attendance rates were 90% for both KG and Primary, and 91% at JHS. Interestingly the lowest rates were more varied, at 65% for KG, 66% for Primary and much lower at 58% for JHS. 16 For JHS this was only captured for teachers of Mathematics, English and Ghanaian languages. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 89 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 51 below gives more detail about the highest and lowest performing districts for teacher attendance rates. Table 51. Top 5 and bottom 5 districts' teacher attendance rates, by level of education Level KG Primary JHS Top 5 District Region Kintampo Brong North Ahafo Bottom 5 Region Rate District Rate 90% Wa East Upper West 65% Krachi West Volta 89% Chereponi Northern 68% Nkwanta South Volta 87% Wa West Upper West 69% Ejura Sekyidomase Ashanti 86% Brong Ahafo 69% Central Gonja Northern 85% Northern 71% Krachi West Volta 90% Chereponi Northern 66% Kpandai Northern 86% Wa East Upper West 69% Ejura Sekyidomase Ashanti 85% Kassena Nankana East Upper East 72% Nkwanta South Volta 85% Jirapa Upper West 72% Kintampo South Brong Ahafo 85% AtebubuAmantin Brong Ahafo 72% Krachi West Volta 91% Bongo Upper East 58% TolonKumbungu Northern 89% Chereponi Northern 65% Nkwanta North Volta 89% ZabzuguTatale Northern 68% Northern 88% Wa East Upper West 72% Ashanti 87% Karaga Northern 75% Yendi Municipal Ejura Sekyidomase AtebubuAmantin ZabzuguTatale In the top performing districts, Kwachi West (Volta) and Ejura Sekyidomase (Ashanti) are top performers at all three levels of education. Nkwanta South (Volta) also appears in both the KG and Primary top fives. Regions with districts in the top five are Brong Ahafo, Ashanti, Northern and Volta, meaning no districts from Upper East, Upper West, Eastern or Western regions made it into the top performers (note that Western and Eastern each only have one district submitted). At the lowest end of performance, we see that Wa East (Upper West) and Chereponi (Northern) are in the bottom five at all three levels of education, in fact being the lowest two at KG and Primary. Zabzugu-Tatale (Northern) and Atebubu-Amantin (Brong Ahafo) appear in the bottom five at two out of three levels. At all three levels the bottom five districts come from four regions: Brong Ahafo, Northern, Upper West and Upper East. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 90 Ministry of Education, 2013 7.4 Ghana Partnership for Education Grant The Ghana Education Sector Working Group was successful in its application to the Global Partnership for Education Fund in 2012, establishing the Ghana Partnership for Education Grant (GPEG). The grant agreement was signed on November 22, 2012 and became effective on February 15, 2013. As of May 2013, the first $14.9m of the grant has been received. GPEG is a three year grant for US$75.5 million, implemented by the Ghana Education Service in 57 deprived districts in eight out of ten regions. The project development objective is to improve the planning, monitoring and delivery of basic education services in the deprived districts of Ghana. The project aims to support the decentralized mechanism for basic education expenditure. Given the way salaries absorb most of the education budget, the GPEG will be used only for non-salary expenditures. In addition, the objectives and activities of GPEG are aligned with the Education Strategic Plan 2010-2020. The GPEG is expected to benefit approximately 6,600 schools and 1.7 million students (KGJHS). Approximately 8,000 untrained teachers may participate in a distance learning course to upgrade their credentials (UTDBE) and an additional 40,000 teachers and many education staff will benefit from the project. There are three components to GPEG: the first provides Sub-Grants to deprived districts to support key education objectives. The second component provides sub-grants to schools in the deprived districts. The third component focuses on programme management, institutional strengthening and monitoring and evaluation of project activities. Component 1: Grants to Deprived Districts ($42 million). Grants will be allocated to districts to support the four pillars of equity, access, quality and management improvements as planned in their annual programmes of work (APW). The APWs set out activities chosen by districts to meet local needs, aligned with annual district performance reports and operational plans. Out of this $15m has been allocated specifically to upgrading up to 8,000 untrained teachers through the Untrained Teacher Diploma in Basic Education (UTDBE). The DfID supported Girls’ PASS scholarship programme is also being distributed through the district grants. Component 2: School Grants ($22 million). Public basic schools in the deprived districts will receive grants (averaging $4 per pupil) to supplement the ongoing capitation grants, with an explicit focus on improving access and quality. Component 3: Project Management and Institutional Strengthening ($4.6 million). This provides the resources for management (particularly supervision of decentralized services), monitoring and evaluation and impact evaluation. The districts’ APWs for 2013 were approved in March 2013. Tables 52 and 53 show the breakdown of funds for 2013 by pillar and level of education (excluding funds ring-fenced for UTDBE and Girls’ PASS). Approximately 75% of funds are targeted at improving access and quality of education. In fact the two most popular activities in terms of allocation of expenditure come under access, and account for 27% of all funds: Essential supplies for schools (chalkboards, furniture etc); and Sanitary facilities (toilets, urinals). Over 47% of funds are allocated to Primary schools. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 91 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 52. pillar Pillar Districts’ Annual Programmes of Work – allocation of funds by Total (GH c) Percentage Access 6,907,849 40.39 Quality 6,001,290 35.09 Gender 1,443,710 8.44 Management Total 2,749,169 17,102,018 16.08 100.00 Excluding funds for UTDBE and Girls’ PASS Table 53. Districts’ Annual Programmes of Work – allocation of funds by level of education Level of Education Total (GH c) Percentage KG 2,115,171 12.37 PRIMARY 8,097,057 47.35 JHS 4,140,621 24.21 MANAGEMENT 2,749,169 16.08 TOTAL 17,102,018 100 Excluding funds for UTDBE and Girls’ PASS Districts are mandated to carry out a number of activities under Management with their grants. These activities include training, monitoring and supporting headteachers with school grant planning and expenditure, and training circuit supervisors to improve reporting on school grants and the school report cards. Other management activities were chosen by less than 20% of districts, such as management training for circuit supervisors to improve school supervision, and building capacity of school management committees. 7.5 Education Sector Working Group – donor mapping exercise In March 2013 an exercise was carried out to map the interventions of the key donors on the Education Sector Working Group. Donor activity was found to cover the priority areas of the Education Strategic Plan, to be directed either at specific districts (often deprived) or at national level management and no duplication was found. A brief summary of the activities is given below. The majority of activities were targeted at basic education. There are a number of Donors that are providing support to education yet have not provided information to the Ministry and the Sector Working Group of their activities and alignment with ESP priorities. These include KOICA, the Embassy of Israel, and the French Embassy and DANIDA. Access Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 92 Ministry of Education, 2013 DfID, IBIS, JICA, UNICEF and USAID were found to have activities to improve access to quality education. UNICEF, IBIS and DfID are supporting activities to reach out-of-school children, particularly through Complementary Basic Education programmes. These aim to provide fast-track and accessible schooling to out of school primary-aged children, allowing them to then enter mainstream schooling once basic literacy and numeracy skills have been learnt. JICA and USAID are involved in construction projects to improve access to basic education. Quality Again all the donor agencies are involved in supporting improving the quality of education in Ghana. Ensuring availability of trained teachers, regular refreshing and updating of teacher in-service training and practice of child-centred pedagogy are objectives of programmes under UNICEF, USAID, DfID, IBIS and JICA. USAID are also supporting a four year programme of technical assistance to the Government in assessment, which will include the National Education Assessment and the introduction of Early Grade Reading and Mathematics Assessments. Gender Activities to bridge the gender gap tend to focus on access to basic education for girls in the deprived districts. USAID and DfID have supported scholarship packages for girls, which include provision of uniforms, shoes, bags and stationery. UNICEF are also trying to increase girls’ demand for education and IBIS are supporting model schools for girls. Inclusive and Special Education UNICEF and USAID are putting significant support into this priority area. UNICEF have supported the roll out of inclusive education to 12 deprived districts, enhancing the capacity of schools to identify, care and provide for children with special educational needs. USAID are supporting teachers to be able to test children for mild and medium hearing and vision challenges. Science and Technical Education GIZ is providing technical assistance to COTVET, trade associations and technical institutes as part of the Ghana Skills Development Initiative. Amongst other activities, the project is looking at women’s skills development and quality standards for the apprenticeship system. Mainstreaming issues of HIV/AIDS and life skills UNICEF is supporting the operation of HIV/AIDS and life skills education in basic schools. Management There are a substantial number of activities aimed at improving education management in Ghana. A selection of activities aim at strengthening school governance and supervision at district, circuit and school-level, such as USAID’s Partnership for Accountable Governance in Education and work by IBIS. JICA are supporting the GES’s capacity for decentralised education management at all levels through technical assistance. The Ghana Partnership for Education Grant also supports the decentralised management of basic education, and in Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 93 Ministry of Education, 2013 tandem with GPEG a number of donors supported the Government in rolling out School Report Cards in the deprived districts, to improve schools supervision, planning and accountability. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 94 Ministry of Education, 2013 8 EDUCATION FINANCE Summary Spending on education continued its increasing trend in 2012, with a total expenditure of GH¢ 6.0billion in 2012, up from GH¢ 3.6billion in 2011. In 2012 education expenditure was equal to 8.4% of GDP. The largest source of funding is the Government of Ghana (76% of all funds), however of this 97% is allocated to compensation, leading to heavy reliance on other sources to pay for goods and services and assets, which make up 21% and 5% of total expenditure respectively. Whilst all levels of education saw an increase in expenditure between 2011 and 2012, subsectors which saw a substantial increase in share of the total spending were pre-primary, JHS and SHS. Primary level education had a notable decrease in its proportion of spending, from 34.6% to 25.9%, however in absolute terms its spending increased. There was an overrun in GoG expenditure from the allocated budget in all items of spending: compensation, goods and services and assets. The execution rate of expenditure against budget was particularly high for assets at 2,412%. This was largely accounted for by the reallocation of planned expenditure from GETfund into GoG funds, particularly for Schools Under Trees and SHS infrastructure. Analysis of unit costs showed that costs per pupil increased for all levels of education between 2011 and 2012. The largest increase was in Pre-Primary (KG and crèche), which increased by 327% in 2012. Unit costs increase as the level of education increases, from GH¢ 341 per pupil in Pre-Primary up to GH¢ 2,693 in Tertiary (2011 expenditure). Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 95 Ministry of Education, 2013 8.1 Trends in Education Expenditure Total expenditure on education in 2012 was GH¢ 5.7billion, representing a 60% increase from GH¢ 3.6billion in 2011 (see Table 54).17 This increase in total expenditure has risen faster than GDP, meaning that expenditure on education as a share of GDP has increased from 6.3% in 2011 to 7.9% in 2012. Education expenditure also grew as a proportion of all Government spending, from 25.8% in 2011 to 27.2% in 2012. The increase in total education expenditure was reflected in almost all of the major sources of funding. Funds from the Government of Ghana (GoG) increased by 79% from GH¢ 2.6billion to GH¢ 4.6billion. This represents an increase in the Government's contribution to the total budget from 72% in 2011 to 80% in 2012. Donor funds actually decreased by 10% from GH¢ 127million to GH¢ 114million between 2011 and 2012. This took its share of education expenditure from 3.6% down to 2%. Internally Generated Funds (IGF) increased by 78% to GH¢ 631million. The expenditure from GETfund actually decreased, from GH¢ 518million to GH¢ 361million (a 30% drop). Funding from the Highly Indebted Poor Country Fund (HIPC) and Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) came to an end in 2011, but the Annual Budget Funding Amount (ABFA) began in 2012 with an expenditure of GH¢ 10.6million. Table 54. Trends in Education Resource Envelope and Expenditure as a share of GDP and Total Public Spending (GH¢) Source 2009 2010 2011 2012 1,461,721,144 1,825,819,889 2,563,391,576 4,587,183,213 Donor 95,067,893 64,742,440 127,255,813 114,311,680 IGF 210,524,567 302,013,754 354,288,649 630,674,197 GETfund 150,636,100 313,283,250 518,486,027 361,279,228 HIPC/MDRI Annual Budget (ABFA) 31,818,711 58,504,024 2,288,506 0 0 0 0 10,571,282 Total Education Expenditure 1,949,768,415 2,564,363,357 3,565,710,571 5,704,019,600 GDP 36,598,000,000 46,232,000,000 57,013,000,000 71,847,000,000 Total Government Expenditure 8,756,146,694 11,532,209,320 13,837,325,330 20,944,723,341 5.3% 22.3% 5.5% 22.2% 6.3% 25.8% 7.9% 27.2% GoG Funding Amount Education Exp. as a % of GDP Education Exp. as a % of GoG Exp. Table 55 shows the trends in expenditure by the different levels of education. All levels of education saw an increase in expenditure between 2011 and 2012. Pre-school saw the most significant increase in expenditure, from GH¢ 103 million to GH¢ 435 million, representing 17 This increase is in nominal terms and does not account for inflation. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 96 Ministry of Education, 2013 both a 321% increase and a shift from 2.9% of the total expenditure to 7.6%. Whilst spending on Primary increased in nominal terms from GH¢ 1.2bn to GH¢ 1.3bn, there was a notable decrease in its share of total spending, from 34.6% to 22.8%. JHS on the other hand had an increasing share of total expenditure, from 11.5% in 2011 to 17.0% in 2012 which was GH¢ 969million. SHS received an increase in share from 14.8% to 18.5%, but this was almost a doubling from GH¢ 527million to GH¢ 1,057million. The share of expenditure to Management and Subvented agencies decreased from 13.7% to 11.1% (2011 to 2012), however, the absolute figures indicate that that component actually increased from GH¢ 488million to GH¢ 631million. Table 55. Trends in expenditure by level of education 2009 Level 2010 2011 2012 Amt. (GH¢) % Amt. (GH¢) % Amt. (GH¢) % Amt. (GH¢) % Pre-school 60,272,779 3.1 72,036,051 2.8 103,391,337 2.9 435,502,334 7.6 Primary 594,950,694 30.5 715,160,506 27.9 1,234,146,460 34.6 1,302,972,161 22.8 JHS 297,665,072 15.3 370,235,825 14.4 411,648,553 11.5 969,147,257 17.0 SHS 337,369,027 17.3 400,030,646 15.6 526,809,606 14.8 1,057,413,465 18.5 TVET 35,038,819 1.8 38,436,313 1.5 126,982,366 3.6 163,681,164 2.9 SPED 7,493,238 0.4 17,214,633 0.7 19,149,996 0.5 21,717,157 0.4 NFED Teacher Education Tertiary Management & Subvented 3,715,031 0.2 13,357,023 0.5 15,154,167 0.4 40,538,896 0.7 50,377,753 2.6 62,056,093 2.4 - - - - 401,191,936 20.6 511,806,744 20 639,230,889 17.9 1,081,971,635 19.0 160,837,566 8.2 362,459,208 14.1 487,809,862 13.7 631,075,530 11.1 HIV-AIDS 856,499 0 1,570,316 0.1 1,387,335 0.04 0 0.0 Total 1,949,768,414 100 2,564,363,357 100 3,565,710,570 100 5,704,019,600 100 Figure 39. Proportion of total expenditure by level of education Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 97 Ministry of Education, 2013 The allocation of expenditure by item type is shown in Table 56. Compensation received a significant proportion of expenditure, at 78.2% of the total expenditure and 97% of the Government of Ghana funds. Goods and services accounted for 17.2% of expenditure, of which Internally Generated Funds were the major contributor with GH¢ 625million, followed by GH¢ 180m from GETfund. Assets were allocated 4.6% of total expenditure (GH¢ 264m), of which 68% of funds were from GETfund. Table 56. Education resource envelope and item expenditure 2012 Sources Compensation Goods & Services Assets Total % GoG 4,459,516,046 75,246,732 52,420,434 4,587,183,213 76.2% Donor 98,405,290 15,906,390 114,311,680 2.0% IGF 625,515,081 5,159,116 630,674,197 10.5% GETfund 180,472,068 180,807,159 361,279,228 6.0% - 10,571,282 10,571,282 0.2% 4,459,516,046 979,639,172 264,864,382 5,704,019,600 100% 78.2% 17.2% 4.6% 100% ABFA Total Figure 40. Expenditure by item, 2012 Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 98 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 57 shows the breakdown of expenditure by type and by the level of education. Under compensation, Primary and JHS received the largest amounts at GH¢ 1.2billion and GH¢ 917million respectively. The levels with the highest Goods and Services expenditure were Tertiary (GH¢ 380million) and SHS (GH¢ 283million). The 2012 expenditure components on assets of GH¢ 264m indicated that the largest amount was allocated to SHS, with GH¢ 111million, which constitutes 42% of the total asset expenditure. This high expenditure is duly accounted for by the policy on four year SHS programme that necessitated the emergency provision of infrastructure. Table 57. Level Expenditure by Level of Education and Item 2012 Compensation Goods & Services Assets Total % 417,350,629 12,399,597 5,752,108 435,502,334 7.6% 1,196,347,150 65,174,863 41,450,148 1,302,972,161 22.8% JHS 917,407,476 29,775,124 21,964,657 969,147,257 17.0% SHS 663,299,608 282,762,361 111,351,495 1,057,413,465 18.5% TVET 39,437,837 105,678,182 18,565,145 163,681,164 2.9% SPED 14,618,821 3,384,981 3,713,355 21,717,157 0.4% NFED 39,282,739 799,569 456,588 40,538,896 0.7% Tertiary 645,893,417 380,264,038 55,814,180 1,081,971,635 19.0% 525,878,369 99,400,456 5,796,705 631,075,530 11.1% Pre-school Primary Management Agencies & Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 99 Ministry of Education, 2013 Total 4,459,516,046 979,639,172 264,864,382 5,704,019,600 100% 8.2 GoG Expenditure 2012 Table 58 shows how Government funds were allocated across the levels of education and types of expenditure in 2012. As mentioned above, 97% of GoG funds were allocated to compensation, leaving only 1.6% for goods and services and 1.1% for assets. Under goods and services, the level receiving the greatest amount was SHS with GH¢ 42million, followed by GH¢ 11million to Tertiary. Less than GH¢ 10million was allocated to Basic education for goods and services, indicating the heavy reliance on other funding sources for this subsector. The same is true for assets, where no allocation was made from GoG funds to Basic education. Again, SHS received the most substantial portion, which was GH¢ 49million. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 100 Ministry of Education, 2013 Table 58. GoG Expenditure by level of Education and item, 2012 Compensation Goods & Services Assets TOTAL % 417,350,629 2,019,637 - 419,370,266 9.1% 1,196,347,150 5,494,322 - 1,201,841,472 26.2% JSS 917,407,476 2,055,511 - 919,462,987 20.0% SHS 663,299,608 42,001,475 48,853,534 754,154,617 16.4% TVET 39,437,837 3,104,724 - 42,542,561 0.9% SPED 14,618,821 3,049,274 - 17,668,095 0.4% NFED 39,282,739 799,569 456,588 40,538,896 0.9% Tertiary Management & Subvented agencies TOTAL 645,893,417 10,946,070 2,472,723 659,312,210 14.4% 525,878,369 5,776,150 637,589 532,292,108 11.6% 4,459,516,046 75,246,732 52,420,434 4,587,183,213 97.2% 1.6% 1.1% 100.0% Level Pre-school Primary % of Total Table 59 provides a summary of GOG budget execution rate for 2012. The year experienced a number of events that involved high financial commitments and has thus resulted in enormous budget execution rates especially for asset as compared to the execution rate in the previous year (see figure 31). Compensation overrun was 263% and was attributed to the payment of arrears as part of the implementation of the Single Spine Salary Scheme. The overrun expenditure under goods and services (146%) was due to reallocation of funds from Ministry of Finance for the payment of some social intervention programmes such as the capitation grant to all public basic schools and feeding grant to special schools, subsidies, etc. The asset overrun, at 2,412%, was explained by the reallocation of funds from GETfund to GoG for payment towards the conversion of schools under trees into permanent structures as well as the payment of SHS infrastructure provision. Table 59. GoG Budget Execution Rate 2012 Item Budget Head Ministry* GES Tertiary Total Compensation ('000) Allocation Expenditure % Execution 203,414 342,292 168% 1,279,220 3,471,330 271% 214,501 645,893 301% 1,697,135 4,459,516 263% Goods and Services ('000) Allocation Expenditure % Execution 10,278 4,127 40% 25,100 60,174 240% 16,096 10,946 68% 51,474 75,247 146% Allocation 350 1,350 473 2,173 Expenditure 624 49,324 2,473 52,420 Asset ('000) Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 101 Ministry of Education, 2013 % Execution 178% 3654% 522% 2412% * NB: Ministry Includes Main Ministry and Subvented Agencies Figure 41. GOG budget execution rate for 2011 and 2012 8.3 Expenditure from other sources Table 60 shows how expenditure from sources of funding other than GoG were allocated by level of education in 2012. The ABFA was allocated entirely to Basic education. GETfund was allocated across all the levels except for Non-formal, with its highest share going to Tertiary (28%), followed by Management (25%) and SHS (23%). IGF was most significant in its expenditure in Tertiary education (GH¢ 314million), followed by SHS (GH¢ 217million) and TVET (GH¢ 92million). Donor spending18 was highly concentrated on Basic education, with 90% of its GH¢ 114million total expenditure on Basic. Within this, Primary gets the most significant share, representing 55% of total Donor spending, followed by 26% to JHS and 9% to Pre-primary. Table 60. Level Pre-school Primary JHS SHS TVET SPED NFED Tertiary Management & Subvented 18 Expenditure by level of Education from other sources, 2012 ABFA GETfund IGF Donor Amount % Amount % Amount % Total % 1,057,128 6,342,769 3,171,385 0 0 0 0 0 10% 60% 30% 0% 0% 0% 0% 0% 4,255,924 32,285,545 17,267,772 84,688,975 28,075,579 3,713,355 0 101,619,956 1% 9% 5% 23% 8% 1% 0% 28% 0 0 0 216,777,814 92,904,777 0 0 313,794,857 0% 0% 0% 34% 15% 0% 0% 50% 10,819,016 62,502,375 29,245,113 1,792,059 158,247 335,707 0 7,244,612 9% 55% 26% 2% 0% 0% 0% 6% 0 0% 89,372,122 25% 7,196,749 1% 2,214,552 2% Donor spending includes AfDB, DfID, IDA, JICA, UNICEF, DANIDA and USAID. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 102 Ministry of Education, 2013 Total 10,571,282 100% 361,279,228 100% 630,674,197 100% 114,311,680 100% 8.4 Unit Cost Analysis The table below gives the unit costs per pupil by level of education. For each level two indicators are given, the total cost per pupil and the recurrent unit costs since these are the running costs to the sector spent on educating the pupils (recurrent costs are the compensation and goods and services expenditure). Only pupils enrolled in public schools and institutions are used here. Note that for TVET this includes Technical and Vocational Institutes which do not actually fall under the education sector budget, which means the unit cost of TVET under GES and COTVET may be significantly underestimated here. Enrolment is used for the second school year within the financial year, for example 2012 expenditure is divided by 2012/13 enrolment. It can be seen there is a wide disparity between the recurrent unit costs at different levels of education, generally rising with the levels. KG is the least costly per pupil, at GH¢ 343. The unit cost rises through Basic Education, then increases substantially between JHS (GH¢ 818) and SHS (GH¢ 1,227). As might be expected TVET is still substantially more at 2,971, and as mentioned above this may in fact be an underestimate. As Tertiary enrolment is not yet available for 2012/13, the most recent unit cost is for 2011, and shows Tertiary is the highest cost at GH¢ 2,693 in 2011. In terms of trend, all the levels of education experienced an increase in unit cost from the previous year. The increase was most substantial in Pre-Primary (KG and crèche), with a 328% increase. This most likely reflects the push to allocate more resources to Pre-Primary, which is still receiving less than Primary on a per-pupil basis. Table 61. Unit costs by level of Education Level Pre-Primary (KG + crèche) Primary JHS SHS TVET TERTIARY 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 60 84 347 Unit Cost GH¢ 57 80 343 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 202 192 224 390 413 Unit Cost GH¢ 189 181 214 372 400 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 275 277 336 367 837 Unit Cost GH¢ 257 260 320 340 818 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 388 704 603 761 1,372 Unit Cost GH¢ 281 636 397 516 1,227 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 379 885 1,030 2,481 3,351 Unit Cost GH¢ 305 650 775 1,143 2,971 Total cost per pupil GH¢ 2,681 2,620 2,763 3,144 - Unit Cost GH¢ 2,012 2,034 1,932 2,693 - As the unit costs are given in nominal prices, figure 42 below shows the annual percentage change in unit cost as well as the inflation rate for each year. It can be seen that the unit costs annual growth was above the inflation rate the majority of the time. In 2012, each of the Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 103 Ministry of Education, 2013 levels’ unit costs grew by more than inflation, meaning spending grew by more than average price increases, One reason for this will be the implementation of the single spine salary and related arrears payments in 2012. Figure 42. Annual percentage change in unit cost Year-on-year inflation data comes from the Bank of Ghana Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 104 Ministry of Education, 2013 REFERENCES AUDEM (March 2013). Review Result of Annual District Performance Report 2011-12. Accra: GES. Darvas, P., and R. Palmer, (December 2012). Demand and Supply of Technical and Vocational Skills in Ghana. World Bank. GNECC (2013). Teacher Gaps In Public Basic Schools In Ghana. Global Action Week 2013. GNECC Policy Brief. Joseph, G., and Q. Wodon, (August 2012). Test Scores in Ghana’s Primary Schools: Measuring the Impact of School Inputs and Socio-Economic Factors, Washington, DC: The World Bank. Mehta, A.C. (September 2012). Technical Review of EMIS and Statistical Analysis in Ghana. New Delhi: NUEPA. MoE and ADEA (September 2011). Schools Record Management System: Final Report on Phase II. NCTE (February 2013). Budget Performance for 2012 and Outlook for 2013. NCTE (April 2013). Summary of Statistics for Accredited Tertiary Education Institutions. 2011/2012 Academic Year. Accra: NCTE. UNICEF and UIS (April 2012). Global Initiative on Out-of-School Children – Ghana Country Study. Accra: UNICEF. UNICEF (March 2013a). The Status of Education in Ghana: Results from the Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) 2006-2011. Accra: UNICEF. UNICEF (2013b). MICS 2011: Analysis of Out-of-school Children. Presentation for the National Education Sector Annual Review. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 105 Ministry of Education, 2013 Glossary of education indicators This glossary summarises the indicators calculated in this report, and how they were calculated. There can be different interpretations of the methods so please refer to this explanation for Ghana’s indicators. Completion rate The total number enrolled in the last grade of the level of education (e.g. Primary 6, JHS 3), regardless of age, expressed as percentage of the total population of the theoretical entrance age to the last grade of that level of education. Gender Parity Index (GPI) The ratio of the female GER to the male GER, the GPI is calculated by dividing the female Gross Enrolment Ratio by the male Gross Enrolment Ratio for the given level of education. A GPI between 0.97 and 1.00 indicates parity between the genders. A GPI below 0.97 indicates a disparity in favour of males. A GPI above 1.00 indicates a disparity in favour of females. Gross Admission Rate (GAR) Total number of pupils or students enrolled in the first grade of an education level, regardless of age, expressed as a percentage of the population of the official school-entrance age. Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) Number of pupils or students enrolled in a given level of education, regardless of age, expressed as a percentage of the official school-age population corresponding to the same level of education. The ratio can exceed 100% due to over-aged and under-aged children who enter school late/early and/or repeat grades. Net Admission Rate (NAR) Total number of pupils or students in the theoretical age group for the first grade of a level of education who are enrolled in that grade, expressed as a percentage of the total population in that age group. The NAR should have an upper limit of 100%. Net Enrolment Ratio (NER) Total number of pupils or students in the theoretical age group for a given level of education enrolled in that level, expressed as a percentage of the total population in that age group. The NER should have an upper limit of 100%. Pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 106 Ministry of Education, 2013 The average number of pupils per teacher at a given level of education. Divide the total number of pupils enrolled at the specified level of education by the number of teachers at the same level. Pupil-trained teacher ratio (PTTR) The number of pupils per trained teacher at a given level of education. Divide the total number of pupils enrolled at the specified level of education by the number of teachers who have a teacher training qualification at the same level. Repetition rate The number of repeaters in a given level of education in a given school year, expressed as a percentage of enrolment in that level of education. Retention rate This is a proxy measure for school completion, giving the percentage of a cohort who entered a level of education who are then in the final year of that level the appropriate number of years later. It does not account for repeaters. For Primary, it is calculated as the number enrolled in P6 in year T, divided by the number enrolled in P1 in year T-5. Transition rate The number of pupils (or students) admitted to the first grade of a higher level of education in a given year, expressed as a percentage of the number of pupils (or students) enrolled in the final grade of the lower level of education in the previous year. Education Sector Performance Report, 2013 107