CUTS Ghana, a research and advocacy policy think tank in Accra has described as illegal the system created by West African Examinations Council (WAEC) for Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) and West African Senior Secondary Certificate (WASSCE) candidates to pay before accessing their results online.
Addressing the press, the Country Coordinator for CUTS Ghana Mr. Appiah Kusi Adomako said that the practice by which the council charges candidate’s money before they access their exams is exploitation.
According to Mr. Adomako, examination bodies elsewhere do not charge students any money when candidates want to check their results.
“In the past when candidates sat for the BECE and the WASSCE, the exams body sent candidates’ results slips to their various schools. When the WAEC decided to go online with its results in 2004, it then required candidates to pay to view their results. Though this practice is an improvement from the previous one, mandating candidates to pay to view results is illegal and amounts to extortion,” he said.
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Mr. Appiah Adomako said, “It must be noted that the WAEC has cut down cost tremendously by going electronic and publishing the results of candidate online. “By default, when a system moves from manual to electronic, the cost associated with it reduces, so there are no valid reasons to surcharge candidates. The Council saves a lot of money for not printing results slips and having them sent to schools across the country via road. The savings derived from this innovation is enough to allow the candidates to view their exams online for free. Kenya which also moved from paper-based to electronic means of checking results does it for free. Zambia is also another example”
CUTS Ghana further called on the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), Ghana Education Service and the Ministry of Education to abolish the scratch cards system.
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Speaking on the placement system, Mr. Adomako lamented why candidates have to incur a cost to know which school that they have been placed. The government introduced the Computer School Placement System for admissions into Senior High Schools to help alleviate the challenges that had bedevilled the previous system.
“With this new system, a candidate had to pay to know the school which he/she had placed. In the past, the state was incurring more cost in placing candidates manually. With this computer-based placement, the cost has come down substantially” he opined.
“Mr. Adomako said currently, the WAEC and GES charge GHC 5.00 each to allow a candidate to access results online and know the school which he/she had been placed.
The WAEC and the GES are not the only institution in the world that runs exams or handles placement for candidates. In many countries worldwide, candidates who want to view their results online are not made to pay money. At the universities and polytechnics in the country, a student can view their results many times without having to pay. Students who sit for ACCA, TOEFL, SAT, GRE, ILETS, and ICA do not have to pay to access their results online.
Mr. Adomako is, therefore, calling on the Ghana Education Service (GES) to step in and stop this illegality.
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