“We have written to them to cease the running of such centres by
September 30. Some of them have written to us asking for dialogue and
conversation, which we do not have any problem with.
“At the end of the day, what we are looking for is that we want
things to be done and done properly,” the Deputy Director-General of GTEC,
Professor Ahmed Abdulai Jinapor, disclosed in an exclusive interview in Accra.
Most of the established universities have other campuses
throughout the country in a bid to extend their programmes to the various
regions.
The GTEC insists that many of the centres are not fit for purpose,
hence its refusal to sanction them.
Prof. Jinapor, however, admitted that not all such centres were
illegal.
“We have some that have approval but all those in senior high
schools and colleges of education run by universities as distance, as well as
nursing institutions by universities and in some instances places of work are
illegal.
“We are not against distance education, but it must be fit for
purpose like the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology one at
Tamale and not those using basic and senior high schools or churches as
centres,” he said.
“Distance education is part of the policy of GTEC to bring
tertiary education to the doorstep of the poor but not distancing education,”
Prof. Jinapor explained.
He said the GTEC was working with the Ghana Education Service to
issue a fiat to all senior high and basic school heads to desist from giving
out their schools as
centres to such universities.
Prof. Jinapor described as unacceptable the use of office premises
and basic school compounds as centres of learning for some of the universities,
saying such centres were “not fit for purpose”.
Touching on courses offered on satellite campuses, Prof. Jinapor
also stated that it was unacceptable for a public university in one region to
establish a campus in another region where there is a public university to run
the same programmes.
Describing the tertiary education environment as cancerous, the
GTEC deputy director-general gave an assurance that the commission was working
hard to deal with the
numerous challenges bedeviling that space.
“The tertiary education landscape is a cancerous environment, but
we will definitely purge it of this cancer.
The only way that we can do this is to get the buy-in of the
immediate stakeholders within this architecture, which is management of the
institutions,” he said.
Prof. Jinapor appealed to parents to take keen interest in the
institutions and programmes their children select, giving the assurance that
whatever the GTEC was doing
was in the interest of parents and their wards.
He dispelled the perception that the position of GTEC was meant to
make tertiary education scarce, thereby denying some people tertiary
education.
“So, we are aware of all these challenges; we are working very
hard to address them.
It will take some time, but we are very committed to getting these
issues addressed and we are working with speed,” he said. Prof. Jinapor assured
the public that the GTEC was working very hard to address the challenges,
saying that it had inherited loads of such challenges, “that we think we are
doing very well based on where we are
today.”
“We pray and hope that it will get to a time that the institutions
will buy into the fact that without accreditation, you cannot run a programme.
“We have instances where students have got scholarships to study abroad and those scholarships have been denied because the awarding institutions go on the GTEC website only to realise that those programmes are not accredited,” he said.
Credit: Severious Kale-Dery of Daily Graphic