Ghana’s
public universities are facing a boom in applications, but do not have
sufficient facilities to meet growing demand that has been exacerbated
by an influx of students from neighbouring countries and a double cohort
leaving school this year.
As a result, admission to universities
is no longer based on obtaining the required grades – some qualified
candidates have been turned down or made to sit additional selection
tests.
The situation has been compounded by
students from neighbouring countries – especially Nigeria – competing
with Ghanaians for admission. Nigerians have been seeking out Ghanaian
institutions because of the frequent strikes that have bedevilled their
public university campuses.
“Over the past four months, Nigerian
universities have been on strike and students have been forced to stay
at home so it is better for some of us to look elsewhere to educate our
children,” a Nigerian parent, Folu Agbeniran, told University World News in Accra.
Agbeniran said he had spent a month in
Ghana looking at institutions that could admit his child as a first-year
political science student.
“It is expensive to send your child to
universities in Europe because even if you have the money, the visa
regime has become very complicated so it is only logical to turn to a
neighbouring country where everything is working,” he said.
Local students have become frustrated as
institutions put in place competitive procedures to select qualified
applicants. This year the University of Ghana rejected 39,645 qualified
applicants who wanted to pursue undergraduate or graduate programmes in
the 2013-14 academic year.
The vice-chancellor of the University of
Ghana, Professor Ernest Aryeetey, said the situation was worse this
year because there were two groups of students that sat the West African
Senior School Certificate Examination in May-June 2013. This was due to
the shortening of the four-year senior high school course to three
years.
Aryeetey said about 37,507
undergraduates and 2,138 graduates were denied admission. He described
as “painful” the decision to reject 881 applicants who obtained good
aggregates.
“We are faced with the painful decision
of having to turn down the applications of many otherwise well qualified
applicants due to limitations of staff and facilities,” he said.
As a result of these limitations some science students said they had to sit selection tests to gain admission.
“I made the grades and was expecting to
be admitted but the university authorities used a test that they
conducted to deny my admission,” said Joseph Addo.
“My dream of gaining admission to study
medicine has been dashed and I am not sure of what I can do because
private universities are very expensive and my parents cannot afford to
pay those fees,” Addo added.
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