COVID-19: Online exams'll be discriminatory – PUSAG

The Private Universities Students Association of Ghana (PUSAG) has said it will not be advisable for the Ministry of Education to permit public universities to organise online end-of-semester examination for students across the country.
According to the group, the policy could be discriminatory, as many of the students studying in private universities and other university colleges, will be left out.
The group is also lamenting what they term the neglect of private university students by the government in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
PUSAG said all interventions from the education ministry, so far, including the e-learning platforms, have only benefited a few public universities.
“We are of the strong conviction that the government has neglected us in its plans toward combating this novel coronavirus”, PUSAG President Aswel Annan told Class News, explaining: “Because a lot of packages have been announced for SMEs in this country and we believe that as private universities, we also, in a way, help the government to ensure that ordinary Ghanaian students have access to tertiary education. So, we want to, indeed, plead with the government to come out with modalities to ensure the smooth running of private universities at this critical moment”.
Mr Annan also noted that as the academic calendar draws to a close, many public universities have issued notices that end-of-semester examination will be online but the Private Universities Students Association is of the view that the Ministry of Education would have to come to the aid of over 50 members because the move could be discriminatory against private universities who are finding it difficult to smoothly run their activities in the wake of the outbreak.
“Not all private university students in Ghana have access to the internet and most of them are also in remote areas and we all know that internet connectivity and electricity in Ghana are not stable so you can imagine when someone has low battery or there is no light at where students are and at that time it been scheduled for them to take the exams, they will find it difficult to access the internet. So, we think that writing exams online is not advisable and we think most of the private universities would be left out”.
Source: classfmonline.com
Trending News
President Mahama calls for electoral integrity at post-election conference
14:45President Mahama confers Ghana’s highest national honour on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi
07:33AMA decongestion exercise leads to 14.4-tonnes reduction in CBD waste volume
02:552.45% electricity tariff hike necessary to avert ECG collapse - Majority Leader
12:12Memphis University threatens to drop Ghanaian scholarship students over unpaid fees by gov’t
14:19Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi makes historic visit to Ghana, first in 30 years
07:24Martyrs Day: NDC Legal Director slams attempts to link PNDC to NDC
02:39Perez University College unveils new academic programmes amid milestone achievements
10:09John Apea to lead clemency petition for Ato Essien on justice and human rights grounds
14:08W/R: GoldBod taskforce cracks down on 10 Chinese gold smugglers
21:30