
The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) says the Bono, Bono East and Ahafo regions recorded the highest number of examination malpractices for the 2023 examination.
According to the council in 2023, the three regions cumulatively had 18,504 involved in the various forms of examination malpractices.
“Bono, Bono East, and Ahafo regions had the highest number of candidates involved in malpractice in 2023, these critical areas require immediate attention, given their rising trends in malpractice involvement,” The head of Humanities and Test Development Division, WAEC, Mr Daniel Nii Dodoo, revealed.
Giving an overview of the examination malpractices in the country at a stakeholders’ forum in Accra on Thursday, he said Ashanti region “remains a focal point for intervention due to its high number of malpractice cases as well.
He noted that, the region has showed a significant malpractice cases of 17,633 candidates involved in malpractices in the year 2023.
Mr Dodoo noted that although the Central Region had relatively lower examination malpractice rates, the recent increase in percentages warrants proactive action.
Again, he stated that WAEC’s data indicated significant upward trends in malpractice incidents over a three-year period, highlighting an escalating issue.
Furthermore, Mr Dodoo
asserted that there was a need to confront the pervasive nature of this malpractice and its serious implications for national security.
He said the reality of examination malpractice was a glaring truth that had infiltrated the country’s educational system and demanded an urgent attention.
“Examination malpractice encompasses any unethical behaviour aimed at securing an unfair advantage during assessments,” he added.
Alarmingly, he mentioned that examination malpractice had been escalating in West Africa, driven by a complex interplay of socio-economic pressures, a pervasive culture of impunity, and weak regulatory frameworks.
The Head of National Office, WAEC, Dr Rosemond Wilson, stated that the meeting aimed to translate discussions into collective action to tackle exam malpractice, which threatens the integrity of exams, devalues certificates, compromises academic standards, and harms students’ futures.
She said stakeholders had the capacity to combine forces with the council to collectively combat the menace.
The forum brought together officials from the Ministry of Education, Ghana Education Service, representatives of Conference of Heads of Assisted Secondary Schools (CHASS), Regional Supervisors and among others to seek solutions to the challenge of examination malpractices.
The post Bono, Bono East, Ahafo regions top in examination malpractices – WAEC appeared first on Ghanaian Times.
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