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BY: Severious Kale-Dery
• Dr Hilda Ampadu, Executive Director, National Inspectorate Authority, speaking at the 2021 Annual New Year School and Conference. Picture: Maxwell Ocloo
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The quest to develop a functional ICT educational system in the country is on course, the Inspector-General of the National Schools Inspectorate Authority (NaSIA), Dr Hilda H. Ampadu, has said.
She said the traditional mode of learning was inadequate, hence efforts by successive governments to ensure that ICT and life-long learning became key parts of the educational system.
Dr Ampadu was speaking on the topic: ICT for the provision of inclusive quality education and life-long learning , at the 72nd Annual New Year School and Conference at the University of Ghana, Legon in Accra last Wednesday.
+ • Dr Hilda Ampadu, Executive Director, National Inspectorate Authority, speaking at the 2021 Annual New Year School and Conference. Picture: Maxwell Ocloo
The quest to develop a functional ICT educational system in the country is on course, the Inspector-General of the National Schools Inspectorate Authority (NaSIA), Dr Hilda H. Ampadu, has said.
She said the traditional mode of learning was inadequate, hence efforts by successive governments to ensure that ICT and life-long learning became key parts of the educational system.
Dr Ampadu was speaking on the topic: “ICT for the provision of inclusive quality education and life-long learning”, at the 72nd Annual New Year School and Conference at the University of Ghana, Legon in Accra last Wednesday.
The quest to develop a functional ICT educational system in the country is on course, the Inspector-General of the National Schools Inspectorate Authority (NaSIA), Dr Hilda H. Ampadu, has said.
She said the traditional mode of learning was inadequate, hence efforts by successive governments to ensure that ICT and life-long learning became key parts of the educational system.
Dr Ampadu was speaking on the topic: ICT for the provision of inclusive quality education and life-long learning , at the 72nd Annual New Year School and Conference at the University of Ghana, Legon in Accra last Wednesday.
According to Dr Ampadu, Ghana, together with countries such as Cameroon, Mauritius and Botswana, was moving towards a stable economy that placed premium on ICT applications.