Accelerated and complementary (alternative) approaches for schooling and education provision continue to gain grounds even at the post-2015 global mandate stages. The Wing School as an example of complementary basic education programme has made it possible to extend education to remote and deprived communities in Northern Regions of Ghana where the issue of non-enrolment and drop out incidences are high. However, the strength of the Wing Schools (WS) in Northern Ghana does not lie in its ability to boost enrolment alone but also to change the phase of schooling and learning. The language backgrounds of children from the hamlets and rural communities of the Northern part of Ghana are often from homogenous language contexts. This study reveal...
Between 1995–06 and 2005–06, more than 85,000 children between the ages of 8 and 14 years participat...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper explores, at the ...
In Ghana, plurilingual language use is the norm rather than the exception. It follows that the multi...
This paper relates to the broader purview of educational language policy in an African setting. It m...
This paper presents evidence on literacy trajectories for children in Ghana who enrolled in a Comple...
This study sought to evaluate the National Literacy Acceleration Programme (NALAP) on the teaching o...
The language of education is crucial to learners’ academic success. As a result, nations whose nativ...
Abstract. This comparative study looks at the implementation of Ghana’s 2007 language in education p...
The language of education is crucial to learners ’ academic success. As a result, nations whose nati...
Achieving Education for All (EFA) in Ghana and many parts of sub-Saharan Africa remains an elusive g...
This life history study examines how the changes in language and literacy policy in lower grades imp...
language plays a pivotal role in educational provision and its quality as it is the main medium that...
Children who completed the Complementary Basic Education (CBE) programme in the academic year 2016/1...
The English language curriculum for primary schools in Ghana spells out the various aspects, topics ...
This paper assesses the extent to which children’s language preference and their home environment ma...
Between 1995–06 and 2005–06, more than 85,000 children between the ages of 8 and 14 years participat...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper explores, at the ...
In Ghana, plurilingual language use is the norm rather than the exception. It follows that the multi...
This paper relates to the broader purview of educational language policy in an African setting. It m...
This paper presents evidence on literacy trajectories for children in Ghana who enrolled in a Comple...
This study sought to evaluate the National Literacy Acceleration Programme (NALAP) on the teaching o...
The language of education is crucial to learners’ academic success. As a result, nations whose nativ...
Abstract. This comparative study looks at the implementation of Ghana’s 2007 language in education p...
The language of education is crucial to learners ’ academic success. As a result, nations whose nati...
Achieving Education for All (EFA) in Ghana and many parts of sub-Saharan Africa remains an elusive g...
This life history study examines how the changes in language and literacy policy in lower grades imp...
language plays a pivotal role in educational provision and its quality as it is the main medium that...
Children who completed the Complementary Basic Education (CBE) programme in the academic year 2016/1...
The English language curriculum for primary schools in Ghana spells out the various aspects, topics ...
This paper assesses the extent to which children’s language preference and their home environment ma...
Between 1995–06 and 2005–06, more than 85,000 children between the ages of 8 and 14 years participat...
© 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This paper explores, at the ...
In Ghana, plurilingual language use is the norm rather than the exception. It follows that the multi...