President Nana Akufo-Addo says the teacher licensure exams policy will not put impediments in the way of teachers from the colleges of education and other tertiary institutions.

According to him, the policy "is meant to enhance professionalism in teaching and guarantee that our teachers meet a minimum standard of qualification, through an independent examination, so as to be able to teach in our classrooms.  If education is important to us, then it requires that we maintain the best standards”

President Akufo-Addo gave the assurance at the investiture and induction service of Rev Father Prof Anthony Afful-Broni, the fourth Vice-Chancellor of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW).

He urged Rev Father Prof Afful-Broni to “use his full gifts” to promote the spirit of reconciliation in the university during his tenure of office.

According to him, reconciliation represents the surest route to success in the daunting task ahead.

The President stated that the investiture took place on the heels of recent happenings in the university which disturbed all.

“It is worth noting, however, that the stakeholders have acted within the confines of the law to ensure that this university has a substantive leadership in place to help it achieve the goals for which it was established. To all whose diverse efforts helped in restoring normalcy to UEW, you have the appreciation of a grateful nation,” he added.

With UEW performing an important role in the social and economic transformation of Ghana, the President indicated that his government has demonstrated its commitment to the growth of the university.

He pledged to help ensure that UEW fulfils its mandate, saying, “Our goal is to help restore the teaching profession to the status it once enjoyed and make it an attractive career choice.”

Referring to Rev Father Prof Afful-Broni, President Akufo-Addo was confident that the UEW has a person capable of not only steering the affairs of the university for the next four years, but also spurring it on to even greater heights.

“His induction into office today is a mark of the trust that the governing council and faculty of the university have reposed in him, and I am confident that this trust will not be broken. His wealth of experience, with decades of service to church and classroom, makes him an appropriate person for this all-important assignment,” he added.

The President reminded the new vice-chancellor of one of the most important and immediate challenges which would confront the university and others, i.e. the dramatically increased population of students who will be seeking admission in some two years as a result of the Free Senior High School policy.

The President strongly disagreed with the stance by some who continue to state that all the infrastructural needs of senior high schools should have been addressed before the rollout of the Free SHS policy.

He quoted scriptures from the Bible to back his decision to rollout the Free Senior High School (SHS) education policy in a wholesale manner.

“I take comfort in the words of the Holy Scripture, in Ecclesiastes chapter 11 verse 4, which says: ‘If you wait until the wind and the weather are just right, you will never sow anything and never harvest anything,” he said.

The President continued, “We have taken the first bold step because we cannot continue to watch as tens and tens of thousands of qualified Ghanaian children drop out of school because they cannot afford fees. Free SHS is here to stay and will be a permanent feature of our educational architecture,” he added.