Abstract

Rural–urban disparity in economic and social development in Ghana has led to disparities in educational resources and variations in students’ achievement in different parts of the country. Nonetheless, senior high schools (SHSs) in rural and urban schools follow the same curriculum, and their students write the same West Africa Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (WASSCE), which qualifies them to access higher education in Ghana’s public universities. Urban SHSs are also recognized nationwide as good schools where students make it to university. Moreover, performance patterns with regard to admission of SHS graduates into university also vary between rural and urban schools; consequently, some parents do everything to get their children in urban SHSs, even consenting to placement in visual arts, a program deemed appropriate only for academically weak students. This study therefore adopted the qualitative-quantitative research approach with interview, observation, and questionnaire administration to investigate the critical factors that affect academic performance of SHS students, particularly those in visual arts as case study. Findings from six public SHSs in Kumasi—two each in rural, peri-urban, and urban areas—revealed that urban schools perform better than rural and peri-urban schools because they attract and admit junior high school graduates with excellent Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) grades, have better infrastructure, more qualified teachers, prestigious names, and character that motivate their students to do well. This suggests that bridging the rural–urban gap in educational resources could promote quality teaching and learning, and thereby raise academic achievement for SHS students in Ghana.

Highlights

  • Education is one of the most powerful instruments known for reducing poverty and inequality and for laying the basis for sustained economic growth

  • Field data to verify the existence of any disparities in teaching, learning, and student achievement in senior high schools (SHSs) located in rural, peri-urban, and urban communities in Ghana were gathered via observation, interview, and questionnaire administration

  • Only a small sample of 120 visual arts students spread across six schools that represent SHSs in rural, periurban, and urban settings in the Kumasi metropolis in Ashanti Region was studied, the findings attest to obvious differences existing between academic performance of students in the SHSs in general but among students on the visual arts program

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Summary

Introduction

Education is one of the most powerful instruments known for reducing poverty and inequality and for laying the basis for sustained economic growth. It raises the productivity and efficiency of individuals and produces skilled manpower that is capable of leading economic development. Education is a process through which the intellectual, moral capacities, proper conduct, and technical competency of individuals are developed to make them cultural members of their societies (Tuan, 2009, as cited in Dorleku, 2013). Learning is the medium through which the attainment of individuals and the nation’s educational goals can be achieved (Aremu & Sokan, 2003). Teaching output is measured largely by student learning and academic achievement (Ankomah, 2002)

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