‘Strengthen Guidance, Counselling Unit’

 Guidance and Counselling Coordinator of the Accra Metro Directorate of Education, Ms Sylvia Aboagye The Guidance and Counselling Coordinator of the Accra Metro Directorate of Education, Ms Sylvia Aboagye, has called for the establishment of counselling units in schools to strengthen the guidance and counselling section of the Ghana Education Service (GES).

Advertisement

Currently, she said, most of the counsellors in the schools were teachers who had combined teaching with counselling sessions without any recognised office.

She made the statement on the sideline of a day’s workshop organised for guidance and counselling coordinators in the Accra Metropolis.

The workshop was organised by the GES in collaboration with the Virginia State University and LAWA Ghana.  

Ms Aboagye explained that students had challenges hence the need for specialised counsellors in the schools, stressing that counselling was a sacrificial job and that counsellors also had challenges.  

Ms Aboagye said most parents did not have time to monitor the activities of their children and left them at the mercy of their peers.

That, she said, paved the way for children to engage in sexual exploitations which jeopardised their future.

She explained that most children did not report sexual abuse against them because of the threat and stigma attached to it.

As counsellors, she urged them to nurture children to be assertive to give them the confidence to voice out their problems for the required assistance.

A participant in the workshop, Mrs Rose Kissi, also told the Daily Graphic that if a desk was established, it would make the section more efficient and effective for the students to confide in counsellors and added that the setting up of counselling units would make the task more respectable to gain the recognition and acceptance of parents and guardians.

In her address, the Coordinator of LAWA, Mrs Barbara Ayesu, stressed that parents also needed counselling in order to help in the upbringing of their children.

“Most parents give out their children for child trafficking without even knowing its consequences”, she said.

Out of ignorance and poverty, she stated, that some parents gave out their children to friends and relatives to help in their upbringing without monitoring their upkeep.

With counselling, she said, the parents could learn to cater for their children even with the little they had to keep their eyes on them.  

So far, Mrs Ayesu added LAWA had rescued more than 353 children between 2010 and 2012 who had been enrolled in school.

By Salomey Appiah & Rubi Ani-Adjei/Ghana

Connect With Us : 0242202447 | 0551484843 | 0266361755 | 059 199 7513 |

Like what you see?

Hit the buttons below to follow us, you won't regret it...

0
Shares