Established | February 1953 |
---|---|
Affiliation | Government of Ghana |
Location | , , BB0023 , 7°26′42″N 2°34′32″W / 7.44510°N 2.57545°W |
Language | English |
Region Zone | Brong-Ahafo Ashanti / Brong Ahafo |
Short name | Betco |
Source: An Atlas of The Forty Colleges of Education in Ghana.[1] |
Berekum College of Education is a teacher education college in Berekum (Berekum Municipal District, Brong-Ahafo Region, Ghana).[1] The college is located in Ashanti / Brong Ahafo zone. It is one of the about 40 public colleges of education in Ghana.[2] The college participated in the DFID-funded T-TEL programme.[3]
History
Berekum College of Education is located at the south-eastern part of Berekum, on the Berekum-Sunyani road. The college was established in February, 1953 as a Government institution with the motto PER ARDUA AD ASTRA (Through the Sky to the Star). Nana Yiadom Boakye Owusu II, the then Omanhene of Berekum traditional area released 42hectares (103.491 acres) of land, and laid the foundation stone for the establishment of the college. In February 1953, sixty male students were enrolled. Mr. T.T. Buchanan was the College's first principal. Mr. Alex Godwin Kwakye was the first college prefect. Three dormitories were built and named after the first three principals – Buchanan House, Nicholas House, and Stewart House. Mr. I.E. Hayfron was the first Ghanaian principals of the college.[4]
The college took off with a 2-year certificate ‘B’ programme till 1961 when a 4-year Certificate ‘A’ programme was introduced. The last batch of the 2-year Certificate ‘B’ students left in 1963. In 1964, a 2-year Specialist programme in Mathematics was also introduced. The programme was transferred to Winneba in 1966. The college became a co-educational institution when women were admitted in 1965. In 1968, a 2-Year Post-Secondary Certificate ‘A’ course was introduced to run alongside the 4-Year Certificate ‘A’ course which phased out in 1971. Berekum Girls Secondary school was established in 1972, and attached to the college, which became a female institution. Men were re-admitted into the college in 1974 which rendered the Girls Secondary School removed in 1975. In that year, a 3-Year Post-Secondary programme was introduced to run alongside the 4 Year Post Middle programme that was re-introduced in 1975. A Modular programme for uncertificated teachers was introduced in 1984. The Post Middle programme was finally phased out in 1992.[4]
The vision of the college is An icon of excellence in teacher education. In September, 2007 the college was given accreditation to offer Diploma programme. However, the first batch of Diploma graduates passed out in July, 2007. Student enrolment as at October, 2007 stood at 916, comprising 613 men and 303 women. The college runs a Sandwich programme in Diploma in Basic Education for 546 certificate ‘A’ teachers, and 586 untrained teachers. Two hundred and thirty-one (231) untrained teachers are also on a sandwich programme for certificate ‘A’. There are 43 teaching staff members, comprising 36 men and 7 women. The college has seen impressive academic record over the years and have trained about eight thousand teachers, a good number of whom have served or are serving in other capacities as public servants, lawyers, accountants, lecturers, politicians, business executives, traditional rulers and media practitioners.
The college has a proud record in sports, for instance, in 1963, the college played the Government Secondary Technical School at Achimota School in the finals for the Presidential Trophy. The college emerged as the first runner-up. In 2007, the college emerged the overall champion in the Ashanti/Brong-Ahafo (ASHBA) Sports Competition. In 2008, it became the first runner-up in the ASHBA Sports Competition.[4]
Berekum college places emphasis on discipline, maintenance of plants and structures, and environmental cleanliness. Most of the infrastructural facilities were built in the fifties. In the seventies, some extension works were undertaken. The Government of Ghana with assistance from Kreditantstallt FÜr Wiederaufbau (KfW) completed some major rehabilitation and constructional works in the college in July, 2000. Within the same period, the Managing Director of Asuo Bomosadu Timbers and Sawmills (ABTS), Berekum donated a 7,000-gallon capacity water reservoir to the college to solve the acute water problem. Under the GETFund, the college has been provided with a modern one-storey Library Complex as well as a 12-Unit Classroom Block.[4]
Name | Years served |
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Mr. J.R.T. Nicholas | February, 1955 – October, 1957 |
Mr. I.M. Stewart | October, 1957 – August, 1958 |
Mr. I.E. Hayfron | August, 1958 - March, 1961 |
Mr. H.C. Essilfie (Ag.) | March, 1961 –September,1961 |
Mr. G.Y. Agyeman | September, 1961 – June, 1962 |
Mr. A.K.A Tinkorang | June, 1962 – September, 1963 |
Mr. E. Asiedu-Akrofi | September, 1963 – September,1965 |
Mr. C.K.A.A. Quarshie (Ag.) | September, 1965 – December,1965 |
Mr. A.I.Krampa | December, 1965 – August, 1968 |
Mr. I.K. Adjei | August, 1968 - October, 1970 |
Mr. A.G. Essilfie | December, 1970 – January, 1974 |
Ms. Margaret Amakye (Ag.) | January, 1974 – September, 1974 |
Mr. L.H. Osei Baffour | September, 1974 – October, 1978 |
Mr. V.P.K. Ametefe | February, 1979 – September,1980 |
Mr. M.M. Tettey | September,1980 – September,1982 |
Mr. J.K. Tuah | September, 1982 – January, 1997 |
Mr. Tom Coffie | January, 1997 – November, 1997 |
Mr. Yaw Adjei-Sarkodie | November, 1997 |
References
- 1 2 Björn Haßler, Jacob Tetteh Akunor, Enock Seth Nyamador (2017). An Atlas of The Forty Colleges of Education in Ghana. Available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International. Available at http://bjohas.de/atlas2017
- ↑ "National Accreditation Board, Ghana - Public Colleges of Education". Archived from the original on 2016-05-22. Retrieved 2017-12-28.
- ↑ "Our network". Transforming Teacher Education and Learning, Ghana. Archived from the original on December 29, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 "Learning Hub - T-TEL". www.t-tel.org. Archived from the original on 2019-07-22. Retrieved 2019-07-16.