“To
curb, if not eradicate completely this canker, pupils and students
should be impressed upon to use their leisure time in reading,” he said.
Mr
Tamakloe said this at an awards ceremony to crown this year’s
celebration of the International Children’s Book Day at Peki-Blengo in
the South-Dayi District of the Volta Region.
It was on theme: “Once Upon A Time, There Was a Story that the Whole World Told”.
Mr
Tamakloe said: “The public library today has become a platform that is
at the forefront of engendering education and development and therefore
the country cannot afford to lose the potential of public libraries.”
He,
therefore, appealed to institutions whose corporate social
responsibilities include the promotion of education to extend such
facilities to the Ghana Library Authority to enable it to bring
effective and efficient services to the citizenry.
Mr
John Yao Agbai, Headmaster of Peki Senior High School, lamented the
poor spoken and written English among students and called on educational
authorities to step up their supervision of teachers to enable them to
impact positively on their students.
Ms
Esther Akyea, Deputy Director in charge of Supervision and Monitoring
at the South-Dayi District Directorate of the Ghana Education Service,
reminded the pupils that knowledge was acquired through reading and
advised them to use time used in playing video games and watching films
to read so as to improve on their knowledge.
Ms
Elizabeth Akyea of Government College of Education (GOVCO),
Demonstration Junior High School, won a reading competition organized by
the Ghana Library Authority for selected schools in the district, and
was presented with a school bag, story books, exercise books, pens and
pencils.
Mr
Frank T.K. Dei, Director, Policy Planning, Budgeting, Monitoring and
Evaluation at the Ministry of Water Resources, Works and Housing, who
chaired the function, donated 1,000 Ghana cedis to GOVCO Demonstration
JHS for placing first in the reading competition.
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