HomeEducation61,000 Candidates to Sit for 2026 TVET Certificate Examination

61,000 Candidates to Sit for 2026 TVET Certificate Examination

The Commission for Technical and Vocational Education and Training (CTVET) has announced that 61,506 candidates from public and private technical and vocational institutions nationwide will take part in this year’s May/June Certificate II examination, beginning Monday, May 18.

This figure reflects an 8.6 per cent increase over last year’s 55,295 candidates, underscoring growing enrolment and confidence in technical and vocational education in Ghana.

Addressing a press conference in Accra last Wednesday, CTVET Director‑General Zakaria Sulemana said the examination would be conducted at 169 centres across the country and conclude on June 12. He noted that 278 public and private pre‑tertiary TVET institutions will participate.

Mr. Sulemana further explained that this year’s examination marks the first implementation of the interim harmonised curriculum for all TVET institutions under the Ministry of Education and CTVET, following the enactment of the Education Regulatory Bodies Act, 2020 (Act 1023).

He said under the new arrangement, there would no longer be separate examinations for institutions previously examined under the National Vocational Training Institute (NVTI), the Technical Examinations Unit (TEU) and the former National Board for Professional and Technician Examinations (NABPTEX).

“All TVET institutions will take the same examination at the same time and at all examination centres,” he said. The Director-General explained that candidates would write four core subjects — English Language, Mathematics, Integrated Science and either Social Studies or Entrepreneurship — in addition to their trade electives.

He added that Information and Communication Technology (ICT), although compulsory under the curriculum, would not be examined. Mr Sulemana said the commission had strengthened supervision, invigilation and monitoring systems to ensure credible, transparent and secure examination.

He said CTVET would continue to deploy test serialisation across all core subjects and selected elective papers to minimise examination malpractice. Under the system, he explained that multiple versions of the same examination paper would be generated with variations in the arrangement of questions and answer options while maintaining the same standards and level of difficulty.

“This approach significantly minimises opportunities for examination malpractice and discourages dependence on leaked questions, popularly referred to as ‘Apo’,” he said. He added that six different series would be used for each paper developed under the serialisation system.

The Director-General further cautioned candidates against engaging in examination malpractice or relying on leaked questions circulated on social media. “True success is built on hard work, competence and character,” he said.

He also warned supervisors, invigilators and examination officials to adhere strictly to examination regulations, adding that any form of collusion, negligence or misconduct would attract sanctions in accordance with the laws governing examinations in the country.

Gender participation

On gender distribution, Mr Sulemana said 45,357 candidates, representing 73.7 per cent, were males while 16,146, representing 26.3 per cent, were females. He said 170 candidates with disabilities — comprising 92 males and 78 females — had also registered for the examination. Mr Sulemana also said female participation had improved from 14 per cent last year to 26.3 per cent this year.

“It is not very high, but it is progress worth noting,” he said.

Source: Maclean Kwofi

Benjamin Mensah
Benjamin Mensahhttps://freshhope1.org
Benjamin Mensah [Freshhope] is a young man, very passionate about the youth of this Generation. Very friendly, reliable and very passionate about the things of God and all that I do. The mission is to inform, educate and entertain. Feel free to send your whatsapp messages to +233266550849 and call on +233242645676
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