2026 BECE school selection after results have been announced, but what was your take on it? If there’s any policy change that many policymakers, NGOs, and the general public have called for in the education sector for a long time, it is the call for BECE candidate school selection to be done after the release of the results.
In 2023 and 2024, the African Education Watch boss, Mr. Kofi Asare, was one of the big advocates for such a system. With the 2026 BECE in sight, the Minister of Education, Hon. Haruna Iddrisu, informed the nation that the 2026 BECE School Selection will take place after the release of the results by WAEC.
While the news has been welcomed, more needs to be done in terms of planning, strategy, and implementation to ensure that the ills of school selection—previously done before or right after the examination—are not carried into the new selection window.
Potential Risks of the New 2026 BECE School Selection Timeline
The change in itself will not yield any results if we do not deal with issues such as the selling of school placements, excessive protocol lists, and the long list of candidates which reduces the competitiveness of placement. These practices often hand over placements in top schools to parents and politicians who have the means to buy their way through the placement system.
The change from school selection before the examination to after the release of the results is also likely to introduce new corrupt practices and strategies by persons with criminal minds searching for illegal placements to find a way around the system.
If the “after BECE result” window is not handled well, it could lead to:
Increased Monetization: The selling of protocol placement slots.
Protocol Abuse: MPs, Ministers, and officials often have protocol slots allowing them to present candidates regardless of whether the students obtained the required competitive grades.
Reduced Fairness: With all 450,000+ slots in Category A, B, and C schools available at the time of selection, system managers could exploit desperate parents, placing wards at the expense of those choosing based on merit.
Preventing Chaos and Self-Placement Issues
If the school selection after the release of BECE results is not handled well, it can create more chaos when placements are released. One reason for this change is to ensure that self-placement issues and associated stress are avoided.
Often, choices are made based on taste and preference instead of performance. The government’s decision to allow selection after the BECE means parents and candidates must move from mere preference to a decision driven by data, science, and general results.
Benefits of Post-Result School Selection
The 2026 BECE school selection after results is very important and, when well implemented, will deal with a lot of bottlenecks of the past systems. The post-BECE result release school selection is a great idea if implemented well. It would help:
Data-Driven Choices: It compels students and parents to make choices based on actual performance. If you secure an aggregate 15 and wanted to study Science at Presec or Aburi Girls, you will now know that your grade is not competitive enough for those Category A schools. This reduces over-subscription and gives the Ministry of Education (MoE) and Ghana Education Service (GES) peace of mind.
Increased Transparency: The issue of “wrong choices” becomes a thing of the past. The placement process will be devoid of the usual confusion and accusations from stakeholders. If the sale of slots is eliminated, it will increase the goodwill of the GES and MoE, making them a trusted brand.
READ: How To Avoid 2026 BECE School Selection Critical Mistakes: Choose BECE SmartPick Tracker
Recommendations for Maximum Efficiency of the New Post 2026 BECE School Selection System
The positives of this new regime will not be easy to achieve unless deep thinking and strategic plans are taken to design a system that stakeholders can trust. To achieve the best efficiency, the following decisions should be made:
1. Re-introduce Cut-off Points
The Ministry of Education must re-introduce the dreaded cut-off point for both aggregates and raw scores. This is not to prevent students from enjoying Free SHS, but to sanitize school choice options.
School-Level Cut-off: Only students with certain aggregates can choose a specific school.
Programme-Level Cut-off: Students must meet a specific score for competitive programmes (like Science or Business) within that school.
2. System Integration of Student Data
Ensure that when schools are selected, the student’s index number, grades, and final aggregates are captured in the system. The portal should filter out schools for which a student does not qualify.
For example, if a student with aggregate 15 attempts to select a school where they only qualify for Visual Arts or General Arts, the system should only display those specific options. This is the kind of system designed on SkulManager.com (https://skulmanager.com/shschoices/welcome.php) to help parents simulate and guide their selection before using the official CSSPS portal.
3. Public Education and Robust Logic
The MoE and GES must provide flawless education across all networks. Using well-planned videos and audio, they must explain the new system in a user-friendly way.
The MoE and GES have their work cut out for them to build a robust, science-powered system that resolves the challenges of the past. If they fail, we will come after them for failing the people of Ghana. The success or failure of the new 2026 BECE school selection system after BECE will be measured by its efficiency and not its popularity.
I am ready to share more ideas on how to make this system super responsive and one that solves the current challenges given the chance to share ideas.

The Ghana Education News Editorial Team is a specialized collective of education researchers, journalists, and policy analysts dedicated to providing high-fidelity reporting on the Ghanaian academic landscape. Serving as a primary bridge between governing bodies—including the Ghana Education Service (GES) and WAEC—and the public, the team leverages over a decade of combined experience to serve students, parents, and educators nationwide.
Lead Architect & Editor-in-Chief
The team is led by Wisdom Kojo Eli Hammond, a distinguished Ghanaian Edu-Tech Entrepreneur, AI Solutions Developer, and Product Architect with over 25 years of cross-disciplinary experience in education, finance, and digital media. Wisdom is the visionary force behind SkulManager, Ghana’s premier school management ecosystem, and the Lead Consultant at Education-News Consult.
A self-taught innovator, professional Web Designer, and regular columnist on GhanaWeb, Wisdom engineered SkulManager.com as the only platform strictly tailored to the GES Curriculum. His technical leadership has redefined educational assessment through a Hybrid Marking Ecosystem, pioneering the BECE and WASSCE Home Mock services—a unique fusion of WAEC-trained human examiners and advanced AI marking engines operational since 2022.
Wisdom’s 360-degree view of institutional challenges is grounded in his tenure as College President and Lecturer at Pinnacle College (Achimota), as well as his background as a school administrator and accountant. He is a dedicated lifelong learner currently advancing his studies at the Accra Institute of Technology (AIT), with academic ties to the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA).
An accomplished author, his works include Returnees of the Dead Forest (UK Published), Simplified Beacon of Light (850+ Q&A), and The Leader in Me. A foundational pillar of the award-winning NGO Human Rights Reporters Ghana (HRRG), Wisdom is committed to building intelligent systems that solve societal problems and prepare the next generation of Ghanaian students for a digital future.
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