The Ministry of Education (MoE) has issued stern warning to all teaching and non teaching staff of the Ghana Education Services (GES) who will be caught aiding and abetting in 2025 WASSCE malpractice. According to the ministry, such staff of the GES will face severe punishment.
This was contained in press release by the MoE dated 5th August, 2025.
It also reminded “all school authorities, teachers, invigilators, and supervisors that the credibility and integrity of the examination process must be upheld at all times.”
It called on all WAEC permanent and temporal staff to be vigilant and report any suspicious activity before, during, or after examinations.
In a related development, the LEAD Impact Foundation (LEAD), which is championing issues of Leadership, Education, Advocacy and Digital Skills, has called on WAEC to also put its house in order and its checks to ensure its staff do not become the conduit for WASSCE exam malpractices.
LEADIF called for zero tolerance for examination malpractice and a radical approach to dealing with persons found guilty.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2025 WASSCE: TEACHING AND NON-TEACHING STAFF CAUGHT AIDING OR ABETTING EXAMINATION MALPRACTICE WILL FACE SEVERE PUNISHMENT
Today, the 5th of August 2025, marks the official commencement of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE). On behalf of the Minister for Education, I wish to remind all school authorities, teachers, invigilators, and supervisors that the credibility and integrity of the examination process must be upheld at all times.
The Ministry of Education, working in close collaboration with the Ghana Education Service (GES), the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), and the security agencies, will not tolerate any form of cheating, leakage, or compromise in this year’s WASSCE.
Staff members found guilty of aiding or abetting examination malpractice will face strict disciplinary action, including dismissal and possible jail term. The integrity of our examinations is non-negotiable, and all teaching and non-teaching staff are expected to uphold the highest standards of honesty, integrity, and accountability.
We also urge all personnel to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity before, during, or after examinations. Protecting the fairness of the examination process is a collective responsibility of all. We expect all stakeholders to work together to maintain a culture of integrity and to ensure that students succeed based on merit.
The Ministry of Education will not shield anyone who engages in any attempt to aid or abet any examination irregularity.
Schools are places of learning, not breeding grounds for dishonesty. Those who participate in any acts that compromise the integrity of the examination will be dealt with severely. This year, we are watching closely. Surveillance and monitoring have been intensified. The consequences of misconduct will be swift, public, and unforgiving.
You have been employed to nurture, guide, and support students in their academic journey, not to compromise their future.
“There must be zero tolerance for exam malpractice across the country; the young ones must grow in integrity and let no one of them be associated with exam malpractice,” the Honorable Minister for Education, Haruna Iddrisu, has stated.
To our hardworking WASSCE candidates, we urge you to remain focused and confident. You have been prepared well. You have what it takes to succeed with integrity. Believe in yourselves, and go into the examination room knowing that your best effort is enough.