President John Dramani Mahama has reiterated his government’s commitment to end the SHS double-track system.
According to President John Mahama, a hundred SHS schools have already reverted to single-track.
Mahama highlighted that his government is firmly committed to abolishing the double-track system entirely through a focused two-year intervention, which will be implemented this year and next year, and will eventually end the double-track system.
Speaking at the 54th National Delegates Conference of the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) in Accra on Monday, January 5, President Mahama stated, “In 2025 alone, the Free SHS program received 3.5 billion Ghana cedis under the GETFund. This has been the highest allocation since its inception, and this has strengthened logistics, feeding, and learning conditions in our secondary schools”.
He added, “I’m pleased to announce that about 100 double-track schools have already reverted to single-track. And the government remains firmly committed to abolishing the double-track system entirely through a focused two-year intervention, which we call the Ghana Secondary Learning Improvement Project — GSLIP.
This project will improve access and quality and restore full-time schooling for all students. So this year, next year are implementation. By the time we finish implementing, there’ll be no secondary school implementing double-track in this country.”
Meanwhile, the Minister for Education, Haruna Iddrisu, last year announced an 11-member committee to guide the reversal from double-track to single-track in SHSs and Senior High Technical Schools (SHTSs).
Prof. Godwin Awabil, University of Cape Coast (UCC), is the chair of the committee tasked with reviewing the 2024/2025 academic calendar and proposing a roadmap for a single-track.
The committee includes,
Prof. Godwin Awabil, University of Cape Coast (UCC)
Prof. Samuel A. Atintono, PRINCOF
Prof. Smile Gavua Dzisi (Mrs.), Deputy Director-General (Management Service), GES
Dr. Munawaru Issahaque, Deputy Director-General (Quality and Access), GES
D. W. Agbenyo, WAEC
Rosemond Wilson (PhD), WAEC
Mr. Augustus Agyemfra, CODE
Mr. David Odjidja, CHASS
Addo Nicholas Nii Kpakpoe, COHBS
Prince Charles Agyemang-Duah, Schools & Instructions Division, GES
Also, Haruna Iddrisu, the Minister for Education, has said the former government’s double-track system in Senior High Schools (SHSs) negatively affected the quality of education.
The Education Minister noted that the double-track system reduced contact hours and study time for students in the Senior High School.
Speaking at a media briefing on Sunday, August 24, 2025, Haruna Iddrisu stated, “The double-track system has impacted negatively on the quality and outcomes of education under the Free SHS policy. Students have fewer contact hours and less study time, which affects their performance.
“Government’s commitment to ending the system can only be realised at three levels: expanding infrastructure, strengthening digital resources in schools, and allowing private SHSs to absorb qualified students to ease the pressure,” he said at a media briefing.
Watch the video below:
Government to completely abolish SHS double-track system by end of 2026…#GHOneNews #EIBNetwork #GHOneTV #NewsAlert pic.twitter.com/mAAHl5Wifx
— GHOne TV (@ghonetv) January 5, 2026
