
The provisional 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) results, released by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), confront Ghana with a deepening crisis in secondary education. The catastrophic decline in core subjects, especially Core Mathematics and Social Studies, signals a failure to equip nearly half a million candidates with foundational knowledge. Only 48.73% of candidates achieved the minimum A1-C6 passes in Core Mathematics. These results confirm one of the poorest national performances recorded recently.
Catastrophic Core Subject Collapse
The data shows an alarming “Great Collapse.” The outright fail rate (Grade F9) in Core Mathematics nearly quadrupled, skyrocketing from 6.10% in 2024 to 26.77% in 2025. Chillingly, “nearly one out of every four students who sat for the exam failed the subject outright.” Similarly, the F9 rate for Social Studies almost tripled, jumping from 9.55% to 27.50%. Failure rates in English Language and Integrated Science also more than doubled.
This massive surge in failures is linked to a stunning fall in the crucial A1-C6 pass rate. Core Mathematics, the linchpin for many tertiary courses, saw its pass rate collapse by almost 18 percentage points. It plunged from 66.86% in 2024 to just 48.73% in 2025. The implications are stark: “more than half of the candidates did not secure the grades required for tertiary admission.” The futures of 461,736 candidates are now in jeopardy.
Voices from the Classroom and Home
These numbers translate into real-life heartbreak. A female Senior High School student, speaking anonymously, attributed the lack of focus to the Free SHS policy. She admitted, “The free SHS also contributes to the failure of the students.” She noted a lack of financial accountability meant students “will not take his studies seriously.”
Educationist Professor Stephen Adei offered a critical diagnosis. He argued that the challenge’s true source is at the basic school level. “The main source of the problem happens at the basic school level before the secondary school,” he stated. He cautioned that Ghana is “almost producing illiterate people at the basic level,” and warned, “Unless we tackle a fundamental issue… these results will be the best we can hope for.”
The Ghana Education Service (GES), through its Public Relations Officer, Daniel Fenyi, offered a crucial, nuanced response. While confirming the 2025 results “represent a true and credible reflection of students’ academic performance” and affirming close collaboration with WAEC in conducting the exams, Fenyi also admitted the severity of the decline was deeply concerning for the education system. He stated, for any genuine education system, “this result is quite worrying,” but stressed that the results are truly reflective of student capabilities: “the results you see are a true reflection of the competencies of our learners.”
WAEC attributes Failure to Core Skill Gaps
John Kapi, WAEC’s Head of Public Relations, provided insight into the failures on the JOY Super Morning Show. He stressed the decline “does not reflect a deviation from the curriculum.” Instead, it “indicates the need for strengthened teaching and student focus on practical problem-solving skills.”
Mr. Kapi detailed seven specific areas of Core Mathematics weakness. These included the inability to solve simple interest applications, translate word problems, and represent information in diagrams. He confirmed these topics were within the syllabus. Beyond mathematics, WAEC flagged a pervasive issue: candidates’ reliance on “social media diction and non-standard English” in their answers. This revealed a broad decline in formal academic communication skills.
Political Fallout: Blame and Historical Context
The sharp decline has quickly become a political flashpoint. The Minority in Parliament issued a strong statement criticizing the current government’s handling of the sector and the GES’s official response. The caucus highlighted the dramatic drop in Core Mathematics from 66.86% in 2024 to 48.73% in 2025, which followed a period of “consistent improvement from 2022 to 2024.” They contrasted the 2025 results with the much lower performance in 2016 (e.g., Core Mathematics at 33.12%), arguing that the previous government had successfully improved learning outcomes.
The Minority also directly challenged the GES’s attempt to attribute the poor performance partly to enhanced invigilation, describing the explanation as “unprofessional and unethical.” The caucus questioned, “Could it be a reason for the poor performance?” They stressed that while invigilation must protect integrity, it “should not, and must not put fear in the candidates” as this can negatively affect performance.
Systemic Context: Infrastructure and Free SHS
While WAEC focuses on student skills, analysts point to systemic flaws. Cletus Seidu Dapilah, Member of Parliament for Jirapa, cited “inadequate and uneven distribution of teachers across basic schools.” He noted that weak foundations lead to poor secondary school performance.
Experts demand a data-driven approach. Dr. Peter Anti Partey, Executive Director of IFEST, urged an end to assumptions. He stressed, “We should ask the Ministry of Education to let us know which schools are pulling the national averages down.” He asked what interventions the ministry would provide.
The Free SHS policy is widely debated. While increasing enrollment, stakeholders cite overstretched school resources and overworking of teachers. They also note reduced student motivation due to a lack of parental financial investment.
Universities hold the Line on Admission Standards
The University of Ghana signaled that academic rigor will not be compromised. Prof. Gordon Awandare, the Pro Vice Chancellor, stated the university “will not lower its admission cut-off points for the 2025/2026 academic year.”
Prof. Awandare explained the rationale. “At the University of Ghana, every year, we have many more students making the cut-off but not getting the opportunity to be admitted,” he said, citing limited space. He stressed that standards cannot be compromised. The message to struggling students is difficult: “We will advise that if they really want to come to Legon, they should resit some of the papers and improve their aggregates and try again.”
Integrity Crisis Tarnishes Results Release
The academic slump was worsened by a severe “integrity crisis.” The provisional results were marred by an unprecedented crackdown on malpractice. The Ghana Examinations Committee approved severe sanctions against thousands of students and dozens of personnel.
Specifically, 6,295 candidates had subject results annulled for bringing unauthorized materials. The entire results of 653 candidates were canceled for possessing mobile phones. A deeper rot was revealed. Results for candidates from 185 schools were withheld for suspected collusion.
Most damning is the criminal involvement. A total of 35 persons, including 19 teachers, faced legal action. WAEC confirmed that 19 of those individuals have already been arraigned before court and convicted to fines or prison terms. This sent a strong message against complicity. The convicted teachers’ names will be given to the Ghana Education Service for further disciplinary action.
Moving Forward: A Call for Urgent Reform
The 2025 WASSCE results are an unavoidable indictment of Ghana’s secondary education. The findings show a significant disconnect between teaching methods and the practical skills required for success. The dual crises—high failure rates and widespread malpractice—demand an urgent national response.
For Ghana, striving to build a skilled workforce, the fact that most high school graduates are deemed unfit for university raises fundamental questions about national development. Educational stakeholders must use this sobering data. The challenge is to implement measurable reforms, bridge the critical skills gap, and restore trust in the examination process.
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