Evangelical Presbyterian College of Education, Amedzofe

Evangelical Presbyterian College of Education, Amedzofe is a teacher education college in Amedzofe (Ho West District, Volta Region, Ghana).[1] The college is located in Volta Zone. It is one of 46 public colleges of education in Ghana.[2] The college participated in the DFID-funded T-TEL programme.[3]

Evangelical Presbyterian College of Education, Amedzofe
Other name
E. P. College of Education, Amedzofe
AffiliationGovernment of Ghana
Location, ,
V10523
,
6.84324°N 0.43728°E / 6.84324; 0.43728
LanguageEnglish
Region
Zone
Volta Region
Volta Zone
Short nameAmeco
Source: An Atlas of The Forty Colleges of Education in Ghana.[1]

As of May 2019, the college is affiliated with the University of Ghana.[4]

History

Evangelical Presbyterian College of Education (AMECO) was opened on February 10, 1946 with the motto ‘ Education for Service ”. The founding fathers of the College were Mr. W.M. Beveridge, a Scottish missionary, Rev. C.G.Baeta, Rev. R.S. Kwami, Mr. Winfred Addo, Rev. McMillian and Mr. Tom Barton. Members of the teaching staff in 1946 were Mrs. Isa S. Beveridge, Mr. V.O. Anku, Mr. R.Y. Gletsu and Mr. S.K. Agbley.[5] The vision of the College is to position itself to become a reputable College in teacher education, and to be a pace setter in Information Communication Technology education. The College was established with the admission of 30 men. Rev. W.M. Beveridge, was the first principal of the College. In January 1950, the College became a co-educational institution, when it admitted its first batch of 20 female students. AMECO has followed prescribed courses to meet the teacher needs of the country for basic education.[5]

The College has within the sixty years of its existence fulfilled the dreams and aspirations of the founding fathers. AMECO has trained about 6,000 teachers for the nation.

The following principals have administered the College:
Name Years served
Rev. W.M. Beveridge 1946 – 1962
Mr. T.W. Kwami 1962 – 1973
Mr. W. Otu (Ag.) 1973 – 1974
Mr. M.O. Mireku 1974 – 1976
Mr. A.A Bekui 1976 – 1982
Mr. B.B.K. Adjabeng (Ag.) 1982 – 1983
Mr. I.K. Cudjoe 1983 – 1986
Rev. O.K. Klu 1986 – 1988
Mr. M.A.Y. Fie 1988 – 1995
Mr. V.K. Akude (Ag.) 1995 – 1996
Mr. J.N.K. Fianu 1996 – 2000
Rev. E.K. Gaewu 2000 – 2004
Mr. J.D. Koka 2005

Programmes

The courses it has provided over the years are;

  • two-year post middle Teacher's Certificate ‘A’,
  • 4-year post middle Teacher's Certificate ‘A’,
  • 3-year post secondary Teacher's Certificate ‘A’
  • 3-year post secondary Diploma in Basic Education introduced in October, 2004.
  • Specialist programme in Home Science introduced in 1974, but later transferred to Aburi.[5]
gollark: No.
gollark: Minoteaur will probably have macros for some insane reason.
gollark: And yet I *am* developing it.
gollark: It is already too late. "Minoteaur" approaches.
gollark: Generate a language at random.

References

  1. Björn Haßler, Jacob Tetteh Akunor, Enock Seth Nyamador (2017). An Atlas of The Forty Colleges of Education in Ghana. Available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International. Available at http://bjohas.de/atlas2017
  2. National Accreditation Board, Ghana - Public Colleges of Education
  3. "Our network". Transforming Teacher Education and Learning, Ghana. Archived from the original on December 29, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  4. Adams, Claude Nyarko (2019-05-18). "Ghana: 6 Colleges of Education Now Affiliated to University of Ghana". Ghanaian Times (Accra). Retrieved 2019-07-11.
  5. "Learning Hub - T-TEL". www.t-tel.org. Retrieved 2019-07-29.



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