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Accreditation Board to audit private varsity lecturers’ qualifications

The National Accreditation Board (NAB) will start auditing the qualifications of lecturers in all private chartered universities in the country from next year, the Executive Secretary of the board, Dr Kingsley Nyarko, has said.
The move, he explained, was to, among other things, ensure that institutions operated according to the guidelines of the board.
Dr Nyarko said this in Accra on Tuesday when he outlined the new Five-Year Strategic Plan of the NAB.
The plan, he said, was the result of months of consultations and deliberations between the board and a cross-section of stakeholders.
He mentioned the private chartered institutions whose lecturers would be audited to include the Valley View University, the Ashesi University and the Central University and said the move was to ensure quality assurance.
In the past, Dr Nyarko added, the NAB had audited public tertiary institutions, including the University of Cape Coast, the University of Ghana, the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and the University for Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA).
Throwing more light on the auditing of institutions, he said last year, for instance, three public institutions — the University for Development Studies (UDS), the Kumasi and the Mampong campuses of the University of Education, Winneba (UEW) and the University of Mines and Technology (UMaT) — were audited, with a focus to find out whether they were still operating within their mandates.
“We need to find out how they are improving upon their quality because these are institutions that were established by acts of Parliament, and by our regulations, we need to go there every five years and see how they are making progress,” he said.
In order to ensure that the highest standards and quality were achieved in tertiary education, Dr Nyarko said, the work of the board would be underpinned by professionalism, responsiveness, excellence, integrity and innovation.