19/05/2026
CAN INTEGRITY SURVIVE IN A SYSTEM PEOPLE NO LONGER TRUST?
I think if GES, WAEC and other stakeholders truly want to understand the growing culture of cheating in BECE and WASSCE, they should read the reactions under my recent post on examination malpractice.
We have spoken, and many of the responses point to disappointment in leadership, frustration with the education system, and a growing belief that integrity does not pay; Survival does.
Many people questioned the relevance of what they learn in school. Someone asked, “How will algebra change my life?” Others described the syllabus as overloaded and disconnected from the reality outside school.
What shocked me most was not only the frustration, but how many people openly questioned whether integrity still pays. Some asked, “Can we eat integrity?”
That alone tells us something deeper is wrong.
A system that frustrates people cannot suddenly expect strong moral values without addressing the conditions shaping the mindset of the youth. Yet, no matter how difficult life becomes, a society that abandons honesty and discipline risks destroying its future completely.
As a nation, we must be concerned. Not only about cheating in exams, but about how money, shortcuts, and survival are slowly replacing values, integrity, and conscience.
This conversation is bigger than education.
It is about the future of our generation.