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 activeness among basic school girls in the Ashanti Region has led to 
many of them getting pregnant and their academic dreams shattered. 
 Mrs
 Emma Awateng-Mensah, the Regional Girls’ Education Officer, termed the 
situation as deeply disturbing and said every effort must be made to 
tackle it head-on.
 
 She told the Ghana News Agency that over the 
past four years a total of 357 girls could not write the Basic Education
 Certificate Examination for the simple reason of having become 
pregnant.
 
 These are teenage girls from 13 and 16 years and the situation should give cause for everybody to worry, she said.
 
 Mrs
 Awateng-Mensah blamed irresponsible parenting for what is happening, 
saying, parents needed to be vigilant and spend quality time with the 
adolescent girls in counselling them.
 
 She asked parents to shield
 their children from bad peer influence and follow with keen interest 
whatever they do on the internet, chat platforms and on the mobile 
phone.
 
 “Nobody should discount the powerful influence that movies
 and television programmes meant for adults could have on children – the
 curiosity and the tendency to practice what they see.”
 
 She said 
as part of measures by the Ghana Education Service (GES) to reverse the 
trend, girls’ clubs are being formed in basic and senior high schools in
 the region to provide the pupils with adequate sex education, build 
their self-esteem and actively engage them to put their time to 
profitable use.
 
 Mrs Awateng-Mensah appealed to community leaders 
and other stakeholders to combine efforts to promote girl-child 
education and discourage them from early sex.
 
 She encouraged 
teenage mothers to take advantage of the system introduced by the GES, 
which gives opportunity for their re-entry into the school system to 
complete their basic education and climb further the educational ladder.
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