The lecture was on the theme: “Lawrence Alfred Creedy and the development of teacher education in Ghana, 1948-1962”.
It offered the platform to acknowledge the contribution of Lawrence Alfred Creedy, the first and only Missionary Principal of Komenda College, and laid a good foundation for the development of the college as well as a public signatory to the church’s deed of foundation.
Prof. Amoako-Gyampah underscored the need for UEW students to be taught the real essence of education to be able to impact knowledge to their students.
He noted that, although Ghana’s education had gone through turbulent past, teachers and leaders had provided the right direction for the country to have a resolute educational system comparable to the best system in the world.
Prof. Amoako-Gyampah paid tribute to Lawrence Alfred Creedy for providing direction and anchor for the future development of the college, saying, “Nurturing and developing the newly established Komenda College was a herculean task that required fortitude, vision, creativity, and unalloyed commitment.”
The foundation that was laid, he said, significantly contributed to the development of teacher education in Ghana.
“The establishment and development of Komenda College did not occur in a vacuum, but rather, it mirrors the ebbs and flows and the general trends underlying teacher education in Ghana, as well as the driving force of one tenacious leader,” Prof. Amoako-Gyampah noted.
The former Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church, Ghana, Most Rev Titus Awortwi Pratt, commended the College for promoting agriculture by training students and also promoting food security.
He also commended the College for the establishment of an Information Communication and Technology (ICT) laboratory, to ensure that students acquire the needed skills with the use and application of ICT to enable them to discharge their duties effectively in the field of work.
Prof. Amoako-Gyampah said the late Lawrence Alfred Creedy contributed immensely to teacher education as well as the development of the Methodist Church Ghana.
The Principal of Komenda College of Education, Very Rev Prof. Kwesi Nkum Wilson, mentioned that the educational institution had embarked on several infrastructural developments to enhance teaching and learning.
He, however, appealed for support from the college in the completion of some of the projects which stalled due to lack of funds.
FROM DAVID O.
YARBOI-TETTEH, KOMENDA