The Department of Education through the Measurement Services Division has released the top performing National High Schools. The National High Schools were ranked separately from the secondary schools and private schools. The Department of Education has seperately ranked the private schools from the system schools for this year 2021. Paradise College is the top performing private school in 2021.
The Catholic Mission run St Charles Lwuanga Secondary School has once again topped the Grade 10 Examinations. Cameron Secondary School in Milne Bay came second followed by consistent performer, Marianville Secondary School on third. The Top 10 schools in Grade 10 Performances are:
Most Improved Schools in Grade 10
All girls secondary school, Marianville Secondary School has topped Grade 12 once again for this years (2021) Examination results. The Education Department through the Measurement Services Division announced this while releasing the examinations results online at the Port Moresby National High School today. Top 10 in Grade 12 in 2021The top ten Secondary Schools in the Country are:
Most Improved in Grade12
Next : School Names Building After Late PNG Chief Ombudsman Manek A building housing six classrooms built at a cost of K350,000 at a primary school in Morobe was named after the late former Chief Ombudsman Chronox Manek. Nawaeb chief executive officer James Niapukali said the building took almost 14 months to complete because of funding delays. The six-in-one classroom at Boana Primary School in Nawaeb comes complete with furniture, including chairs, tables, blackboards and other essential classroom equipment. Nawaeb MP Kennedy Wenge said the funds for the classroom came from the district development authority (DDA). TA SECONDARY school principal in Wewak, East Sepik, is concerned about the inconsistent payment with the cash component of the tuition fee free (TFF) policy to his school. Mercy Secondary School principal Alexander Marcus said the only all girls’ school had a lesser complement of TFF payments since 2018. “The money is not coming,” he said. “We are not getting what we are supposed to be getting.” Marcus said with little to no TFF funds, the school had depended on project fees from parents. “We should be getting 63 per cent of the cash component from the Government and 37 per cent from parents in a year but for us, it is the other way around,” he said. THE University of Goroka (UOG) in Papua New Guinea is preparing to teach Mandarin in the campus’ Confucius Centre next year, the university’s Somare Research Institute executive director Dr Jane Awi says. “The centre will introduce the course next year when the China Open University approves and endorses its course contents,” she said. “The Chinese Embassy in Port Moresby has been working with the Chinese university and the UOG since the inception of the centre in 2018, forging a cordial relationship. THE Hela Department of Education will reward its top-performing grade 10 and 12 students, director Ronny Angu says. Angu said those who scored highly in the national examinations and attained A’s in their overall grades would be given incentives such as having their school fees paid. He said the incentives were to motivate the students and their teachers and would be given annually after the results were published online by the Education Department. Angu said head teachers would be required to access their school’s grades 10 and 12 online results next week and identify students who scored A’s in the subjects and their teachers. He said the department would also co-sponsor students who made it directly to universities next year and onwards. Schoolchildren at the Marorogo Primary School in Erave, Southern Highlands Province were thrilled to receive keys to a new double classroom fully fitted with desks to enhance learning. A new teacher’s house was also handed over to the school. Mineral Resources Development Company (MRDC) Managing Director Augustine Mano was on hand to present the brand new school infrastructures to the school and the community of Marorogo last Thursday. During the handover ceremony, Mano stressed the importance of investing in quality education using income from oil and gas and encourage students and the community to value education. “You must get good education; you must strive to be better than me. I never thought I would become a managing director of a big organization but here I am.” “Education provides the opportunity to be someone greater than me and this can only realize that through education.” MOROBE education programme adviser Keith Tangui says it will cost the division K1.5 million to repatriate all retired teachers to their home provinces.
He said hundreds of teachers who served in Morobe were still waiting to be repatriated with some having waited for the last 10 years. Sadly, some passed away this period. Ian Meaea, from Gulf, was one retired teacher who passed away in 2005 before he could be repatriated. He was posted to Morobe in 1977. Daughter Lavinia said her father spent 28 years of his teaching career in remote schools of Bulolo and Finschhafen in Morobe until his retirement. |
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