Professor or Not? Why GTEC holds the stronger ground

Story By: Nana Ofori Owusu

The dispute between the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) and Dr. Grace Ayensu-Danquah over her use of the title “Professor” has stirred public debate. Ghanaian cultural tours

Her lawyer, David Ametefe, delivered a forceful defence, but when stripped of rhetoric, the facts favour GTEC.

Related: Stop using ‘unearned’ academic title or face us in court – GTEC writes to Chief of Staff on Deputy Minister of Health Grace Ayensu-Danquah’s title

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Dr. Ayensu-Danquah presented evidence of an appointment as Adjunct Assistant Professor of Surgery at the University of Utah. That fact is not in dispute. But the crux of the matter lies in academic equivalence.

In the American system, “Assistant Professor” is an entry-level faculty rank — the equivalent of a lecturer in Ghana.Ghanaian cultural tours

In our Commonwealth system, the title Professor is the pinnacle of academia, reserved for those with long records of scholarship and research.

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To use “Professor” without qualification risks misleading the public into assuming a higher rank than is actually held.

Critics claim GTEC’s intervention is politically motivated. But this does not hold up. The Commission has consistently raised red flags against individuals using unearned or honorary professorships.

Its concern is not with politics but with safeguarding academic standards from inflation.

It is true that GTEC cannot regulate degrees or titles awarded by foreign universities. But it does have a responsibility to protect the Ghanaian public from misrepresentation.

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That means applying universal equivalences so that foreign titles are accurately understood in our context.

An Assistant Professor in Utah is not a Professor in Ghana. The distinction matters — especially when titles carry weight in public service, policy, and politics.Ghanaian cultural tours

Lawyer Ametefe is right on jurisdictional grounds: GTEC cannot invalidate a foreign appointment.

But he sidesteps the substantive truth.

His client may use “Assistant Professor of Surgery, University of Utah” with full legitimacy. What is misleading is shortening this to “Professor” in Ghana, where the title carries a very different meaning.

At stake is not just one person’s designation, but the credibility of our academic culture. Titles are not ornaments; they are markers of achievement. Inflating them dilutes the respect owed to those who have earned them at the highest level.Ghanaian cultural tours

Dr. Ayensu-Danquah’s achievements must be respected, hailed, and indeed celebrated. She stands as a great exemplar to women — particularly African women — and is an inspiration to many.

Her academic and professional record speaks for itself. However, the title of Professor, for now, does not fit.

In this case, reality weighs heavier than rhetoric — and GTEC is on the stronger ground.

 

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