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Kalil Condé expressed a feeling of joy when, surrounded by friends and teachers, he took the Experimental Sciences option in French-Arabic, the first in the Republic, on the morning of Wednesday July 24, 2024. He also returned to the secret that allowed him to occupy this honorary position, a Guineematin.com journalist reports in Kankan.
On the evening of Tuesday, July 23, 2024, the Guinean ministry responsible for pre-university education published the results of the single bachelor’s degree for the class of 2024. This year the national success rate is 24.64%. But in Kankan prefecture it is 38.42%, well above the national average. The first French-Arab profile in the Republic, the experimental science option, comes from Kankan. I am Kalil Condé, from Kérouané, a student at Alpha Yaya Diallo high school in the Briqueterie district. Kalil Condé was born in 2021 and today he is a happy student.
“It’s a feeling of satisfaction and joy. I’m very happy with the result, happy that my dream has come true, I’m overwhelmed by the result. The secret is revision. With revision, patience and sleepless nights, everything is possible. Since the first year, I dreamed of coming to this place one day… What I want to study at university is medicine, otherwise I want to study computer engineering. Those who say that students at the Franco-Arab School can only serve as imams are wrong. If it was only for the purpose of becoming an imam, we would not introduce exact subjects in our curriculum. We have experimental sciences, we study Arabic and French. There, we have four common subjects: mathematics, chemistry, physics and biology. We also discuss the same topics,” he said.
For the 23-year-old winner, Franco-Arab schools are neglected in Guinea, and he believes that this reality must change.
“French-Arab schools are seriously neglected in Guinea. We see this in the lack of teachers in these educational institutions; this is nothing new. Sometimes we think that those who attend French-Arab schools do not have French proficiency, which is a mistake. Since we study the same subjects and achieve the same grades, we must be considered the same as students in French schools,” he said.
Guineematin.com from Kankan, Abdoulaye N’koya SYLLA
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