UEW Opens 2026/2027 Admissions for Undergraduate and Postgraduate Programmes

UEW Opens 2026/2027 Admissions for Undergraduate and Postgraduate Programmes
UEW Opens 2026/2027 Admissions for Undergraduate and Postgraduate Programmes
The University of Education, Winneba has officially opened applications for admission into its undergraduate and postgraduate programmes for the 2026/2027 academic year.

The admissions exercise covers Full-time, Sandwich, and Distance programmes for suitably qualified applicants seeking to pursue diploma, bachelor’s, master’s, MPhil, MBA, and PhD programmes.

According to the university, candidates who will be sitting for the 2026 WASSCE are encouraged to apply as Awaiting Results applicants.

UEW stated that undergraduate applications are open to holders of WASSCE, SSSCE, ABCE, GBCE, GCE Advanced Level, diploma qualifications, and mature applicants who meet the required criteria.

For bachelor’s degree programmes, WASSCE applicants must obtain at least six credit passes including English Language, Mathematics, and Integrated Science or Social Studies, as well as three relevant elective subjects with an aggregate of 36 or better.

Mature applicants must be at least 25 years old by September 30, 2026, provide proof of age, possess relevant academic qualifications, and pass the university’s General Aptitude Test and Subject Area Test.

The university also announced postgraduate openings for programmes including M.A., M.Ed., M.Sc., MBA, MPhil, and PhD across regular, sandwich, weekend, and distance study modes.

International applicants are eligible to apply but must meet programme-specific requirements, demonstrate English proficiency, and provide supporting academic documents.

Application voucher fees have been set at GH¢255 for undergraduate applicants, GH¢325 for postgraduate applicants, and US$100 for international applicants.

UEW announced that Sandwich applications will close on June 30, 2026, while Direct and Mature applications will close on September 30, 2026.

The university cautioned applicants against dealing with middlemen or paying money to any person in an attempt to gain admission, stressing that the process is conducted transparently.