Tag: Education Minister

  • NANS hails Tinubu over redeployment of Alausa as Education Minister

    NANS hails Tinubu over redeployment of Alausa as Education Minister

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), West Africa Affairs has hailed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for redeplpying Dr. Tunji Alausa as Minister of Education.

    The body expressed confidence that Alausa’s wealth of experience, dedication and passion for advancing education sector will bring about positive reforms in coming years.

    A statement by the Director, West Africa Affairs NANS Diaspora, Com. Joshua Olakunle also congratulated Alausa on his redeployment, saying under his leadership, students will witness transformative changes that will further enhance quality of education, ensuring its accessibility, inclusivity, and global competitiveness.

    He appealed to Alausa to revisit the ban on recognition of certificates from institutions in Togo and Benin Republics, saying the decision has affected large number of students and parents who have invested significant resources in their children’s education in these countries. 

    According to him, suspension of certificates from these institutions has created uncertainty and emotional distress for both students and parents who are now faced with possibility of their years of academic pursuit being nullified.

    He said: “We urge you to consider the financial implications and the sacrifices made by Nigerian families, many of whom took loans and other financial risks to provide their children with quality education outside the country. 

    “By lifting this ban, you would be offering these students a second chance to contribute meaningfully to the nation’s development without their academic achievements being invalidated.

    “While we understand the need for standards and regulations, we appeal for a balanced approach that considers the future of thousands of students who are affected by this ban. We believe that with your proactive leadership, a solution that safeguards educational standards and recognizes these institutions can be reached.

    Read Also: NANS seeks sack of VCs allegedly sabotaging student’s loan

    “Furthermore, we would like to express that NANS Diaspora is ready and willing to work collaboratively with your office to help put in place the necessary academic standards for institutions in Togo and Benin Republics. 

    “We are committed to ensuring that Nigerian students studying in these countries receive quality education that meets internationally recognized benchmarks. Together, we can establish systems that uphold educational excellence while protecting the interests of Nigerian students abroad.

    “We trust that your administration will find a balanced solution that benefits all stakeholders, and we look forward to working with you in this regard. We wish you a successful and impactful tenure.”

  • Education Minister’s phone number hacked

    Education Minister’s phone number hacked

    The telephone number of the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, has been hacked and his Whatsapp page used by unauthorised individuals, an official of the ministry has said.

    In a statement issued by Folashade Boriowo, the Director Press and Public Relations of the ministry on Friday in Abuja urged everyone to disregard any message of request received from the said number until further notice.

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    “We deeply regret any inconvenience this may cause.

    “The matter has been reported to the relevant authorities and is under investigation.

    “We advise all members of the public to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activity,” Boriowo said.

  • Why Nigeria, others must use research for developmental growth, by education minister

    Why Nigeria, others must use research for developmental growth, by education minister

    The Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, has emphasised the necessity for Nigeria and other African nations to harness the potential of research for growth and development.

    He highlighted that the federal government, led by President Bola Tinubu, has initiated a roadmap to stabilise the country’s education sector.

    Speaking at the ongoing 2024 West and Central African Research and Education Network conference in Abuja, the minister affirmed the vital role of research and education in fostering sustainable development.

    He noted that Nigeria is taking proactive measures to support all levels of the education sector, aiming to foster critical thinking and establish skills and innovation hubs nationwide.

    Read Also: Declare a state of emergency now!

    He said: “In line with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu, the Federal Ministry of Education under my leadership has developed a roadmap for the education sector to transform the educational system of Nigeria. We are also taking bold steps to support all levels of our educational system to nurture critical thinking and also establish skills and innovation hubs across the country.

    “We must harness the power of research and education to propel the African continent forward. Whether it is in the fields of healthcare, technology, agriculture or governance. The solutions to our most pressing issues lie in the scholarly minds of our researchers and educators.”

    Acting Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, Chris Maiyaki encouraged participants to embrace digital transformation, foster collaboration, and cultivate a culture of innovation and entrepreneurship among students and faculty.

    Maiyaki’s remarks highlighted the importance of preparing higher education and research communities for the challenges and opportunities ahead, calling for engagement in thought-provoking discussions, sharing best practices, and exploring innovative solutions to common challenges.

  • Again, FG, ASUU meeting deadlock

    One month after it embarked on an industrial action, the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) is not returning to the class room soon as the meeting between the leadership and Federal Government has again ended in a deadlock.

    The meeting which took place at the Ministry of Education failed to resolve the issue raised by the union which includes reconstruction of the committee to renegotiate the agreement between the union and government among others.

    Read Also:Education stakeholders call for dialogue to end ASUU strike

    The union embarked on the strike on November 4 over the poor funding of Nigerian universities and non-implementation of previous agreements by the government.

    National President of ASUU, Prof Biodun Ogumyemi told newsmen after the meeting that both sides were yet to arrive at a compromise.

    He said “For now, we have started to discuss, we are yet to reach any concrete decision. Once we have more information, we will make ourselves available to the press.”

    Ogumyemi said the meeting will reconvene very soon to continue negotiations, but was not definite.

    The government’s representative at the meeting included the education minister, Adamu Adamu; the permanent secretary of the education ministry, Sunny Echono; a representative of National Universities Commission and a representative from the National Income, Wages and Salaries Commission.

    The government had issued a no work no pay directive to Vice Chancellor’s but withdrew at the last minute.

  • Education minister urges Islamic scholars to preach true doctrines

    Education Minister Mallam Adamu Adamu has urged scholars of Islamic doctrines and jurisprudence to ensure only those versed in the religion are permitted to preach to check the spread of negative influence on young stars.

    A statement by the Director (Press & Public Relations), Mrs C.P. Ihuoma, noted that the minister gave this, charge when the Management of the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID), led by the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Ibrahim Abubakar Njodi, visited him in Abuja.

    Adamu said the Federal Government would take necessary measures to safeguard the lives and properties of students and officials of the University who have been repeatedly attacked by Boko Haram and other criminal gangs.

    The minister praised the university community for its resilience and perseverance in promoting teaching and learning in such hostile environment.

    He added that whatever extra ordinary actions taken by the ministry to alleviate their predicament was in exercise of its statutory duties of superintending over the education sector.

    On his part, the Vice Chancellor thanked the Federal Government for approving funds for the fortification of the university campus against repeated attacks by the insurgents.

    Njodi also thanked the Minister for personally visiting the institution to formally commiserate with them over their challenges. This good gesture, he said, wouldl motivate them to work harder to achieve the set objectives of the university.

     

  • Fixing education’s woes

    Last week, President Muhammadu Buhari gathered his ministers, aides, heads of parastatals and others to Aso Rock to discuss the education sector.

    At that meeting, the Education Minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu lamented the poor funding of the sector over the years, saying budgetary allocations were nowhere near what even smaller countries spent on education.

    Between 2012 and 2017, the highest amount Nigeria has allocated to the education was 10.53 per cent of the 2014 budget, which came toN493 billion. The average has been six per cent. In 2018, the government plans to spend seven per cent on education.

    Adamu is asking for up to N1 trillion yearly which would bring Nigeria closer to spending double digits percentage on education.

    Former Education Minister, Dr Obiageli Ezekwesili is also supportive of increased investment in education. She said countries like Singapore, China, Malaysia and India have moved from the backwaters of under development to the superhighway of development because they invested in human capital development. She gave China as an example of one country that lifted 700 million of its people out of poverty in 30 years.

    She is positive that commitment to human capital development like these countries, will change the lives of over 100 million Nigerians currently living below the poverty line.

    I applaud President Buhari for setting time aside to discuss how to move our education sector forward. I also praise the Education Minister for being honest enough to lay the poor state of the sector bare to the President, warning him he would not fulfil his party’s campaign promises if he failed to commit more funds to the sector.

    My concern, however, is with the judicious use of whatever funds are allocated to education. I expect that with what he learnt from the retreat, President Buhari would go back to shake the national purse, checking what the nation could do away with so education could get more money. It is therefore of utmost importance that the money be expended well. It must achieve the purpose for which it was voted. It is not enough to budget more money; it would come to no avil if at the end of the day we have nothing to show for it. Before even voting more money, we must decide what direction we want to go with our education. What do we want to achieve? Where is the world going? What opportunities are there for us to take advantage of? What can we give that the world needs? How can we take advantage of our young population? To do these, the President and his team cannot work without data. Nigeria is notorious for not have trusted data to work with. We like to politicise everything – manipulating population figures, achievements, results, learning outcomes just to score political points. We don’t need that any more. We need the truth and data gathered the proper way will tell us the truth we need to take the right decisions for our future. So, dear President, do not vote more money without knowing what the data says about enrolment, retention in schools, number of teachers, number of schools, infrastructure, assessment of learning outcomes, and the like. And, please, let this data be gathered by our own people – not development partners.

    After budgeting on the basis of available data, the next challenge would be for the President to ensure that the budget performs. The funds have to be released in time – and – the funds have to be judiciously utilised. We don’t want to hear things like a classroom block that should have cost N20 million was built for 60 and yet requires major repairs within a year of use. We should follow the money. When what is budgeted can be accounted for, then we can say we have invested in education and our future.

     

  • Post-UTME costs more than N2,000

    Post-UTME costs more than N2,000

    In June last year, the Education Minister, Malam Adamu Adamu, barred tertiary institutions from conducting Post-Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) screening, saying a second examination was unnecessary after the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) conducted by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB).   He was also averse to the added financial burden on candidates and their parents to register for the examinations by various schools.

    However, in August, the minister reversed the decision during the Combined Policy Meetings on Admissions into Tertiary Institutions in Nigeria held in Abuja.

    Describing the proscription last year as a mistake, he gave institutions the freedom to screen candidates as they deemed fit, but urged them not to charge above N2,000 for the exercise.

    “We have asked them not to impose huge financial burden on the parents. The burden should not be more than what they can bear,” Adamu was reported to have said.

    Since then, universities, polytechnics, colleges of education and others have announced their post-UTME screening procedures and calendars to the students.

    A check by The Nation has, however, revealed that the N2,000 benchmark was hardly complied with by any institution.  While many of them stipulated N2,000 as the official fee, other levies, like bank charges, past questions, access to portal and service charges by operators of cyber cafés, who help candidates to do the online registration, increased the amount candidates have to pay to, in some cases, three times the official fee.

    In Edo State, the screening by the University of Benin (UNIBEN), the Ambrose Alli University (AAU), Ekpoma and the Federal Polytechnic, Auchi costs as much as N5,000.

    At some cyber cafes in Benin City, some candidates who spoke to our reporter said they had spent about N5,000 on the registration even though their preferred institution charged N2,000 official rate.

    UNIBEN Public Relations Officer Mr. Michael Osasuyi, said the cost of the post-UTME included N2,000 for the screening, N1,500 for past question papers, and N1,500 for owners of the internet portal through which the registration is done. This is beside the bank charge of N1,000. However, a candidate in Lagos confirmed that in all he paid N6,000.

    But Osasuyi denied this, claiming that the university did not charge N6,000 as alleged by some candidates for the screening which will take place between today and October 10.

    At AAU, the university spokesman, Mr. Edward Aihevba, said all the charges amounted to N4,500, including bank charges.

    He insisted that the university did not increase the charge but complied with the Federal Government’s directive.

    At the Auchi Polytechnic, candidates paid up to N4,000 and above.

    The institution’s spokesman, Musa Oshiobugie, said he was not aware of other charges aside the official N2000.

    At the Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), the screening for National Diploma (ND) full-time and B.Sc in Technical Education programmes was N2,000 but with extra expenses.

    In a circular on the institution’s website, the Registrar, Mrs. Biekoroma Amapakabo, said: “Applicants are to pay a fee of N2000 excluding result verification fee, and candidates are expected to upload their photograph”.

    However, at the cyber cafés where the candidates register, they are informed of a directive, which requires them to pay N1,700 for verification of their O’Level results – if they are submitting just one set; and N3,000, if the result is for two sittings.

    The total cost to a candidate with one sitting is N5,000 – N1,300 being the service charge of cyber cafés.  Candidates with two sittings’results pay N6,000.

    It was, however, learnt that the institution would conduct no tests but screen the results of the candidates.

    For the prospective students, what matters is getting admitted – though the cost is high.

    One of them, who did not give her name, said: “I am surprised at the amount but the registration process is not slow like the UTME  registration, and I pray I get admission into the school”.

    Another student said: “It is expensive but if I gain admission, I will forget about the payment. The registration process is normal, no much stress as long as you has your money.”

    Candidates sitting for the post-UTME at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), between October 4 and 6, spent a little less than their YABATECH counterparts. After the official fee of N2,000 and additional N400 for bank charges, cyber cafes charged between N1,100 and N1,600 for their services.

    A candidate, Omolara Adeoye, said she spent N4,000 “for everything”.

    In Lagos State, candidates who chose the Lagos State University (LASU) paid N5,000 – the same amount paid last year, when post-UTME was proscribed. The university organised an internal Computer-Based Test (CBT) that cost N5,000 then.

    In Benue State, the Federal University of Agriculture Makurdi (UAM) and the Benue State University Makurdi ( BSU) charged N2,500.

    The Public Relations Officer (PRO) of BSU, Mr. Tse Vanger, said the N500 extra was bank handling charges. The UAM gave the same explanation.

    However, a candidate for BSU, Erdoo Malu, complained that apart from additional charges, accessing the BSU portal was difficult because of slow internet.

    The Public Relations Officer (PRO) of Adeyemi College of Education (ACE), Ondo, Mrs. O.Olatuyi said the college strictly followed the mandatory screening fee of N2,000 per candidate without charging any extra cost.

    The Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba-Akoko (AAUA) spokesperson, Sola Imoru, also said the institution did not charge more than N2,000.

    He, however, stressed that the service providers and bank officials could also charge on their own, but not under the authority of the university.

    The Abia State University (ABSU), Uturu conducted its post UMTE test last week, after the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) called off its nationwide strike.

    A lecturer from the Faculty of Humanities, who pleaded anonymity, said “unnecessary” fees were added to the N2,000 that brought the total to N5,000 (including bank charges of N350).

    However, he added that it was the Senate that decided the amount that was charged.

    The Ekiti State University (EKSU), Ado-Ekiti charged candidates N3,500.

    A prospective student, Tosin Adewole, told our reporter the amount was inclusive of charges described as “administrative fee.”

    Admission seekers at the Federal University, Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE) are expected to pay higher to realise their dream of entering the institution.

    FUOYE spokesman Mr. Godfrey Bakji, disclosed that the institution takes N5,000 as its post-UTME fee while candidates sort out bank charges.

    Candidates who applied to the University of Abuja (UniAbuja) paid N2,000.  However, an official of the institution, who pleaded anonymity, said they would not be writing any tests but would have their results screened for admission.

    “We have not gone beyond the N2,000 that the minister said the screening should be conducted for. Candidates will not write another examination. Everything is done online. Candidates are supposed to submit their best five Ordinary Level (O’ Level) results for consideration.

    “The O’Level results will be calculated along with your score in the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME). The university has pegged its JAMB score at 70 per cent while the O’ Level will be graded at 30 per cent.

    “Candidates who meet the requirements of the departments they put in for will be considered on their average score for admission. The screening is on already. It was advertised in some national newspaper.”

    A candidate who applied to study Theatre and Performing Art, said apart from N2,000 he paid N1,000 for registration.

    Tosin, as he called himself, said: “I paid N2,000 for the screening. The bank collected N10 as extra charges.

    “The registration was okay. Everything was good. I paid N1,000 to the cyber café operator for the registration. The money was for the form printed for me.”

    The University of Calabar (UNICAL) conformed with the N2,000 for its aptitude test. Candidates paid an extra N1000 to agents that helped them register.

    However, their counterparts at the Cross River University of Technology (CRUTECH) have been told to pay an additional N3,000 as portal access fee before the October 5 deadline for registration.

    Applicants seeking to get into the Federal University, Lokoja (FUL) also paid N5,000 through the bank for the same purpose as those at CRUTECH – N2,000 for screening and N3,000 to access the university’s portal.

    Aside this, one of the prospective students at FUL, who gave her name as Toriola, said she also paid N1,000 to secure her original JAMB result slip and N100 for the printout.

    The Sokoto State University, Sokoto is the only institution, among others, in the state whose post-UTME form is out. Prof Muhammad Zaiyan Umar, Deputy Vice Chancellor (DVC), Academic, of the university said the candidates were not paying extra.

    Yet to roll out their forms are: The Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, The Polytechnic Sokoto, and Shehu Shagari College of Education (SSCOE), Sokoto.

    “We are in compliance with the cost directive and candidates have been having it smooth to access our portal. Delay will never come from us except the banks. No fewer than 1,800 candidates completed the process as at Wednesday evening.

    However, Musa Abubakar who is participating in the exercise told The Nation that there was more.

    “We are aware of the N2,000 cost pegged by Federal Government The bank charges and Remita cost of N500 were excluded,” he said.

    Institutions in Kano charged between N300 and N500 above the official amount.

    When our reporter visited the institutions, the management declined to speak on the rationale behind the extra charges, but some  staff members, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the extra charges covered bank and administrative charges.

    For instance, Bayero University, Kano (BUK) charged N2,500 flat rate; the state-owned North-West University charged N2,300; while the Kano State University of Science and Technology(KUST), Wudil also charged N2500.

    Many of the candidates described the charges as outrageous but said the registration was without hitches.

  • Unity Schools PTA scores education minister low

    The Southwest Zone of the Parent-Teacher Association (PTA) has scored the Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, low on efficiency of Unity Schools in the country.

    The association in a communiqué issued at the end of its meeting in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital last weekend, accused the minister of poor handling of the strike by academic staff of the schools in Southwest which it said has crippled academic activities and prevents the school children from their parents while they idle in their various school premises.

    The communiqué, which was signed by the Zonal Chairman, Mr Adebayo Olayide, read in part: “The meeting, however, scored the Ministry of Education under Mallam Adamu Adamu,  very low especially as regards the way it handled academic activities that have been crippled with the strike action embarked upon by the teaching staff of some unity colleges in the Southwest in the last six weeks.

    “The forum noticed with dismay the non-challant attitude of the Federal Ministry of Education towards the strike embarked upon by Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN). The forum is particularly worried that our children in their teens are kept in school without doing anything and the ministry refused to release them to their parents, not minding the psychological effects of the present ugly situation on these innocent children.

    “The forum hereby appeals to the Federal Ministry of Education to resolve the issues with the striking teachers, so that the future of our children will not be jeopardised.”

    The parents also expressed worry that the ministry was not doing enough on the absorption of PTA teachers into permanent positions most of who have been on PTA job in the last 10 years.

  • Open letter to Education Minister

    Let me quickly congratulate you on your appointment as helmsman of arguably the most important sector of a nation’s social fabric. Your successful screening and subsequent appointment form the crux of your first victory. But there is an overwhelming deluge of battles ahead. As a topflight scholar, I am convinced that you understand the prodigious weight of your portfolio and that Nigerians would empty their acerbic venom on you should you fail to reposition the sector for good. This is no threat or an attempt to inspire fear.

    For many of us, we have waited for this day to come. We have waited for a time when we will have the attention of a listening Minister of Education; one who is ready to bend backwards to restore glory of a tainted narrative. For now, we can’t confidently say you are the messiah until you prove the very letters of your portfolio. Time definitely remains the best arbiter of all human fate. In the meantime, I am sure we won’t be disappointed just the same way a slew of your predecessors blew our hopes into smithereens.

    I am sure you know that our education system has been a huge joke; a costly joke that mocks our common sense more than it afflicts our understanding of the drivers of a free and prosperous nation.  Trust me, I won’t lump this letter with those boring, predictable statistics. But I am sure you understand the blatancy of the stench more than the back of your hand. So I am briefly going to lay emphasis on a few things you need to fix with the best of swiftness you can possibly muster.

    One, curriculum. Let’s consider secondary education, for instance. How come our secondary schools’ curriculum has remained the same for over 30 years? Is that to say that education is static like a shore of still water? Or are we saying there had been no significant breakthrough in secondary education all these years to have warranted an overhaul in the curriculum? We all are testament to the fact that the world has changed considerably. So why would education sleep while the world purrs with the contest for pace and inventions?

    Again, curriculum. This time, the lens zooms on tertiary education.  It hit all of us like a bolt from the blue few years ago when former CBN governor, Prof Charles Soludo said that over 70 per cent of Nigerian graduates were unemployable. It came across like an exaggerated claim tempered with political undertone. But while the world growls at the sorry fate of a Nigerian graduate, the emphasis shifts rather too quickly to the effect rather than the cause. That the curriculum is faulty and archaic is a cause. That lecturers dish out half-baked knowledge is a cause. That there is decrepit infrastructure on our campuses is a cause. That cheap handout has replaced the measured excitement of research and quality service delivery is a cause. That lecturers deliberately desecrate the sacred tang of knowledge by way of sex-for-grades and all what not is a cause. But we have decided to mourn our collective misfortune without commensurate probe into why the tragedy befell us in the first place.

    To solve these riddles, we do not need the luxury of committees. We all know how committees have turned out to be merely talk shops whose reports seamlessly find solace in the dustbin of history. Posterity will be harsh on you if you fail to maximise the revolutionary aura of the Buhari government to rewrite the story of the Nigerian education system. It is only then that the swarm of Nigerians and the world will brand you a deserving champion.

    Three, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) unrest. One issue that remains baffling over the years is the trajectory of strikes by the ASUU. While you may be unable to fully satisfy their cravings in the short term, you must be quick to evolve a working model that answers the very questions of distrust and neglect that characterised the style of previous administrations. Previous administrations won accolades for mongering hyperbolic talk with no clear plan for execution. So, ASUU turned out as a lady jilted and bruised by the fawning tongue of her lover.

    No serious nation will allow students to remain idle at home for six months or more all because of a government that cannot keep its own portion of a bargain. And here is the caveat: the enormity of the problems with ASUU is far more menacing today than it were during the past administrations. To avoid a repeat of our sorry past, the situation deserves no less than sweeping measures or the vicious circle continues.

    Sir, we do not need grand plans and elaborate reform conventions, closed-door meetings and briefings. We do not need promises and all the faint optimism they can stir. We have seen spells of that in the past, plunging us further into ruins. What we need is a tempered grace and willpower to roll up the sleeves and work. What we need is a speedy, comprehensive overhaul of the content and context of our education curriculum.

    We understand that thriving economies are powered not by moving speeches, grand intentions, skin colour, gender or geographical location. They are powered squarely by the miracle of knowledge speckled with the discipline of execution. Education remains the only leveller of the social stratum, creating a perfect template for everyone to compete. And if we get it right, our redemption story finds a fertile ground to fruition. We must not fail.

     

    • Gilbert is a content writer and digital story-teller.