Tag: Education

  • ‘Poor education quality responsible for Nigeria’s challenges’

    Sokoto State Chairman of the Technical Committee on State of Emergency on Education, Prof Riskuwa Arabu Shehu, has identified lack of quality education as a factor responsible for many of the challenges the country is facing.

    “It affects every critical aspect of our lives,” Shehu said.

    Lamenting the poor state of education in the Northern region, Shehu attributed the challenge to negligence, lack of planning and disunity.

    He noted that the only driving force to reposition the system is ensuring collective efforts towards quality teaching, conducive environment and provision of infrastructure to reposition the sector.

    “We have a situation whereby over 100 students/pupils are in a class, and where more than 50 per cent of structures are dilapidated. This is in addition to about 60 per cent unqualified teachers,” he lamented.

    “If education must be successful, we must stop politicising it for selfish purpose”, he warned.

    Shehu said there was no justification for the cries, adding that all Nigerians are culpable and should therefore take responsibility for the decline.

    He continued: “We have no excuse than to take corrective steps to save the future of our children’s education.’’

    Citing Imo State as a reference.  Shehu said: “Imo State alone has been getting more qualified candidates for admission into universities, whose numbers cannot be produced by five states in the north put together.”

    “We don’t expect miracle to happen overnight; but we need to make serious efforts to redeem the good foundation and legacies of our forefathers,” added Shehu, who is the former vice chancellor of the Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto.

    He said the training, which would be carried out on 75 enumerators/supervisors consisting of professionals, lecturers and representatives of agencies in the state civil service, would highlight how best and reliable to get comprehensive data that would capture basics such as staffing and other elements without assumption.

    “We are confident of the integrity of those to conduct the survey exercise,”he assured.

    Earlier, the Special Adviser to Governor Tambuwal on Media and Publicity, Malam Imam Imam who spoke on the ‘Role of Media to the Success of the Exercise,’ noted that the media remained the driving force that stimulate government policies and programmes for development.

  • ‘Nigeria needs private sector support to deliver technical education’

    Executive Secretary, National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), Ma’sud Kazaure, has said Nigeria needs private sector support the delivery of technical and vocational education (TVE)

    He spoke to reporters in Offa, Offa Local Government of Kwara State on the sidelines of the eight convocation of the Federal Polytechnic, Offa.

    He canvassed the establishment of more private polytechnics in the country.

    He said: “More focus is now towards private sector participation in the delivery of education, no to mention technical and vocational education that we need most in this country.

    “I want to assure you that from 2010 till date, we have had a lot of private polytechnics springing up, particularly in the Southwest region.  In particular when the current Minister of Education, Alhaji Adamu Adamu took over, he gave approval to so many of these private polytechnics. It is out of this realisation that we need private sector support to deliver technical and vocational education.

    “I want to also on behalf of the minister commend private sector’s efforts in the delivery of technical and vocational education in the country.”

    Kazaure further lent his voice to the dichotomy between polytechnics and universities with respect to award of degrees.

    He said: “According to the Polytechnics Act, polytechnics are not supposed to award degrees, but some have gone far, in affiliation with the universities to award degrees. This is borne out of the zeal of Nigerians to get degrees. That is why some of the polytechnics that have the capacity approached the National Universities Commission (NUC), which gave them approval to affiliate with universities that have the mandate to award degrees.”

    The institution graduated 26,955 students in a combined convocation that stretched between 2009 to 2016 academic sessions.

    Acting Rector of the institution Dr. Ayodele Olaosebikan expressed satisfaction that workers have now put behind the acrimony of the past that had hindered the progress of the school.

    She is happy that all programmes in the school have been fully accredited and announced plans to introduce new courses that would make use of the increase in its infrastructure at the permanent site.

    “We have critically examined our operations and resources and came to a conclusion that the polytechnic has the capacity of generating revenue to augment federal allocations,” she said.

  • TETFund wants firms to up 2% education tax

    Executive Secretary, Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund), Dr. Abdullahi Baffa, has called for the expansion of two per cent education tax to more corporate companies.

    Baffa made the request at the seventh edition of the TETFund interactive forum jointly organised with the Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS) in Port Harcourt, River State.

    Baffa, in a statement in Abuja, called for the enforcement of tax payment compliance on companies to shore up TETFund revenue generation base.

    “One of the key things we want is enforced compliance. Those companies that are within the education tax net should pay correctly and those that are outside should be brought in,” the statement said.

    He said more institutions in Nigeria would soon be added to the list of top universities at the global level following the recent ranking of the University of Ibadan (801) among 1000 universities in the world.

    According to him, the improved ranking of UI by Times Higher Education World University Ranking was largely due to TETFund intervention projects.

    “It is very gratifying for the TETFund, as it is for every Nigeria, to hear that University of Ibadan is among the top 5 per cent universities in the world. This is one testimony that TETFund intervention is making the desired impact. Let me assure you and indeed, all other beneficiary institutions, that you would continue to enjoy the improved and determined support of TETFund at every step of your journey to the top of the league table.

    “To achieve this would require among other things, focused and targeted inflow of funding to our benefiting institutions through the Fund,” he said.

    The statement quoted the Executive Chairman, Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Babatunde Fowler, as blaming the fall in the collection of education tax revenue on tax evasions, the uncooperative attitude of private sector operators and unpatriotic business organisations.

     

  • ‘I don’t regret spending big on education’

    ‘I don’t regret spending big on education’

    OSUN State has no regret committing the largest chunk of its resources on education, Governor Rauf Aregbesola has said.

    He said his administration was preparing future leaders for the next 25 years in a new world order.

    The governor spoke on Wednesday at the unveiling of a new block of 10 classrooms built by the Anglican Church Communion in honour of former Governor and ex-All Progressives Congress (APC) National Chairman Chief Bisi Akande.

    Aregbesola said: “Education has commanded our greatest engagement and resources and we owe no one any apology on this.

    “As I often let people know, we are preparing for the next 25 years, what we want our children to become and where we want them to be in an increasingly digitised and fiercely competitive world.”

    The governor said the dedication of the classrooms resonates with the vision of his government’s education programmes.

     He added: “Osun was the cynosure of all eyes when President Muhammadu Buhari came to inaugurate the state-of-the-art Government High School, Osogbo; just one of the 3,000-capacity 20 high schools our administration is building. The others being 900-capacity each 100 elementary schools and 50 middle schools.”

    The governor regretted that education failed to achieve its purpose in many individuals, noting this as the root of problems confronting the society today.

    “We are in trouble today; we are under-developing and are at war with one another as a people because we have forgotten these fundamentals.

    “Any educational system or any faith, for that matter, whose goal is not to develop and bring harmony to human society by first cultivating human intellect and then imbuing man with a higher moral standing is not worth its estate and will soon be discarded into the dustbin of history. Same will happen to any faith that continues to foment trouble and divisiveness in human society,” the governor warned.

    He explained that education serves man to fit in and live successfully.

    The governor added that humans were already projecting to colonise other planetary bodies.

    Akande, in whose name the school was inaugurated, attributed decadence and immorality in schools to the forceful take-over of missionary schools by past military governments.

    The former governor said the consequence of the military take-over resulted in the displacement of people with moral integrity by fraudsters, drug barons, thugs and vagabonds from the political space.

    The former APC national chairman asserted that the major reason the military took over schools from missionaries was to lay the foundation for their immorality and corruption.

    The Primate of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Reverend Nicholas Okoh, said religion is a veritable tool to promote peaceful cohabitation and tolerance in the society.

    Okoh, who frowned at religious crises in some parts of the country, hoped that with a Christian faith building a school in honour of a Muslim statesman, Nigeria will soon get out of religious vendetta.

    He described Akande as a “true Muslim, whose ideology and faith have impacted greatly in the lives of fellow beings without discrimination”.

  • ‘How to improve education standard’

    The Proprietress of Jols-Rose School (Montessori) in Mowe, Ogun State, Mrs. Comfort Modupe Oyinlola, has said the only problem the education sector in Ogun State is experiencing is lack of standardisation.

    Oyinlola, who revealed this during her school’s just-concluded Valedictory Service/Prize Giving Day, said proprietors of schools should uphold quality education which goes beyond structures and aesthetics that are attached to the schools.

    Features of the event were praises and worship, cultural dance, Bible verse recitations in Igbo and Yoruba languages, choreography, presentation of certificate/prize giving.

  • LASU VC: education key to national growth

    LASU VC: education key to national growth

    LAGOS State University (LASU) Vice Chancellor Prof Olarenwaju Fagbohun has canvassed good education for youths and governance as panacea for national development.

    Fagbohun, who was guest speaker at the installation of Lanre Akintilo as president of Rotary Club of  Gbagada in Onikan, Lagos recently, noted that education could galvanise youths for development since ‘’they are the greatest assets of a nation’’. He said youths have enormous energy, do protest the present and have no fear about the future. He urged the youth to embrace education and use their abilities and training to tackle the challenges facing the country.

    Speaking on Education, youth and national development –redefining the future of Nigeria, Fagbohun said: “Education develops the personality of the individual and significance of his life to himself and to others. With the right education, our youth will be empowered to pierce the curtain of the future and give shape and usage to mysteries still in the womb of time. Getting governance right is the key to ensuring that our youth positioned to contribute to national development.’’

    The professor of Environmental Law said since the adults, who are leaders today, were yesterday’s youths, they had failed us, noting that the youths could not contribute meaningfully  to national development because they have been neglected by the leaders and this had  led to their frustration and despondence. He added: “I am convinced that the situation is not helpless and that, indeed, there is so much that we can do to bring about desired changes.’’

    Fagbohun called for good governance, adding that Nigeria’s problems were caused by bad administration over the years. Good governance, he said, translates to respect for rule of law, human rights, transparency, lack of corruption, effective institutions, conflict resolution mechanism, among others. ‘’When good governance is enthroned, it will bring together the cooperation of the public sector, the business community, civil society and organisations like Rotary,’’ he added.

    He said governance would assist the government to have in place frameworks for managing its problems and move the country forward. He called for strategic governance that would encourage policy experimentation and learning and push the ministries, departments and agencies to be inclusive, transparent and accountable.

  • ExxonMobil, others spend N2b on education

    Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education has received a boost in 12 schools, thanks to ExxonMobil subsidiary- Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria Limited (EEPNL), in production sharing contract with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and its co-venturer on the Erha North Phase 2 Project under their Community Assistance Programmes (CAPS).

    The firms endowed e-learning centres in the 12 schools in rural communities to boost e-learning and ICT knowledge at the grassroots.

    The e-learning centre and other educational initiatives under the CAPS, are valued at about N2 billion.

    While three e-learning centres were donated under the CAPS phase 3 of the project, nine e-learning facilities built under the phase 1 were recently donated to schools in Rivers, Osun and Anambra states.

    The nine schools included St. John’s Grammar School, Ile-Ife; Anglican Grammar School, Ile-Ife; Olode Grammar School, Olode; Anekwe Memorial Primary School, Abatete, Ado Girls Secondary School, Onitsha, All Saints Primary School, Onitsha, Onne Community Secondary School, Onne, Kalabari National College, Buguma and Community Primary School, Egendem.

    Each e-learning centre is equipped with 21 desktop computers, electronic learning management system with audio-visuals across a wide range of topics for pre-tertiary education, three-year internet service support and an inverter to provide 24-hour back-up power.

    In addition, the structures housing the e-learning centres were extensively renovated, while teachers were given extensive train-the-trainer instruction on Information and Communication Technology to enable them successfully impart knowledge on their pupils.

    The centres will not only be useful for experiential learning modules, 30 educational software and other e-learning aids, but the pupils will also learn Coding.

    In addition to e-learning centres, the firms have donated 22 science library modules to secondary schools in various states. Each library module per school contains 250 books on a diverse range of science-based topics, with the aim being to improve pupils’ performance in science-based subjects and stimulate their interest in pursuing STEM-related careers.

    ExxonMobil and its partners on the project had earlier, in 2015, donated e-learning facilities to three primary schools in Lagos State-Awoyaya Primary School, Victoria Island, Ansar-Ur-Deen Primary School, Ebute Metta and Obalende Primary School, Ikoyi.

    They also sponsored a Back-to-School that supplied school bags, exercise books, writing materials and other items to children in primary schools in 14 states and Abuja to facilitate their learning.

    The programme targeted schools attended by children of low income earners and its beneficiaries included Children in Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in some states in the Northern geo-political zones of the country who were ecstatic when presented with their Back-to-School items in their various locations.

    The projects were well received by the benefitting communities.

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, during a visit by ExxonMobil officials prior to the inauguration of projects in Ile-Ife, thanked the firm and its partners for the investment and urged other corporate organisations to emulate them.

     

  • ExxonMobil, others spend N2b on education

    Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education has received a boost in 12 schools, thanks to ExxonMobil subsidiary- Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria Limited (EEPNL), in production sharing contract with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and its co-venturer on the Erha North Phase 2 Project under their Community Assistance Programmes (CAPS).

    The firms endowed e-learning centres in the 12 schools in rural communities to boost e-learning and ICT knowledge at the grassroots.

    The e-learning centre and other educational initiatives under the CAPS, are valued at about N2 billion.

    While three e-learning centres were donated under the CAPS phase 3 of the project, nine e-learning facilities built under the phase 1 were recently donated to schools in Rivers, Osun and Anambra states.

    The nine schools included St. John’s Grammar School, Ile-Ife; Anglican Grammar School, Ile-Ife; Olode Grammar School, Olode; Anekwe Memorial Primary School, Abatete, Ado Girls Secondary School, Onitsha, All Saints Primary School, Onitsha, Onne Community Secondary School, Onne, Kalabari National College, Buguma and Community Primary School, Egendem.

    Each e-learning centre is equipped with 21 desktop computers, electronic learning management system with audio-visuals across a wide range of topics for pre-tertiary education, three-year internet service support and an inverter to provide 24-hour back-up power.

    In addition, the structures housing the e-learning centres were extensively renovated, while teachers were given extensive train-the-trainer instruction on Information and Communication Technology to enable them successfully impart knowledge on their pupils.

    The centres will not only be useful for experiential learning modules, 30 educational software and other e-learning aids, but the pupils will also learn Coding.

    In addition to e-learning centres, the firms have donated 22 science library modules to secondary schools in various states. Each library module per school contains 250 books on a diverse range of science-based topics, with the aim being to improve pupils’ performance in science-based subjects and stimulate their interest in pursuing STEM-related careers.

    ExxonMobil and its partners on the project had earlier, in 2015, donated e-learning facilities to three primary schools in Lagos State-Awoyaya Primary School, Victoria Island, Ansar-Ur-Deen Primary School, Ebute Metta and Obalende Primary School, Ikoyi.

    They also sponsored a Back-to-School that supplied school bags, exercise books, writing materials and other items to children in primary schools in 14 states and Abuja to facilitate their learning.

    The programme targeted schools attended by children of low income earners and its beneficiaries included Children in Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in some states in the Northern geo-political zones of the country who were ecstatic when presented with their Back-to-School items in their various locations.

    The projects were well received by the benefitting communities.

    The Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, during a visit by ExxonMobil officials prior to the inauguration of projects in Ile-Ife, thanked the firm and its partners for the investment and urged other corporate organisations to emulate them.

     

  • NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    NUT, ASUU, WAEC, others: why education standard is poor

    Stakeholders are not happy with the state of education, 56 years after the country’s Independence. They blame the government for what they call the neglect of ‘this critical sector’. ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, OLUWATOYIN ADELEYE and MOJISOLA CL

    After 56 years of Independence, how has education fared in Nigeria? Not well, say stakeholders in their assessment of the sector. Reason: poor funding, dearth of infrastructure and policy that can deepen the sectors growth. The government, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) argued, should be blamed for the sector’s poor performance.

    ‘Successive governments, it said, failed to put education on the front burner.

    A statement by WAEC’s Head, Public Affairs, Demianus Ojijeogu said: “In recent years, the total neglect of education by successive governments both at the federal and state levels, became so obvious that it was staring us in the face. Several warnings from those that should know where we are headed in terms of education went unheeded.

    “The infrastructure was not there. And where it was, it was in a decayed state. One of the indices for national development is education. But we went on, as a nation, for a very long time pretending that nothing was wrong. That led to the emergence of private schools. Later, our children started looking towards Ghana, South Africa and even Togo and Benin Republic for quality education. And we had one strike too many.”

    It continued:  “At a time, due to the poor performance of candidates in our examinations, there was pressure on the council to lower its standards. But having been conducting examinations for more than 60 years now, we knew the solution does not lie in awarding high grades to undeserving candidates. And that was why we wrote to all the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, urging them that we can partner with them to train their teachers and also avail them with our numerous resources and materials that will help them raise students with intellectual capability.

    “Education is more than writing examinations. The conducive environment required for teaching and learning to take place should be created.  Adequate remuneration for teachers should be paramount. Laboratories and libraries should be equipped. Parents should be vitally involved in the education of their children. Paying their school fees won’t be enough. The society should also reward students that did well in WASSCE by instituting awards like they do for Project Fame and others.”

    To the Academic Staff Unions of Universities (ASUU), there is no difference in the present government’s approach to public universities with those of past administrations.

    It said the trend could not be allowed to continue because the common man’s future lies in public education.

    ASUU National President Prof Abiodun Ogunyemi recalled that at independence in 1960, the nationalists conceptualised education as a springboard for development. He said up to 40 per cent of the budget was earmarked for education, thereby paving the way for the establishment of first generation universities such as, the University of Lagos; University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University); and University of Nigeria Nssuka (UNN).

    The trend, Ogunyemi noted, continued in the Second Republic with the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and the late Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, among others, championing quality education.

    Things, he said, began to change from former head of State, Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo’s era. Some Nigerians, Ogunyemi said, then  saw education as their private property and began  a gradual commercialisation of the sector. Education nosedived from then on through the Buhari-Idiagbon regime, and up to former Gen Ibrahim Babangida’s eight-year rule.

    Ogunyemi said: “Today, you see the proliferation of private schools everywhere. They first began with primary and secondary schools and they are now some of the biggest investors in private universities.

    “By 1985, these people started rolling back government support for public education. By the time Obasanjo took over as civilian president in 1999, some politicians now saw public schools as their private properties.

    “ASUU has fiercely resisted this to date, but for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank that will not let go because they are the forces of neo-liberalism.

    “ASUU believes it is public education that will give Nigerians a sense of patriotism. So, if government is saying it has no business in public education, what they are saying is that individuals should fund themselves to acquire education anywhere.

    “So, if my parent has to steal to send me abroad, that means once I graduate, my brain will be for the highest bidder rather than saying I want to come back and use the same brain to develop my fatherland.”

    The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) makes a case for standard in the sector. Education, it said,  began a downward slope when the military came into power in 1966.

    “Our leaders have gotten education wrong right from the military coup of 1966 when attention was redirected from education to other areas,” NAPPS National Vice President Chief Yomi Otubela said, adding: “Government at all levels should be able to set a standard for education for private individuals to follow. Failure to do this has brought in mushroom schools, unqualified teachers, and proprietors who have come into education for material gain and not passion. There is no will-power by the government to clampdown on these low standard schools, because even many public schools are mushroom schools.”

    The group continued: “Teachers’ motivation is so low and teaching schools are not standardised. The Nigerian Certificate in Education (NCE) is not motivating teachers, so this has led to half-baked teachers and graduates who cannot defend their certificates.”

    NAPPS blamed it all on erosion of values, saying: “The crave for materialism and show of wealth by those in authority have led to a decay in our values in Africa. Parents no longer prioritise their children’s education so they keep them at home, use them to make money, or they just send them to mushroom schools where they would not get quality education.”

    To enable it assist the sector, the Committee of Vice Chancellors and Registrars of Private Universities in Nigeria (CVCRTU) is appealing for single digit or interest-free loans. It also appealed for access to  research funds and soft loans or scholarship for students.

    Speaking with The Nation the association’s Chairman, Prof Debo Adeyemo said private universities,  were major stakeholders that deserve more financial attention from the government.

    Adeyemo said no private university could claim to be making profit, as a lot of investment went into acquiring infrastructure and maintaining students.

    He said: “We need access to funding as this will allow us have the ambience of an ecosystem to commensurates with that kind of atmosphere conducive for learning and research in universities.

    “There are secondary schools that charge three times what we charge in private universities; yet nobody bates an eyelid. It is government that creates this impression that private school charges are high.

    “In my school (Redeemer University) for instance, each hostel room is shared by two students which is quite expensive to run. But government will charge N90 per person in public school making some parents to now view what we charge as quite high.

    “Now tell me, what can N90 achieve with respect to students accommodation? That is why we see students overcrowding unkempt hostels across many public institutions nationwide.

    “We also want government to open research funding opportunity for us. It is ridiculous when people say because we are private universities, we cannot enjoy government funding. Go to America, universities there, regardless of whether public or private, have unfettered access to research funding. Any research from our engagement will be profitable to both the nation and the world.

    “In all, I think government should simply remove encumbrances to  the growth of private universities. We believe in quality and we should allow quality in our ivory towers if we must compete globally.”

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) berated the government for what it called the poor  funding of polytechnics.

    Its President, Yussuf Dutse Usman, decried the absence of governing councils in federal polytechnics for about 18 months, saying the development has slowed down policy implementation.

    “Generally for us, the performance of government has not been in anyway impressive as there is no significant improvement in funding,” Usman said.

    “Government has not yet fulfilled the agreement it signed with us in 2006 for the overall welfare of polytechnics.  Also many of our colleagues at the state level are being owed salary arrears and this is affecting their performance. We at federal institutions are facing similar challenges as our salaries are not adequate because of what government calls a shortfall,” he added.

    “For about a year and a half now, governing council of federal institutions nationwide have not been in place. This is our greatest headache as most decisions, which could have been taken for the smooth running of administration are being delayed. We are using this opportunity to appeal to the government to reconstitute the governing councils as quickly as possible,” he said.

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), urged the government to invite the stakeholders for talks on  changing the education curriculum to meet current economic demands.

    “This (economic) recession is not only affecting our members, but all Nigerians,” said NUT National President Michael Alogba Olukoya.

    He added: “We need to sit down (with government), discuss economic diversification and also change our curriculum to meet the enormity of the economic demands in our country.”

    EMENT-OMOBOWALE report:

  • Jakande seeks more funding for education

    Governments at all levels need to improve their spending on education if the country must attain development, Lagos State Governor in the Second Republic Alhaji Lateef Kayode Jakande said yesterday.

    He spoke at the Founders’ Day of Ilogbo Higher School, Ebute Metta.

    Jakande, who established the school and others in 1981 as governor, lamented that poor funding is the bane of the education sector.

    He explained that the falling standard of education is a serious concern to him because of his interest in education.

    The elder statesman urged the government to do more on education because no society could be better without quality education.

    Jakande hailed the alumni of Ilogbo High School for honouring him with an award as part of activities to mark the 35 years of the school’s existence.

    Ministry of Education District IV Tutor-General Mrs. Lola Are-Adegbite hailed the alumni association for contributing to the school’s growth.

    She called on old students of other schools to emulate the Ilogbo Higher School’s alumini because government alone could no longer fund education.

    The headteacher, Mrs. Bertrice Efole, hailed the old boys for remembering their source.