Tag: Education

  • Morally deficient education costing Nigeria fortune

    Neglect of morals in education is costing Nigeria more than people reckon with, says Dr Mashuud Fashola, Executive Secretary, Fadhil-i-Omar Ahmadiyya Muslim Educational Foundation (FAMEF).

    He linked the level of corruption in the system to the failings of the education sector to inculcate moral education in children right from the foundation at a briefing to announce the 21st anniversary of Mahmud Ahmadiyya College, Ijede, a suburb of Ikorodu, Lagos, last Tuesday.

    Fashola, an economist, who taught at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), said the moral gap informed the founding of the college 21 years ago to provide a smooth secondary education transition for pupils of Fadhil-i-Omar Nursery and Primary School, Somolu, Lagos.

    “We started Fadhil-i-Omar Nursery and Primary in Somolu and when the first set of pupils was completing their education, public schools were in shambles.  Morally, physically and academically they were nowhere.  Coach Yusuf (head teacher) was worried.  Will the children be sent to useless secondary schools after all they had been taught? That was why we started the college.

    “We want to produce moral, academic and social indoctrination of children. It is easy to indoctrinate children.  But the best way to indoctrinate them is positively.  The greatest asset you can give your child is morality,” he said.

    Fashola warned that failure to address the problem of immorality in the society through education could lead Nigeria to deteriorate to the level of Syria if care is not taken.

    “Nigeria cannot make headway until we adopt integrity, discipline.  These problems will kill us if we don’t kill them. We are going towards destruction.  We don’t have to wake up and be like Syria,” he said.

    Fashola noted that quality education must be accessible to the poor in the society.  He said schools should exist to serve humanity.

    “The purpose of this school is to develop humanity – those who serve God and his creatures.  Many Christians and Muslims are focused on rituals but forget the substance.  You cannot get the blessing of God unless you serve humanity,” he said.

    Fashola acknowledged the roles played by various people who have contributed to the success of the college from inception.

    Another director of the School Management Board, Mr Lakunle Bello, said products of the college have excelled in their various endeavours, a testament to the school’s quality.

    In his address, the Principal of the college, Alhaji Ibrahim Ogunmola, said at about N120,000, the school’s fees was affordable for many parents.  He said indigent pupils get support from the foundation.  He also noted that defaulters are not sent away but their parents given opportunity to pay up.

    Ogunmola, the foundation principal, said the school also does not make profit from the foundation but ploughs back all into its development.

    “From the beginning the mandate the owners gave was to meet all our needs and plough back whatever remains to the development of the school.  All the structures we’ve been able to put are from our funds and we have never taken loan,” he said.

    Activities lined up for the forthcoming anniversary include a symposium holding today, which would feature two lectures titled: “Child Upbringing: Islamic Perspective” by Missionary Muhammad Qasim Oyekola; and “Beyond Mining” by Missionary Rabiu Uthman; a thanksgiving service and free medical service is scheduled for tomorrow; while luncheon and awards ceremony would hold on Saturday at the Lagos Chambers of Commerce and Industry (LCCI) Hall, Ikeja.

    The programme would end with a Hafiz (Quran memorisation) class graduation on Sunday.

     

  • Expert seeks customer service education in schools

    Renowned customer service expert, Shep Hyken, has advocated the inclusion of customer service subjects into secondary and tertiary education curricula to give pupils added advantage in the labour market.

    He said this at a customer service conference, themed: ‘The Customer Amazement Revolution Masterclass’ organised last week by The Workplace Centre (TWPC), at the Lagos Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Hyken, who was the guest speaker at the occasion, said employers were more likely to consider children with customer service or hospitality-related experience for internships and volunteer positions.

    He said: “Here is what I know; that the kids, who work in retails, restaurants, hotels and other positions in the hospitality industry tend to be considered for jobs more than those with general experience  because they are assumed to understand the hospitality-mentality, which is basically about customer service.”

    The customer service guru said he was disappointed to find out, through a minor survey he conducted by declaring a position vacant for fresh college graduates in his organisation, that none of the candidates considered had ever undergone a customer service training.

    Hyken announced plans to donate training licenses to schools, which will allow graduating pupils to undergo eight-hour customer service training and get certificates for their efforts on completion.  He said the number of licenses would  match numbers bought by companies to train their workers.

    He advised teachers to teach customer service in schools by treating their pupils like customers.

    Hyken said: “Teachers should treat their students as if they are customers to a certain degree, because they are children and can be wrong sometimes. Every high school should have a course in customer service to teach kids how to manage the people experience they are going to have. Make them think, ‘How can I be so good that people would depend on me and trust me?’”

    The keynote address was delivered by President, Westminster College, Missouri, United States (US), Dr Benjamin Akande, who spoke on “Making Your Customer a Walking Advertisement”.

    He advised participants to take note of potentials in young ones.

     

  • Ila College of Education seeks workers’ cooperation

    The Governing Council of the Osun State College of Education, Ila- Orangun, is seeking workers’ cooperation in its task to further develop the profile of the college.

    The Chairman, Governing Council Mr. Niyi Akande, made the appeal at a meeting with extended management and the executives of the staff unions of the institution.

    According to Akande, the state government and the Council are committed to the welfare of the college staff. He expressed optimism that the ongoing crisis in the institution would soon be over as government is “passionately looking into all their requests.”

    Akande said the focus of the Council is to ensure the repositioning of academic standard of the college and also to ensure that there is sanity in its administrative system.

    Earlier, the Chairman Senior Staff Union in College of Education, Dr. Lai Oparinde, had pledged support for the Council.

    According to him, the union would not shield any staff who is guilty of corruption.

     

  • Obaji receives champion of education award

    Obaji receives champion of education award

    Nigerian education and child rights campaigner, Philip Obaji has been recognised with the Champion of Education for Peace and Development Award.

    Obaji was awarded on Saturday at a ceremony hosted by New Era Educational and Charitable Support Foundation (NEEDCSI) and Universal Peace Federation in Jos, capital of Nigeria’s north-central Plateau State.

    “The award recognizes and celebrates the extraordinary work of organizations and individuals who are rolling up their sleeves and making outstanding contributions to the development of education,” NEEDCSI said on its website.

    “Philip Obaji is a symbol of what the world needs: more unity,” Dr. Emmanuel Ande Ivorgba, Executive Director, NEEDCSI, said at the ceremony.

    “Through his work, he is sending an important positive message to the world about the importance of education for building peaceful and sustainable societies,” he added.

    Obaji, 30, is known for his activism for rights to education for Children, especially through his 1GAME campaign, which ensures education for all in northeastern Nigeria, where the insurgent Boko Haram has attacked schools and education personnel.

    The 1GAME campaigner has already been honoured with a host of awards, standing ovations and plaudits everywhere from Dakar to Washington D.C.

    “The world has witnessed all sorts of violence on children, but there is no greater violence than to deny the dreams of our children,” Obaji said during the ceremony.

    “I refuse to accept that in an open world, the quest for freedom should be the responsibility of only those directly afflicted with pain, but the responsibility of everyone,” he charged.

  • Low-income schools offer quality education

    Low-income schools may charge low fees, but they offer quality education, says Mrs Esther Dada, President, Association for Formidable Educational Development (AFED).

    Mrs Dada, who spoke at a programme to mark the Lagos State literacy Day on Monday at the NIS Gymnasium, National Stadium, Lagos, said many low income schools offer better quality education than public schools.

    “In some public schools, we have some Primary Five pupils who cannot read; and a primary 3 pupil (in our schools) can do better.  Our children are good, we can showcase them anywhere. They are the returns of our hard work. We have confidence in them,” she said.

    The AFED President said low-income schools exist because of the economic situation of many parents who cannot afford more expensive private schools yet seek quality above what is provided in public schools.

    “We want to give back to the society.  We are qualified school owners in the area of education; we major in education and that is why we are able to talk about it. When we hear low income schools, we begin to look at it like they are of low income quality; they are not giving low quality. We are giving quality education that is available at a low cost so that the parents will be carried along,” she said.

    Mrs Dada, who runs the Peacock Schools, Ikorodu, said that the need to change public perception that low-income schools offer poor quality education informed why the association decided to showcase its pupils from low-income schools located in the six education districts of Lagos and Ogun State who read-aloud at the event.

    The pupils, drawn from Primary 4-5 and aged between eight and 10, read from various storybooks without prompting by teachers.

    In her remarks at the event, Mrs Ronke Soyombo, Director-General, Office of Education Quality Assurance, urged the schools to boost literacy in all schools.

     

  • NOA decries moral gaps in education

    The National Orientation Agency (NOA) has decried the gaps in education which have given rise to moral decadence in the society.
    The missing gaps as identified by NOA are; lack of good virtues such as self control, love, hard work, integrity, humility, justice, wisdom, courage, positive self esteem and good name which are the ingredients of character.
    The State Director of NOA, Rivers State, Mr Oliver Wolugbom, who made this observation at a one-day Enlightenment Workshop organised for private and public school teachers in Port Harcourt Local Government Area also said that teacher should possess these qualities and be able to pass them on to the pupils.
    Unfortunately, Wolugbom lamented that they are missing in teachers hence the need for attitudinal change so that the social reforms in economy, culture and other areas of national life, which are based on education could be implemented.
    At the workshop organised in partnership with Port Harcourt City Council, Wolugbom described the teachers as role models and charged them to be above board.
    “Most school children recognise what the teachers tell them than what the parents say, thus making it imperative for teachers to say and do the right thing always. If after passing through school a person remains unrefined, it means the teachers had not done their work,” he said.
    He said the enlightenment programme would be taken around all the local government councils of the state.
    In the lead paper presented by Assistant Director, Planning, Research and Strategy, NOA, Mr Ellis Dappa, he explained that basic education is all about value re-orientation and roles of teachers.
    In the paper titled: “Basic Education and Value Re-Orientation: the Classroom Teacher as a Model”, Dappa decried a situation where “vices such as cultism, drug abuse, examination malpractice, lesbianism and homosexuality, disrespect for constituted authority, use of indecent and abusive language, poor reading culture, dishonesty, ‘sorting’ and deceitful behaviour have today become the norm rather than the aberration.”
    He blamed all members of the society for the situation, noting that “we have all contributed one way or another in the various units of socialization where we are expected to be in charge, be it family, schools, religious house, age grades and others.”
    In a welcome address, the Caretaker Committee Chairman of Port Harcourt City Council, Mr Clifford Oparaodu, noted that youths are the future leaders and if not given “the right sense of direction, training and sensitization on the ethics of good behavioural pattern in our social institutions, then our tomorrow is shattered and jeopardized.”

  • ASUP seeks waiver on TSA implementation in education

    ASUP seeks waiver on TSA implementation in education

    The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has said the full implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) will be counter productive in the education sector as it will negatively affect the smooth running of tertiary institutions.

    The union wants the government to exempt tertiary institutions from implementing the TSA, arguing that they are not revenue generating institutions.

    National President of the Union, Comrade Chibuzo Asomugha, told reporters in Abuja that while they were in support of government plugging all the leakages, consideration should be given to the special nature of educational institutions.

    Asomugha said: “We are aware of Federal Government’s directives on the immediate commencement of the implementation of the Treasury Single Account. We recognise and acknowledge this as a welcome development that will block financial leakages, stem profligacy and track government’s revenue profile.

    “The tertiary sub-sector is purely service-oriented and its revenue is specifically tied to the daily running of the institutions and for the provision of consumables needed for teaching and learning. The TSA, though well-intended, will tie down the processes of provision of daily needs of the institutions and therefore hamper efficient service delivery.”

    The union also accused the government of evolving policies aimed at relegating the polytechnic sector to the background and undermining their products.

    Asomugha listed some of the policies as: discriminatory funding of the polytechnics, discriminatory cut off mark for admission into tertiary institutions, discrimination against Higher National Diploma (HND) holders, among others.

    He said the polytechnic sector is not only being quarantined and treated with apathy in career progression, “but its graduates and teachers are pathetically and consistently judged, not by the strength and character of their knowledge, learning and skills, but by the addresses of their institutions.”

    The union accused the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) of discriminating against the polytechnic sector in the disbursement of fund as against the distribution ration proscribed by law.

    He said: “The distribution of the fund between universities, polytechnics and colleges of education is statutory in the ratio of 2:1:1 or 25 per cent; 12.5 per cent; and 12.5 per cent. The reality on ground, however, is the gross short-changing of the polytechnic sector in the disbursement of the funds, especially in areas of special interventions, high impact intervention and staff development and training.The situation has left most of the polytechnics underdeveloped and dysfunctional.”

    The Union also warned that henceforth, they would not accept discriminatory cut-off mark for admission into polytechnics which tends to make them inferior.

    He said: “The admission policy of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, which profiles polytechnics as undesirable destinations for pursuit of tertiary education is absurd and unfortunate. The policy has failed to understand that polytechnic education is an aptitude-determined choice of the candidate and not a cesspool of desperation.Candidates who sit for matriculation examinations into tertiary institutions deserve equal treatment.

    “Candidates seeking to be admitted into the polytechnics should be placed on the same benchmark as their counterparts. This is to breach public perception which places our sector as inferior or incapable of competing with the best in terms of service delivery.”

    On membership of governing councils of polytechnics, Asomugha urged the government to appoint only credible people.

    He said: “Cognizant, therefore, of the sanctity of the statutes of the Federal Republic, which set up these Governing Councils on tenured terms and also cognizant of the peculiarly sensitive nature of tertiary institutions, we urge the Federal Government to, as a matter of urgency, reconstitute the Governing Councils of Federal Polytechnics using a template no less stringent and exerting as that used in the appointment of ministers.”

     

  • Aisha Buhari pledges support for girl child education

    Aisha Buhari pledges support for girl child education

    Wife of the President, Hajiya Aisha Buhari, has pledged her support for girl child education in the country.

    She said she would support all efforts aimed at improving the standard of education in Nigeria, especially that of the girl child.

    Hajiya Buhari has also urged Nigerian children to embrace education to enhance the quality of their lives and promote national development.

    She stated this yesterday in Abuja during her visit to  Army Day Secondary School, Mambila Barracks, Abuja, where she advised the students to take their studies seriously.

    Hajiya Buahri, who was in the school to participate in teaching and learning activities, said the President Muhammadu Buhari Administrations was committed to improving the quality of education in country.

    She said without adequate education of the younger generation, the future of the country would not be bright, adding that the quality of education children receive determines the future of any nation.

    She recalled that she got married after her secondary education and the quest for further knowledge propelled her to acquire a Masters’ degree through the support and assistance of her husband.

    Hajiya Buhari advised parents and guardians not to thwart the zeal of their children and wards, particularly the female children in acquiring formal education.

    Earlier, welcoming the wife of the President, the FCT Permanent Secretary, Engr. John Obinna Chukwu, commended her for her initiative and for choosing one of the FCT schools for her first visit.

    Engr. Chukwu described the visit as motivational and said that it would encourage the students to aspire towards achieving academic excellence.

  • Education and our value priorities

    Education and our value priorities

    Let us start this discourse with two assumptions.

    First, whether as individuals or communities, including states, zones, and country we have multiple desires. Second, unfortunately, by token of our human conditions, the resources at our disposal are not adequate to satisfy all our desires or realise all our values. Given these two assumptions which can reasonably be described as the realities of human life, we have a human dilemma: how do we satisfy our desires or realise our values in the face of inadequate resources?

    The resolution of the dilemma has been approached in various ways. One is to insist on satisfying all desires by appropriating resources from others individuals (stealing and corrupt enrichment) or communities (exploitation through colonialism or imperialism). Another is to work harder to accumulate more resources for the satisfaction of all the desires. Not a few individuals and communities have achieved their aspirations through honest hard-work.

    A third approach is limiting desires so that they are realisable with available resources; in other words, cutting our coat according to our cloth. Finally, however, there is also the course of prioritising desires such that the highest on the scale of values are satisfied while the lowest wait until more resources are available. With this approach, one still works hard, but one does not risk overworking with its accompanying stress which then prevents the realisation of any one the desires.

    Of the four approaches, only the first is flat out wrong because it is unfair to those victims of stealing, corruption, and exploitation. But, of course, there are those individuals or communities who are motivated, not by fairness, but by greed. I reject the Hobbesian idea that greedy accumulation and appropriation is natural in the state of nature. Even in that state, there is the morality of conscience that must continually warn any reasonable person that it is not right to take more than you need for your survival. After all, in the state of nature, all you really need is the fulfillment of the basic survival needs.

    Now, the other three approaches are within various degrees of reasonableness. Attempting to satisfy all desires through hard work is reasonable but risky for the stress that it may cause. Limiting desires is reasonable if it is not motivated by laziness or aversion to hard work. Prioritising desires doesn’t give up on any of the desires; it only ranks them such that the most urgent and important are prioritised.

    If it appears reasonable to prioritise desires, it is because it is; for individuals as well as for communities, including political communities. How does it work in reality?

    For individuals, let us assume that the desires are for basic needs such as food, health, clothing, and housing. Surely, none of these can be set aside as unimportant. To survive, each is a priority in its own right. But each can be satisfied by a variety of means, from the very basic to the most luxurious. Prioritising here means distributing resources in such a way that the need for food is not frustrated by the need for housing or clothing, and that all contribute to the satisfaction of the desire for health.

    More importantly, however, our sample individual will benefit from gaining adequate knowledge not just about the importance of these needs and desires, but also about how best to satisfy them. The acquisition of such fundamental knowledge is essential to the successful prioritisation of his desires, and to his survival and prospering. This is the meaning and significance of education in its most basic and simplest form.

    There is no misery to it. Without education, all other values and desires amount to naught. A certain amount of it, that which is needed in the state of nature, is innate and instinctive. And so the caveman is able to determine that he has to hide in the cave to avoid the bitterness of the elements or that he has to hunt to avoid starving to death.

    As human settlement and families emerge, education becomes a collective endeavor so that the ignorance of a member doesn’t jeopardize the survivor of the rest. The collective responsibility to educate the young requires the family to prioritize and reconcile its desires with available resources.

    One way the task is accomplished traditionally is to assemble family members at a palaver session, where the issue is thrown out with the family head underscoring the priorities that must be attended to and the limitation of the resources available. Wastage is rebuked. Greed on the part of any member is condemned. The uncontrolled contribution of mouths to feed by some members doesn’t go unnoticed or unchallenged. There is a general agreement on what is identified as the most important of the desires and it is accorded the most urgent priority with resources allocated. Communal life is saved and it moves on.

    A little over two years ago, I discussed the model of the state as family in a different context. In that context, I made reference to a justification of the former president’s action on ground that he was the father of the nation doing the best for his children. Though, I found the statement inadequate in the context, I also conceded that the idea of the state as the family was not original to the former president because it was a common idea in political philosophy. Even Chief Obafemi Awolowo once explored the analogy with his suggestion that the paterfamilias as the patriarch of his family negotiated with other patriarchs and that this was the origin of the state. This was a historical account of the origin of the state.

    Let us assume that the historical account has some element of credibility. In the present crisis of value conflicts and desire frustrations, how might a political community resolve the conflict?

    That there is value conflict is not in doubt. That there is desire frustration is not deniable. Between individual members of the political community, the conflict is obvious. While a few indulge in opulence, many wallow in abject poverty. ActionAid just reported that more than 10 million children are out of school in Nigeria and that 1 in 6 of out of school children worldwide are in Nigeria. But many Nigerian families also have no problem sending their children to expensive boarding schools overseas and inside the country. While many with life-threatening diseases resign themselves to fate, others can afford to travel overseas for periodic checkups and for cosmetic surgeries.

    Between groups as ethnic nationalities, zones, states, and local governments, the conflict is demonstrable. The North has just for the umpteenth time complained of marginalization, claiming to have the highest number of people making below $2 a day and the lowest literacy rate in the country. On this score it rejects the 2014 National Conference and demands a special national conference for the development of the North. There is no more powerful demonstration of the value conflict that I just described. The nation itself is suffocating under the weight of its irresolvable conflicts.

    To my mind, there is one value that is central to all others and if it is prioritised and the constraints against its effective realisation are confronted and nipped in the bud, the nation as a political community can move with speed. The value I have in mind is effective functional education of citizens. I have in previous contributions in the last few months analysed the issue extensively. But in light of recent policy announcements and decisions of various governments, it bears repeating.

    Simply put, what is needed is a prioritisation of our state and national values so that education is on top of the hierarchy. It doesn’t mean that citizens will get a pass. It means that individuals and groups are assigned requisite responsibilities for the effective functional education of citizens. Everyone will be expected to pay their fair share and make necessary sacrifices, including limiting the number of children they sire. Is the political will there for action?

  • Why education standard declines

    Stakeholders in education have identified reasons the standard has been falling in Nigeria.

    At the second edition of stakeholders forum organised by the National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA) in Ondo to facilitate qualitative education in Nigeria, participants reviewed the level of the learners, who have diverse experiences, characteristics, skills and conditions vis-a-vis the level of the education system.

    They also considered its managerial and administrative system, implementation of good policies, human and managerial resources and the means to measure learning outcome.

    The theme of the conference was: “Education Quality Assurance: A panacea for equity, access and accountability in education”.

    Participants comprising the Directors of Education Quality Assurance (DEQA) in federal and state ministries of Education, parastatals and agencies, noted that Nigerians have the perception a poorly coordinated supervision, underfunded with inadequate data for planning, as well as poor learning environment.

    They also  observed that teacher training programme in Nigeria, has not really been taken into consideration the changes that are needed to implement innovative curriculum in schools.

    “Many states in Nigeria are yet to implement the quality assurance programme prescribed by the Federal Ministry of Education and therefore, internal quality assurance procedures are not being applied in schools in such states.

    They noted that quality assurance departments and agencies (QADA), where they have been established, are sometimes staffed with officers who are not trained in that field. Besides, they are poorly funded and lack requisite operational facilities.

    Stakeholders said despite the establishment of many institutions at the tertiary level, and government policies that support access and equity in education, many young people are still out of school in Nigeria.

    According to them, examination malpractice, which has assumed frightening dimension in many states, has become a threat, not just to the validity and reliability of the examination itself, but also the overall quality of the entire education system and the society at large.

    They noted that perpetrators of examination fraud are not just students and teachers, but also parents, school administrators, government officials, other school personnel, officials of examination bodies and school host communities.

    Besides, they identified common causes of examination malpractice to include: undue emphasis on certificates, poor quality of teaching and learning, high level of materialism, parental consent and involvement as well as the pressure mounted on students to pass examinations at all cost in some cases.

    On funding, they contended that it was one of the formidable obstacles to the effective implementation of Quality Assurance in education programmes and activities by FME, Departments in SMoEs, SUBEBs and agencies.

    The participants, who are representatives of Ministries of Education from 31 states and federal including NECO, NABTEB and other examination bodies, recommended that all credible education programmes, designed to achieve quality assurance in education should address all the requirements of both learners and the education system.