Tag: improving

  • Ways of improving Nigeria

    SIR: Nigeria will be better if the leaders and the led change their attitudes, love one another, and turn to God for Him to heal our land. We all need to turn around and embrace righteousness for Nigeria to see better days. Prophetically, I want to assure Nigerians that we should not lose hope in the country, despite the socio-political and economic challenges, but we should always be in fervent prayers, repent of our sins, look unto God and have faith in Him for He will shower His blessings and favour on faithful believers.

    Our economic management team should adopt policies that have human face and embark on effective utilisation of the nation’s resources for the development of the country. The leaders and the led should shun selfish interests. Capitalism is returning Nigeria to the era of slavery and the solution is the abolition of greed and antagonistic competition in our economic system. The federal government should use its political will to tackle the seeming insurmountable power problems in the country to fast-track socio-economic and infrastructural development in our country. Ensuring better Nigeria and its continued unity is in our hands. Nigeria will be great if we do the right things by embracing righteousness. We must be good people to God, listen to His words and those of the Holy Spirit.

    I want to plead that all of us should work seriously towards ensuring that Nigeria remains one united nation. This year, Nigeria will be 100 years; we just have to make it work, as there is power in number … as in China, India, USA and Indonesia. We cannot fold our hands and see our unity shattered. Let us all join hands to see Nigeria work. Also, we must all be concerned about the security of our nation that is being threatened.

    •Prophet Oladipupo Funmilade-Joel (Baba Sekunderin)

    Lagos, Nigeria

     

  • ‘Govt is improving sector’

    Minister of Health, Prof Onyebuchi Chukwu, Director-General, National Agency for Food Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Dr Paul Orhii and Director, Pax Herbal Clinic and Research Laboratories/Monk, St Benedict Monastery, Ewu-Ishan, Edo State, Rev. Father Anselm Adodo write on the question.

    Nigerian government is not biased to neither orthodox Medicine nor Traditional medicine. Of importance currently, and in the post 2015 development era is the need to ensure that the health system at all levels is strengthened to respond to adequately and timely. Public emergencies had prior to 2010 been limited to those occasioned by floods and by extreme harsh weather and/or poor environment. However, since 2010, bomb blast has become a new dimension of public health emergency.

    There is a role which Traditional Medicine must play in all these. And we are taking pragmatic steps to realising that.

    There have been some modest achievements in the health sector since the National Council on Health meeting, which are solid foundations to continue to build on, post 2015.

    There is establishment of Committees to look into critical issues in the health sector such as Committee on the development of herbal remedies.

    In a determined effort to protect our people, NAFDAC organised a stakeholders’ meeting in April this year, at which National Expert Committee on Verification of claims by Herbal Medical practitioners was set up.

    We have it in view that very soon Nigerian herbal products will be exported to the rest of the world.I commend the efforts of the members of this committee on progress they made thus far, and urge them to intensify their efforts to enable us fully utilise the benefits of traditional medicines.

    It is a misnomer for people to treat without proper diagnosis. Diagnosis is the bane of treatment. Hence, the Ministry is exploring setting up training for herbal traditional practitioners at Colleges of Medicine, throughout the Federation.

  • Improving educational standard in Nigeria

    Improving educational standard in Nigeria

    Over the years, various guidelines have evolved on education, most of which were based on various models of study. In modern times, parents, students, and educators have continued to explore the different philosophies on education and how they can learn using those teaching methods.

    While each education philosophy has its own underlying tenet and driving force, provision of quality education is pertinent in the wake of globalisation. Education guidelines are numerous in various countries of the world. But all seek to achieve one thing: qualitative learning.

    In Nigeria, education seems to have been translated to mean another thing. During examination period, for instance, most students see it as a time to cram their note and text books, then answer questions words for words. After the examination, such students forget what they have read. In higher institution, students refer to this trend as La cram, la pour, la forget.

    It is instructive to note here that the trend has been a major setback in our education system, and it has helped more in the production of half-baked graduates. Examination is supposed to be testing of students on knowledge of what they have been taught in their own understanding. They are required to write necessary quotes, principles, terminologies and keywords in their own words.

    Today, there are many graduates with poor grades but when it comes to the practical knowledge, they have a good grasp of any subject. Their brains work faster compared to the certificate they carry. To those sets of graduates, securing employment is difficult because no employer will give them the benefit of the doubt.

    However, there are graduates with good certificates but they crammed throughout their days in higher institutions. These certificates make them to be in a good position to get jobs. But when they eventually get employed, they perform below expectation. This, surely, will affect the progress of organisations they work for, and in one way or the other, their incompetence will affect the society. This is the reality of Nigeria’s education system.

    Last Christmas, I was discussing education issues with my cousins, who came from the United States for holiday. One of them said: “You guys are undergoing unnecessary stress here in Nigeria all in the name of studying.” He said most Nigerian lecturers deviate from the curriculum and fail to cover the syllabus, believing that students will study to complete the course outline. “Over there, this is not the case; lecturers in the US assist students to read further after they would have completed the course outline,” he said.

    To standardise the quality of education in Nigeria, methinks we should emulate the standards in countries, such as the US, United Kingdom, Canada, India and even Ghana, which have good educational system. In droves, Nigerian students migrate to these countries in search of qualitative education. If we can adopt these countries’ guidelines, our education standard will improve and this will stop the phenomenon of brain drain in our country.

    A statistics on education showed, Nigerian students invested N246 billion – over 60 per cent of the 2012 budget on education – in the UK universities alone. The statistics also showed that, Nigerians studying in British and American universities spent above N137 billion on tuition and living expenses alone in the last two academic sessions; this is about 34 per cent of Federal Government’s allocation to education.

    Foreign universities are profiting from Nigeria’s ill-equipped institutions. According to the UK Council of International Student Affairs (UKCISA), Nigeria is the third in the list of the top 10 non-EU countries studying the country.

    Nigeria, too, can be reckoned with when it comes to education, but this is if our government is ready to place importance on the sector by formulating standards that will help to realise qualitative education. There are international bodies that can help us to achieve this. Such is International Accreditation Organisation (IAO), which approves institutions according to their standards compare to their foreign peers.

    The University of Bangalore recently received candidacy status from IAO, which is a major achievement for the education sector of India. It will encourage reputed education providers to be internationally accredited and recognised for providing quality education.

    IAO’s accreditation offers international recognition to all institutions on its list, a factor considered very important by students and guardians or parents before accepting placement in programmes of any university in the world.

    An internationally-accredited university can reach out across geographic boundaries and has greater appeal for foreign students. Graduates of internationally accredited universities find it easier to pursue their career in foreign countries because their academic credentials are accepted worldwide. This quality of international accreditation plays a vital role in career development for students and increases the value of international accreditation for students.

    If Nigeria can also seek this standard for its higher institutions, the present trend in education, which seems to favour the mediocre, would give way to a standard that will make learning easy for all students.

  • Towards improving the reading culture

    At the height of their mercantilism in Africa, the white imperialists came up with a remark that seemed to insult the intelligence of the black race. They said: “If you want to hide anything from a black man, put it in a book.”Perhaps, the assertion, with its poignant import, has an iota of truth, considering the disinterest many students show to their education in this part of the world.

    The quest for knowledge starts with the development of a reading habit. Reading is the activity or skill of understanding written words or a writer’s message to his readers. This thought, if comprehended, becomes sensible and opens up one’s intellect to ask new questions about such thought, which may result into a broad insight and proper understanding of issues. Only through reading can one challenge and simply knotty ideas and even re-modify them.

    Other advantages that can be gained from reading include individual and social progress, and open understanding of variety of issues. It also provides right attitude of a person towards acquiring new knowledge. It also frees one from boredom and idleness.

    Despite all this advantages, most Nigerian students despise reading books. I vividly remember instance where students in my class were asked to read up to fifteen literary texts for a semester. Expectedly, we complained but after undertaking the course, many mindsets were changed as some of us, who had different viewpoints, immediately had a rethink.

    It should also be known that reading is not just to pass in school alone. Knowledge gain from reading in any discipline will linger because reading is a lifetime experience. It remains an indispensable tool in our quest to learning.

    While a lot of students will blame the unseen fate as to why they perform woefully in their academic assignment, they fail to realise that poor reading habit, which is runs in their vein like blood, is the major cause of their failure.

    Rather than spend ample time on reading, most youth prefer to chat on all social media network about trivial issues, which cannot contribute anything to their educational pursuits. Such students also spend hours to see movies, engage in gist and visiting friends as well as partying all night.

    While it is not wrong to unwind by engaging in social activities, it is not wrong to say many a youth have not set priority on knowledge acquisition. Learning is relegated to the rear end, a situation that puts today’s students in disadvantaged position academically.

    To say that poor reading habit has increased the rate of school dropout, unskilled manpower, poverty, frustration, loss of self-esteem and illiteracy is to restate the obvious.

    The present generation must read and take advantage of the Internet, which has made information easily accessible. Rather than engaging in unproductive chat on social media all day, reading news information and vital articles will help improve the reading culture.

    Also, joining educational groups on the social media will help to change the attitude of the youth away from insignificant venture. Reading is power; it makes a man and makes men construct a successful society, where every citizen can flourish.

  • ‘Kwankwaso committed to improving living standard’

    The Kano State Government has said it is committed to improving the living standard of the residents and the development of the state.

    The Commissioner of Information, Internal Affairs, Youth, Sports and Culture, Dr. Umar Faruk Jibril, spoke in Abuja when he led top ministry officials on a visit to Media Trust, publishers of Daily Trust.

    Dr. Jibril said the Musa Kwankwaso administration would develop all sectors of the state.

    He said the administration has made remarkable progress in less than two years of being in power.

    The commissioner said the visit was to strengthen the cordial relationship between the newspaper and the government.

    Dr Jibril said the visit was in continuation of the ministry’s tour of media organisations across the country.

    He urged the management of the newspaper to explore possible areas of cooperation to would assist the development of commerce and the state.

    The commissioner advised media organisations to desist from negative reports on the security situation in Nigeria because of the importance of Kano State to the country.

    Dr Jibril said anything that affects the state has a reverberating impact on other northern states.

    He noted that negative reports are inimical to the development of the state and affect the efforts of the government to ensure the security of life and property.

    The commissioner advised media organisations to consider the strategic importance of Kano State in their reports so that the insecurity could be reduced.

     

  • UK aid ‘not improving Nigerian education’

    UK aid ‘not improving Nigerian education’

    Millions of pounds of UK government aid to Nigerian schools have failed to produce any major improvement in pupil learning, an independent watchdog says.

    The Independent Commission for Aid Impact yesterday said the aid scheme was being undermined by a shortage of effective teachers and a lack of local support.

    So far £102m has been spent in 10 Nigerian states, with a further £126m committed to 2019.

    The UK government said the report had a limited focus but would be reviewed.

    The Department for International Development’s (Dfid) education programme is operating “in a very challenging environment, with too few effective teachers, poor infrastructure and unpredictable state funding all contributing to poor learning outcomes for pupils in basic education”, the ICAI said in its critical report.

    “Our review indicates no major improvement in pupil learning.”

    Using a traffic light rating system, the ICAI rated the scheme as amber-red – the second-lowest – which indicates “significant improvements” were required.

    It found that around a third of the eligible children – an estimated 3.7 million – were still not in school, while those that were received little by way of education.

    “We are concerned by the very high numbers of out-of-school children and the very poor learning outcomes in nine of the 10 Nigerian states supported by Dfid,” it said.

    It said as a result of British aid, a seven-year-old Nigerian girl could be learning in a new school where the teacher had been trained with UK funding, but she still might leave education not knowing how to read or write.

    The UK aid goes to 10 of Nigeria’s 36 states, but a Dfid spokesman responded: “This was a limited inquiry in that the team only visited 1 per cent of schools, most of which were in only one state in Nigeria, and they did not take into account the most recent evidence of the project’s progress.

    “However, we will carefully review the report’s recommendations and respond in due course.”

    DFID has spent £102 million to date, with a further £126 million committed to 2019. It supports 10 of Nigeria’s 36 States through two programmes: the UNICEF-led Girls’ Education Programme (GEP); andthe Education Sector Support Programme in Nigeria (ESSPIN), delivered by a Cambridge Education-led consortium.

    ICAI engaged with over 900 local people, including pupils, parents, grandparents, teachers, head teachers and community leaders. They identified only limited benefits from the education provided. Around a third of eligible children in the ten States are out of school and ICAI found no major improvement in pupil learning:

    “GEP and ESSPIN have helped to create ten-year State education sector plans which are neither realistic nor affordable. Insufficient and erratic State funding leaves the education system lacking infrastructure and other essentials necessary to improve learning outcomes.

    “Key education building blocks – such as adequate facilities, teachers who are present and committed, routine pupil attendance and appropriate curricula and teaching materials – are often missing from schools.

    “GEP and ESSPIN are delivering similar programmes but the ESSPIN approach appears more likely to succeed in the long term,” the organisation said.

    It added: “There have been some successes, including support for female teachers and school-based management committees and an innovative approach to Qur’anic schools, attended by most Muslim children in northern Nigeria. Implementation issues, however, are limiting the impact on pupil learning. “

    Its recommendations are: “DFID should create a single education programme in 2014 focussing rigorously on basic reading, writing and arithmetic in the early years of primary schooling and building on the lessons learned, with aligned initiatives for teacher training and infrastructure.

    “ DFID should work with its partners and each participating State to secure a clear agreement about the policy changes and financial contributions required to improve enrolment and learning and to introduce effective financial management and resource planning.

    “DFID should work with UNICEF to achieve significant improvement in the performance of GEP over the next 12 months.

    “DFID should address implementation issues limiting impact through the Female Trainee Teachers Scholarship Scheme, School-Based Management Committees and Qur’anic schools.”

    Graham Ward CBE, ICAI Chief Commissioner, said: “The communities we spoke to in Nigeria want their children to become self-reliant by learning to read and write. Our review, however, indicates no major improvement in pupil learning, with significant numbers of children out of school.

    In our view, DFID’s programmes will only become sustainable when they can routinely help to unlock State governments’ budgets to fund the required improvements both adequately and equitably.”