Tag: lagos

  • A letter from Lagos

    A letter from Lagos

    Writing in the latest edition of the Conde Nast Traveller, Nigerian award-winning writer, CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE, captures everyday life in Lagos, alluding to some of the landmarks in the mega city, like the new Cable Bridge, Balogun market in Marina and other places

    THERE is a mild emergency: the dress is not ready.

    My tailor, Razak, has just sent me a text saying ‘Sorry, Aunty, I cannot bring the dress today.’ I stare at the text, upset and unsurprised.

    But first, a little background. Last week, I went to Balogun market to buy fabric for the dress. I walked the rows of little shops, touched the neatly-folded rectangles of cloth, laughed at the traders’ jokes, and bought yards of Ankara in green print. Razak came by later to pick up the material.

    ‘Will the dress be ready for Saturday?’ I asked.

    ‘Yes, Aunty, by God’s grace.’

    ‘Please, Razak, I am wearing it to an important event.’

    ‘No problem, Aunty. I will not disappoint.’

    It was our usual routine. As usual, I told him my event was five days earlier than it was. And now, once again, the dress is late.

    I have been on a tailor quest for many years. There was the woman in Ilupeju, a middle-class suburb on the mainland, whose shop was close to the Indian school. She was ambitious, her shop hummed with distracted apprentices and assistants, one of whom must have made my skirt that turned out a size too big with lopsided hems. There was the woman in Yaba, who worked from her small, dark flat not far from the campus of the University of Lagos. She made me one pretty dress, and then subsequent dresses were never done when she said they would be.

    The Senegalese man on Victoria Island gave me some confidence: Senegalese tailors have a good reputation because they are non-Nigerian. He was soft-spoken and sewed well, but he moved back to Senegal. Finally, Razak came through a friend’s recommendation. ‘He’s very good, but he’s unreliable,’ the friend had said, and then added, ‘But which tailor in Lagos isn’t?

    The first dress Razak made was near-perfect. His work was even, careful, neat. I was used to tailors who ignored small details- a slightly crooked button, a not-quite-flush edging. But Razak paid attention. And I liked him, he was uncomplicated and pleasant. This would be the end of my tailor saga.

    I read his text again. ‘Sorry Aunty, I cannot bring the dress today.’

    The language is slightly unusual, too vague. Usually he would write, a day or two after the dress was due to be ready, ‘I will bring it tomorrow’ or ‘It will be ready by Sunday.’ His reasons are varied:

    No electricity and no fuel for his generator; a wedding he had to attend: even a trip to the dentist.

    I called him, ‘Razak, what is the problem?’

    ‘Sorry Aunty. Something happened.’

    ‘What happened?’

    ‘I will finish it by Sunday.’

    ‘Razak, but I want to wear it on Sunday afternoon.’

    ‘I will bring it in the morning.’

    Something about his tone makes me even more curious.

    A surprise visit can only spur him on to make the dress. The next day, I take the new bridge from Lekki to Ikoyi. A shiny, swooping bridge. I have avoided it since it first opened because the toll is expensive, but driving on it feels oddly luxurious. The view is lovely, too, of the lagoon, ending with the high rises of Banana Island, that strange and expensive swath of land reclaimed from the sea.

    When I walked into Razak’s shop, I am pleased to see him at his machine, bent over my fabric. He looks up.

    ‘Razak, you are only just cutting the dress. You just started.’

    He nodded. ‘I will finish by this night. I have to go to Obalende to buy buttons.’

    ‘But what have you been doing?’

    He smiles a small smile, as though guarding a secret.

    ‘Razak?’ I prod.

    ‘I am writing songs’

    ‘What?’

    ‘Songs, I want to be a musician.

    The past two days I have been in the studio to try.’

    I stare at him. His smile is broader, his face has lit up.

    ‘You want to be a musician?’

    ‘Yes, Aunty. By God’s grace.’

    This is the last thing I expected to hear. Lagos is full of people who want to have their hits on radio and in nightclubs. But Razak? Finally, I say, ‘You’re a talented tailor.’

    He shrugs. And then starts to sing. His voice is off-key, ordinary. I listen to him, saying nothing, thinking: who will believe this story?

    On Sunday morning he brings the dress. I try it on; the sleeves slump and the waist is loose. Razak looks surprised at the fit, as though he does not remember making the dress.

    •Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the author ‘Americanah’ and other books.

  • Lagos Int’l Scrabble Classics: 200 players to attend

    Lagos Int’l Scrabble Classics: 200 players to attend

    Farouk Baba-Inna, a member of the Technical Committee, Nigeria Scrabble Federation (NSF), on Thursday said no fewer than 200 participants were expected at the Lagos International Scrabble Classics.

    The competition, which began on Thursday at the Molade Okoya-Thomas Indoor Sports Hall, Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, will end on Saturday.

    Baba-Inna told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the U.K, Uganda, Ireland and Ghana would be represented at the tournament. He said the three countries would present a player each, while Ghana would feature three.

    “The competition is going to be great because we are going to have experienced hands from the countries participating. This will further encourage and develop the playing skills of our home-based players to attain international standards,” he said.

    Baba-Inna commended the Lagos State Scrabble Association (LSSA) for organising a competition that would aid the development of the sport in the country. He advised other states to emulate LSSA in organising competitions so that talents could be discovered and trained for international tournaments.

    NAN reports that the scrabble classics will bring to 10 the international competitions organised by the Lagos State Government to develop players for the country.

    They are swimming, table tennis, chess, basketball, squash racket, taekwondo, volleyball, badminton and athletics.

  • Lagos International Scrabble Classics kicks off

    Lagos International Scrabble Classics kicks off

    Molade Okoya-Thomas Hall of the Teslim Balogun Stadium will come alive today, as the Lagos International Scrabble Classics kicks off.

    All the top players from the United States, England, Scotland, Ghana, Ethiopia and Kenya will be in action today in the masters/international category for the star prize of N1.2m ($8,000).

    According to the organisers, nine of the 28 games will be concluded today while 19 games will be played at the weekend. The players will compete in three categories – masters/international, Intermediate and opens in their bid to be part of the N4.8m prize money.

    All the participants concluded their accreditation on Thursday with all the matches kicking off today. Winners in the intermediate and opens categories will get N.5m and N1m respectively, while the top 10 players will get cash rewards.

    According to the Chairman, Lagos State Scrabble Association, Dayo Alao, the tournament would also help the local players as they are expected to compete with their foreign counterparts.

    Among the top players expected at the competition include Nigeria-born United States’ Sammy Okosagah, a two-time winner of the Akpabio tournament as well as Nigeria-born Scot, Lukmon Owolabi.

    Also, a special invitational category for professionals, who are expected to pay a participation fee of N50, 000, will be part of the event with the proceeds going into a developmental programme.

    “We are not only looking at the tournament alone, but to look at how we can develop the sport at the grassroots level.

    “That is why we will be having the special category for captains of industry with the proceeds from the participation fee going into a developmental programme in schools.

    “The winner of this division will decide the school that will benefit from the initiative. For us, we are trying to encourage support from these professionals,” Alao said.

  • Ranking for Lagos schools soon

    Ranking for Lagos schools soon

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Mrs Olayinka Oladunjoye, has been relentless in driving policies that will enhance performance in the Education sector.  In this interview, she tells KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE about plans to grade private schools, improve learning outcomes in public schools, as well as performance in the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

    What are your plans to improve the education sector this year?

    The Plans are many folds. First of all we have harmonised our curriculum and calendar; we have fortified our examination board which is actually one of the agencies that will give us our examination and grade us and tell us how we really stand. We have put in place all our tutor general/permanent secretaries in all the respective districts. This is with the view to ensuring that we do not have anybody acting capacity. Those who are there now, they are coming around with new ideas, new initiatives, new passion, new vision and new objectives. And I am sure with this and then the objective of the ministry itself, we have great plans for 2014.

    Tell us about your plans to grade schools.

    The initial thing was that the Education Sector Support Programme in Nigeria (ESSPIN) did a scoping mission in the state and they discovered that some private schools are so poor that they decided that some needed assistance. And if they can assist them it would be good because we need to meet our MDG goals. We want every child to be out of the street and be in school and since we as a government do not have the facilities and the capacity to put every child in school all we can do is support private education. That is why ESSPIN went ahead to bring up DEPIN, another concept, as a fall out of the scoping mission and the census that they did.

    What does DEPIN mean?

    Developing Private Education in Nigeria. They are using Lagos state as a start off. What they intend to do is to grade our schools. We want to ensure if this is a Grade A school what facilities do you have? It is like putting stars in the hotels – five star, four star, three, and two star hotels. We are using stars as well. If you know that you want to go to Sheraton, you will know that is a five star hotel for instance. In the same way, there are some schools that will have five stars, four stars, three stars, two stars and those that do not even have any star at all and cannot acquire any star. I can assure you that those schools will be closed because those ones cannot meet the minimum standard required of them.

    We will tell the whole world that if you want to put your child in a five star school, XYZ school, these are the facilities they have. As a parent, when they charge you money, you know that you are enjoying this facility ‘so why can’t I pay?’ But there are some, they can only be two stars, yet they will charge a lot of money. It is a way to draw the society’s attention to the fact that these schools have these facilities. What DEPIN wants to do is to give them technical assistance; they are not going to give then money. They will give them assistance in such a way that they can even go to the banks and get loans. We must assist as many schools as we can, not necessarily because they are going to be in competition with us, but because they must be in existence. They must take the children off the street for us; they must meet our MDG goals as a state or as a country; and Lagos is an integral part of Nigeria that is driving the MDG goals.

    Are you planning to grade public schools as well?

    Our schools are already graded. You know we have model colleges; we have upgraded schools, so in effect we have already graded our schools without necessarily saying so. And then there are schools that win the governor’s award. We can only improve on the model colleges to make them five star schools; we can only improve on an upgraded school to make them a first class school, so in effect upgrading system is already in place as public schools.

    What are your plans to improve on facilities?

    We have never stopped improving on facilities, as I speak with you we have 14 schools that are yet to be inaugurated. Some of these schools are being used as we speak. It is a continuous process; you cannot say I am done; this administration cannot even say it is done; the next one cannot say it. We have a 32-year-plan. The 2025 year plan is in existence.

    But, like you know, people come to Lagos all the time. They bring their children and family members. They all want to be in Lagos and we cannot turn them back. Lagos is a melting point; we have to just accommodate them. So they always stretch our facilities to elastic limits. As the challenges rear their heads, we will continue to meet them because as government we have never stopped; and a lot of money been deployed, EKO Project money is there being deployed to education, budgetary provisions are being made to education.

    That is why we are doing the residency registration. We want to know exactly who resides in Lagos so that we can plan. If we know that two million people reside in Alimosho, for instance, we want to know how many children are there; how many classrooms should we build consciously? So at least at the back of our minds we know Alimosho still needs these numbers of classroom.

    I want to use this opportunity to appeal to people to go and register, not for tax purposes, but to at least know the number of people that reside in a particular area, and how many children that are there; how many primary schools should we put in place, how many crèche must we build, how many teachers must we train, even for tertiary education. This is because we know that after x number of years, these five-year-old children would be in the university and this one-year old child will be in the primary school; this 10-year old child will come into secondary school, so we need them to register; we need to have data to work with.

    Is that why you have restricted admission into public schools?

    Let me correct you. It is open but we cannot have a situation where there will not be element of accountability. Every child should be able to at least read and write. We do not ask too much from them. If they are going into private schools, they still do interviews. What we are doing for them is to train them to know that as children they must write examination. If you inculcate that in them early, they will be used to writing exam. I went round when they were writing the screening test; they were serious minded about it. They must write exam; and they must score 50 percent in Mathematics and English. They would need the foundation. If they have 50 per cent in maths, 50 per cent in English and cumulatively, they pass. Even if they fail the exam, they have the opportunity of writing it again. It is like the common entrance.

    Now you insist on 50 per cent pass in public schools. I must commend your boldness in implementing the policy.

    They (pupils) will not be eligible for promotion. Apart from that you must come to school 90 per cent of time and remain in school, otherwise, you are not eligible for promotion; and then parents must attend Parents Forum meeting 50 percent of time otherwise we won’t promote you. I am going to ensure that the reform is adhered to very strictly. If they don’t pass the exam let them repeat. That is why ultimately you can see the evidence in our results because it a means to an end and the end is WAEC result. So if they are not serious minded, they don’t come to school and they miss their lessons, there is no short cut about it. You cannot go and start reading short cut to mathematics and say you are going to pass; there must be consistency. And then we as regulators must ensure that our teachers do the right thing and our principals take charge of our schools.

    What benefits are you seeing implementing this policy?

    Consistently, results have been heading up. Between 2011 and 2012, we wend up from 17 to 34 per cent; and that is 100 per cent increase. We know we are not there yet. Last year, we had 41 per cent and we have a mandate from the Governor to go to 60 per cent but that move is more than 60, it is 80. We are targeting 80 per cent because it is something we can do. We have the facilities, the teachers are being trained. They are been trained by ESSPIN; they are being trained with EKO Project money; so government has deployed so much resources and the result must be worth investment their putting into it.

     

  • Lagos inspectors to use new methods

    Lagos inspectors to use new methods

    NO longer will inspectors visit public schools in Lagos and instill fear in teachers and pupils. They are now called Quality Assurance Evaluators and are being re-orientated on how to monitor schools to help them achieve quality.

    The Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board (LSUBEB) organised eight days of training for the evaluators to learn skills that would enable them assess schools appropriately in partnership with the Education Sector Support Programme in Nigeria (ESSPIN), a DFID initiative.

    The training opened last Wednesday at the SUBEB Hall, Maryland, with the first three days dedicated to report writing for 20 evaluators from the Local Government Education Authorities (LGEA) and three from SUBEB headquarters to brush up their report writing skills. The remaining five days, which ends tomorrow, would focus on assessment skills for 35 evaluators from the LGEAS and SUBEB.

    At the opening, SUBEB Chairman, Mrs Gbolahan Daodu, represented by the Board Secretary, Mr Tunji Adefuye, said the new system is a shift to make pupils in public schools achieve learning outcomes.

    She said: “The concept of Quality Assurance Education was adopted by the state government in 2009. This is a paradigm shift from the old system of inspection which laid more emphasis on the efficiency of the school system rather than emphasising effectiveness and improved learning outcomes.

    “Whole school evaluation is the bedrock of quality assurance evaluation in education. The strengths and weakness of the schools are identified and suggestions made for improvement.

    “The objective of the workshop is primarily to equip the evaluators with the knowledge and skills that will enable them carry out the assignment of quality assuring schools and grading them appropriately.”

    Director, Quality Assurance, SUBEB, Mrs Habibat Daramosu told The Nation in an interview that unlike the old system where reports on schools were solely based on what inspectors noted, in the new dispensation, head teachers, parents and the host community contribute to the assessment to provide a clearer picture.

    “In the past, we were like police officers going to catch thieves; but now it is going to be all encompassing – involving the community, head teacher, pupils and the evaluators. The report is not based on the evaluator’s judgment alone. We will send pre-assessment forms to the head teacher to assess herself before the evaluator’s visit. After the visit, we compare the two,” she said.

    In case of lapses, Mrs Daramosu said corrections would be recommended and follow-up visits made to ensure they are effected.

    “Where we visit a school and find some lapses, the school will be informed and then there will be a follow-up visit to see whether the lapses have been addressed,” she said.

     

  • New day for Lagos schools

    New day for Lagos schools

    For long, public and private schools in Lagos ran on different steam. Now, things are being streamlined as part of efforts to improve education, KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE, MEDINAT KANABE, SAMPSON UNAMKA and JANE CHIJIOKE report.

    •Govt adopts uniform calendar

    As part of moves to enhance education, the Lagos State government has introduced a uniform calendar for public and private schools. The initiative took off at the beginning of the second term last Monday when public and private primary and secondary schools resumed at the same time.

    The Lagos State Commissioner for Education, Mrs Olayinka Oladunjoye said the government was also contemplating having a uniform curriculum and examinations. A system for grading private schools will also be introduced.

    In an interview with The Nation, she said the policies were evolved to ensure the education system runs smoothly and efficiently.

    She said the state was collaborating with private education providers to make the policies workable.

    Already, the committee that looked into the harmonization of schools’ calendar, curriculum and the Basic Education Certificate examination for public and private schools in the state submitted its report on December 30.

    The Committee, chaired by Dr Femi Ogunsanya, President, Association of Private Educators of Nigeria (APEN), was made up of representatives of National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS), Catholic, Ansar-ud Deen, Redeemed, League of Muslim Schools (LEMMPS), Association of International Schools in Nigeria (AISEN), Association of Private School Owners (APSO), Methodist Baptist, Association for Formidable Educational Developments (AFED) as well as the Nigerian Union of Teachers and officials of the Lagos State Ministry of Education and Office of Special Adviser on Education.

    Neither the committee’s recommendations nor the government’s response to the report have been made public. However, Mrs Oladunjoye said during the interview that the changes are in the best interest of the basic and secondary education sector.

    She said the state is insisting on a uniform calendar to bring order to the running of the academic sessions.

    She said: “We were working at cross purposes before; and I know that if you work at cross purposes, you can never attain the right vision and objective and results. Since this ministry or government is a result-oriented government we assume that there is need for us to work together. So we called the private sector because we cannot do it alone. First of all, the knowledge and the experience and infrastructure and exposure, they have as private sector, we don’t have it. So also the initiative we have as government they don’t have it, so there is need for us to harmonize their activities. And the issue of calendar is something that has always been a problem in the past. They go on vacation at anytime they like. School A will go, then school B will go at a different time; government will go at a different time. You can’t even plan your holidays. So we just said okay there is need for us to work together as a body that will ensure that we have the right calendar so we now know that together we go on vacation, together we will resume.”

    However, Mrs Oladunjoye said exceptions will be made for foreign schools that follow calendars of their home country if they seek permission.

    Many school owners that spoke with The Nation welcomed the uniformed calendar.Mr Abdulrazak Oladipo, Director of Da’wah Schools, Jakande Estate, Isolo, Lagos said it would stop schools from scheming to enrol more pupils.

    “It is a welcome idea. People are just cheats. They assume if they resume earlier they would get more pupils. They should follow the Lagos State rule,” he said.

    Vice Principal, Amazing Grace Private School, Ilasa, Mr Jonathan Monina, also said the policy is in order.

    “Actually last year we received a particular notice that all schools should resume the same day, at least we welcomed the idea, today we resumed together and we went on vacation the same time with the public schools and for us it is a welcome development,” he said.

    However, some school owners are urging the government to make December closing date earlier because of those who wish to travel for the yuletide. Mrs Rachel Dairo, Proprietress Summer Rain Schools, Isolo, complained that many pupils did not wait until the closing date last December.

    “It is a good thing but, you notice that before Christmas, parents want to travel so that they can pay less on transport fare. Before Christmas classes become empty. For example, a teacher complained that she has been married for five years and wished to travel before Christmas to see her parents,” she said.

    Dr Ijeoma Unachukwu, Cidec School, Apapa, said schools that run international curricula may find it difficult to comply with the uniform calendar policy.

    “I am believing God too that it would work but for now it is still difficult; in the sense that in private education system we run different curricula. Some go by the British curricula, some go by America and some go by Nigeria and some unify the three and it depends on when you take off and when you land. Also, some of us have international students who want to conclude their programmes here and go over there and meet their people and then also they want to come back,” she said.

    For some schools, their concern is how strikes by labour unions in public schools could affect the calendar. Mr Ayodele Ayodeji, Principal of SMA College, Isolo, highlighted this concern and added that schools should be allowed to choose when they should close or resume.

    He said: “We have always followed the resumption date. However, every private institution should have the liberty of when to resume. They may decide to resume or close a week after other schools. The most important thing is that they follow the scheme of work and curriculum and finish it. If the public school teachers decide to go on strike, are they saying the private schools should also hold on or if there is a distraction in the schools, the private schools should wait for them? They are not the ones paying our teachers’ salaries.”

     

    Uniform curriculum

     

    The issue of uniform curriculum has also caused division among private school owners. Some schools run the Nigerian curriculum, while others use it in combination with British, American and other curricula. Schools are required to purchase the Nigerian curriculum books yearly. However, some school administrators seem to be unsatisfied with the way the curriculum changes.

    Proprietress of Lillywhite Schools, Ilupeju, Mrs Taufikat Osibanjo said school owners will be happy to cooperate with the government but need the government to be consistent.

    “We are facing a lot of challenges on that issue. We are ready to cooperate with them; but sometimes they usually drive us back, because their own curricular is not clear,” she said.

    Ayodeji of SMA College, claimed that the curriculum given by the state is not well organised.

    “I can authoritatively tell you that the Lagos State government has changed its scheme of work two times. The curriculum is like a bible. It contains the totality of what should be done in all the classes. The scheme of work is drawn from the curriculum and the exam guide is also drawn from it. Every state has a liberty to draw up its scheme of work. If a scheme of work is given to an experienced teacher, he will look at it and decide what should be taught first; Lagos state has always had a scattered curriculum,” he said.

    Principal, Grandmate Schools, Ilasa, Mr Adesanya Abiodun, said foreign curricula, particularly British, are popular with some schools because parents prefer it.

    “Government should stop bothering itself with schools that operate British curriculum. It cannot be completely cancelled. I believe it is all about taste and because they can afford to do it. Moreover many of these schools are owned by foreigners and those who patronise them are mostly children of senators, governors and they don’t intend for their children to study in Nigeria in the first place. As soon as the children finish from primary or secondary school, they are sent out of the country to further their education,” he said.

    However, the Head Teacher, Ansar-Ud-Deen Nursery and Primary School, Mafoluku, Mrs Zaninab Oluokun said the Nigerian curriculum is more in-depth and therefore, preferable.

    “Sincerely speaking, the Nigerian curriculum is far better than the British one because when you go through theirs and compare it with ours you will see that ours is more detailed. I do not know why people go for British; maybe because of the name. Ours is wider in scope and more comprehensive. Here in my school we take roughly 16 to 17 subjects. I think that is a good idea by the government,” she said.

    Mr Sadiq Ibrahim, Principal of Laureates College, Aviation Estate, Mafoluku, said the Nigerian curriculum is not attractive to parents, not because it is not good, but because it is not well implemented.

    “It is not as if the other curricula are better than ours; it is because the ones we have at present the government does not ensure compliance. They don’t even provide the facilities that could make the compliance easy. In fact we haven’t fully achieved the things stipulated in our curriculum. For instance in the curriculum, we have wood work, electrical work and other technical trades, but they have not been actualised. I don’t think the curriculum is the problem; they should ensure its maximum use,” he said.

    A parent, Mr Kosi Udochukwu, agrees on the uniform education policy because of its local content.

    “It is a wonderful thing to do. We should teach our children more about their country. The worst of it all is that most of the private schools that use the foreign curriculum are more expensive, as if the Nigerian curriculum has no worth,” he said.

    Lagos State President of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools, Chief Yomi Otubela, also advised school owners to patronise the Nigerian curriculum.

    “What is important is that those who are running these curricula should try to achieve a blend. A child that studies in Nigeria should have a knowledge of our history and culture,” he said.

     

    Examinations

     

    In the new dispensation, the Lagos State government is insisting that all schools should register their pupils for the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) organised for Basic Nine (JSS3) pupils by the Lagos State Examination Board and the Senior School Certificate Examination organised for SS3 pupils.

    Regarding the SSCE, the Commissioner said schools are free to run whatever curriculum the wish to but must register their pupils for the examination.

    “You see they have a right to do whatever examination they want to do but they must do the local examination. That is the crux of the matter. So what we are saying is that you can do your GCSE; but your must right WASC. Those children must have a choice. Not every child would want to go abroad, so if you do your final year examination, if you want to remain in Nigeria, write WASC, write UTME, and remain in Nigeria. They can do whatever addition but it is incumbent on them to do our local examination,” she said.

    Regarding the Lagos-organised BECE, Mrs Oladunjoye said there have been challenges about the timing of the examination, which is presently being sorted out.

    “Before, private schools have been complaining that when we fix our examination they are on holiday or they have not finished the syllabus. That is why I said the exam board itself has been fortified. Now, we are going to have an agreement as to when we should write our next examination – looking at all the exigencies of the situation,” she said.

    In considering what should be the solution, Otubela, NAPPS President and Proprietor of Lagos Schools, Iyana-Ipaja, said the government should fix the examination for the third term. “It is our opinion that the examination should come in third term and not in second term. Even the government is handicapped because they use the same examiners as those that mark for WASC, UTME, and NECO. So when those bodies come calling, the examiners prefer to mark for them. As a result, their results are usually released after schools have resumed for the new term so it becomes almost irrelevant,” he said.

    Vice Principal of New Covenant Schools, Isolo, Lagos, Mr Adeshola Adekoya, said the government should evolve ways to make people take the BECE serious.

    “Government should just be serious with the exam because they are also not serious with a lot of things. Many schools would not want to take part in it because they feel that government just want to use it to get money, but government should try to convince them of its purpose. Many other schools that partake in the exam because they have to. We do the BECE exams and we take it seriously.”

    Grandmate Schools Principal, Abiodun, suggests that the government issues certificates for the examination.

    “Most of our parents don’t want their children to do the exams because they believe that whether they write it or not their children will go to SSS1. If government wants it to be effective they should issue certificates for the exams to encourage parents. They can also make it very compulsory. They can say if you don’t pass you will not get promoted. Presently, they don’t fail; they are just made to retake the exams when they are in SSS1 which is not enough. Some parents don’t even bother; they just go and pay for another school for their children,” he said.

    However, the commissioner said the examination board has been strengthened to conduct the BECE properly.

  • ‘We’ve tackled crime in Lagos’

    Lagos State Police Chief Umar Manko said his command would never neglect its duty of securing life and property.

    Manko, who was invited by the House of Assembly over the state of security in Lagos, said crime had become bad business in the state.

    The police chief, who was praised for his pro-active actions since ressuming office two years ago, said it was the duty of any police officer to respond to distress calls from the public at any time, whether he is on duty or not.

    His command, he said, had been dealing with land speculators (Omo Oniles), who are making life difficult for residents.

    He said he was unaware that some youths were allegedly being given para-military training at the Lagos and Badagry Toll Gates by the Federal Road Management Agency (FERMA). He promised to investigate the claim.

    He denied that his men had been extorting money from motorcycle riders operating in legitimate areas across the state.

  • Good times getting back on Lagos roads

    Before 2010, Lagos residents had different stories to tell on the condition of roads in the state. But the experience of Mr. Oloruntoba Adeola was indeed harrowing, though interesting.

    Every other month, Michael had to visit his mechanic to complain about either worn-out shafts or leaked absorbers. For him, driving on Lagos roads was a nightmare which he wouldn’t want to experience if he could avoid it.

    But that was then, the music today has changed and Adeola is now singing a different, refreshing tune. Just last week in Lagos, he said the nightmares of those years “have ended and the new era has come.”

    He, also, acknowledged that he now “drives with less time and less pains, at least on the key roads in the metropolis. I no longer visit mechanic workshops as often as I did in 2009 and even 2010.” According to him, this means I spend less on car maintenance. For instance, I changed my absorbers in 2012, and they are still in good shape.

    It must be noted however, that in the daunting task of ensuring effective road maintenance, the Lagos State Public Works Corporation (LSPWC) recently completed an asphalt production plant which has capacity to produce 160 tons per hour while another plant in Badagry is already at the 30 percent stage of completion.

    Another resident Modupe Isiaka also told The Nation a similar tale of bad and good time on Lagos roads. Even though several roads are yet to be reconstructed, Isiaka, a legal practitioner, said almost all the state roads “are now well-maintained.” He said the state of roads in the state now has reduced his travel time and traffic congestion. “Things have really improved, though there is still a lot to do.”

    But this improvement could not have been possible without the reform of the Lagos State Public Works Corporation (LSPWC), an agency statutorily saddled with the critical responsibilities of road maintenance and rehabilitation in the state. In 2010, for instance, the corporation unveiled a five-year roadmap, which it said, had been implemented, at least up to 80 percent just after four years it was developed.

    As a result, about 705 roads were maintained across the local councils in 2012 alone; no fewer than 988 roads rehabilitated in 2013; and a minimum of 1,400 roads already projected for maintenance under the 2014 fiscal year. For many certified civil engineers, this projection, might be difficult fulfill due to the amount of resources and materials required to put the roads in good shape all through the year, especially during the rainy season.

    But the corporation’s Executive Chairman, Mr. Gbenga Akintola told The Nation that there was nothing to fear. Better than in the previous years, Akintola said the Lagos State Government “has honed its approach to road maintenance and rehabilitation in order to make impact on almost all parts of the state be it in the urban centres or the suburbs.” He said the state government had built the required capacity for road maintenance.

    Akintola said the state government did not just come out with a plan to maintain and rehabilitate, that number of roads this year, but did so because of the completion of a new asphalt production plant in Imota, which he said, started operation December 2013. Enumerating the advantages of having the plant at Imota, he said it has already regenerated the area economically and socially. He acknowledged that as it is now, we have witnessed the influx of people to the area. People are now making inquiry to buy land in the area. A lot of indigenes have been employed in the area.

    “Also, 404 roads will be effectively maintained due to the siting of the plant. Six local councils in Ikorodu, Epe, Ibeju-Lekki and Eti-Osa will benefit from the plant,” he pointed out.

    He also spoke extensively on how the plant had benefited the local population, especially in Imota and other areas in Ikorodu noting that since the plant “have started production in December, all the people that were engaged at the site are from Imota and axis.

    “More than 30 persons have been engaged among the locals when the project was going on. We are still going to employ more people for security, monitoring and other areas,” he explained. But to make bad roads, Akintola said the state had a plan “to site asphalt production plants in each senatorial district in Lagos State. We now have in Badagry to serve Lagos West,” which he said, was already at the 30 percent stage of completion.

    Beyond what the state government has been able to do, Jaiyesimi, a fellow of Nigerian Institution of Civil Engineers (NICE), said road maintenance “is wide and requires a lot of issues,” which he said, could only be resolved through what he described as the robust culture of road maintenance. He said the country had not really imbibed the culture of road maintenance.

    However, Jaiyesimi acknowledged that Lagos State “takes road maintenance very serious.” He added that the state’s road maintenance agency under its current leadership “is really trying. The agency has really improved on its performance in the last four years. We see what it is doing across the local councils, making trips from one part of the state to the other much easier for the motorists and other road users.”

  • Church holds leadership course

    The Voice of Salvation Evangelical Ministry will hold a 13-week leadership course at 12/14, Ademolu Adefuye Street, off Davies Str., Alapere in Agboyi/Ketu Local Government of Lagos State, beginning tomorrow through April 9.

    The organiser, J. Olu Ayeni, said participants would be developed into great potentialities with creative minds. Those expected include church leaders, department heads.

  • Lagos pilgrim board presents report of hajj

    Lagos pilgrim board presents report of hajj

    Lagos State did not record any loss during the 2013 Muslim pilgrimage, Commissioner for Home Affairs and Culture, Oyinlomo Danmole, has stated.

    Danmole spoke with reporters when he received the report of the 2013 Hajj from the chairman of the Lagos State Pilgrims Welfare Board, Dr. Abdulkadir Paramole, at the state Secretariat, Alausa.

    He said, the total number of Lagos pilgrims that went for the 2013 pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia was 3,112.

    All of these, he said, came back home.

    Explaining how the state was able to achieve the feat, Danmole said it was because the state selected its pilgrims carefully.

    “First of all, only Lagos state residents, those who live in Lagos, no matter where you come from, that are entitled to go through us.

    “And we treated them in the best of ways; and we did not allow people who were too young to go.

    “Majority of the people who went, in fact about 80 per cent, were people who have never been to hajj before.”

    Presenting the report, Paramole said it is a comprehensive information on all the activities of the board during the last pilgrimage.

    While disclosing that the board had some challenges in the area of feeding and transportation in the Holy Land, Paramole said there would be improvement this year.