Tag: Ministry of Education

  • Army/Shiites Clash : El-Rufai raises white paper committee

    Army/Shiites Clash : El-Rufai raises white paper committee

    Gov. Nasiru El-Rufai of Kaduna State has set up a nine -man committee to produce a white paper on the report of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the Army/Shiites.

    The Army/Shiites clash in Zaria last December.

    This is contained in a statement issued by Mr Samuel Aruwan, Media aide to the governor, in Kaduna on Wednesday

    El-Rufai said that the committee would commence work immediately and submit the draft white paper within two weeks.

    The committee is headed by Adamu Mansur, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education.

    The governor also mandated the committee to make any other recommendation that would assist government in addressing issues raised in the report.

    The committee members were the permanent secretaries of the Ministries of Environment and Natural Resources, Works, Housing and Transport, Local Government, Cabinet Affairs and Special Services.

    The other members were the permanent secretaries Ministry of Justice, Civil Service Commission, and Mr M. Aliyu of the Ministry of Justice, as well as Mr Alexander Sule of the Office of the Secretary to the State Government.

  • Peak ignites ‘Art of Milk recipe’ in schools

    Peak ignites ‘Art of Milk recipe’ in schools

    Peak milk is rekindling the art of cooking in Lagos schools through its ‘Art of Milk recipe initiative’, one of the remarkable ways in which the company has chosen to mark the 2016 edition of ‘World Milk Day’.

    According to a release from the company, the idea tagged ‘PLAN A DAY’S MEAL WITH MILK (Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner)’ which is a cooking contest, requires selected schools in Lagos State to plan (and prepare) breakfast, lunch and dinner for a day using milk as the main food item.

    The initiative is meant to promote a culinary culture of cooking with milk in Nigerian homes since milk is an important agricultural product.  Milk contains various vitamins and minerals which are essential for the human body.  Hence, on the occasion of the ‘World Milk Day’, it is important to create awareness on the immense health benefits of milk on not just children, but adults also.  This knowledge would help curb malnutrition in children and youth who are the bulk of the Nigerian population.

    To participate, schools in Lagos are expected to create recipes using milk which they would send in for a series of evaluation. The recipes will be sent to: peakmilk@gmail.com. There would be 10 shortlisted from all recipes submitted and these schools would meet for a live face off on June 1st (which is World Milk Day).  The shortlisting will solely be the purview of a panel of judges comprising popular chefs, nutritionists, representatives from the Ministry of Education as well as members of the brand team.

    Some of the criteria to be used in selecting the winning recipes will include personal appearance, sanitary mannerism, creative use of milk, understanding meal planning, nutrition knowledge and team work.

    The whole aim is to get kids into cooking in an interactive way that involves home-based cooking activities.

    The preferred schools recipes will go home with fantastic prizes such as a branded LED screen, air conditioning units for six class rooms and three classrooms in different orders. All participating schools and supporting teachers will get surprising gifts for exhibiting great creativity with Milk.

    Consumers are advised to visit the Facebook Page and Youtube channel of the company for further details on the milk contest.

  • Lagos bans use of schools for parties

    Lagos bans use of schools for parties

    The Lagos State Government on Tuesday said it would no longer tolerate the use of public school premises for social functions and parties.

    The government also warned owners of private schools across the state to comply with rules and regulations guiding their operations.

    The Deputy Governor of the State, Idiat Oluranti Adebule, said this while briefing journalists on the strategic focus of the state government on education this year, adding that the Governor had directed that schools should no longer be used for social functions.

    She said: “The Governor has directed that schools will no longer be used for social activities any longer. We want to implore members of the public to report any school that violates this directive and we would ensure that defaulting schools are sanctioned accordingly.”

    Adebule, who also oversees the Ministry of Education, said the state government was putting a searchlight on the standard of education in the private schools, saying it will no longer be business as usual for such schools that undermine best practices.

    She said as a first step, the government will engage with private school owners and proprietors to intimate them on the action plan of the present administration towards improving the standard of education, saying although government is willing to partner with private schools, they must also be willing to adhere strictly to the acceptable standard.”

  • Lagos awards PZ Cussons for CSR in education

    Lagos awards PZ Cussons for CSR in education

    PZ Cussons Nigeria has been rewarded by the Lagos State Government for its immense support in the education sector through its Corporate Social Responsibility initiatives.

    At a Breakfast Meeting hosted on Tuesday by Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), PZ Cussons and a host of others were presented with the “Support Our Schools Initiative” awards for complementing the government’s effort in reshaping education standards in the state.

    PZ Cussons’ recognition came on the heels of the ground-breaking maiden edition of a senior secondary schools competition last year. PZ Cussons Chemistry Challenge is one of the numerous CSR activities of the company.

    The Breakfast Meeting, held at the jam-packed Lagos City Hall, had in attendance stakeholders in the education sector and top government functionaries.

    In his keynote address, Fashola thanked the award recipients for their contribution to educational growth in the state. He said: “I particularly salute your courage. I salute your steadfastness to work with us. Thankfully government itself has realised this is not a one-man show.”

    The Corporate Affairs and Administrative Director of PZ Cussons Nigeria, Mrs Yomi Ifaturoti said that the company was honoured that the state government “has deemed it fit to give us an award today for the PZ Cussons Chemistry Challenge. We did it in line with our philosophy of partnering with the Lagos State Ministry of Education.”

    She said the company focused on Chemistry because of how important the subject was to the society. “Even Lagos State recognises the essence of Science subjects and that’s why we are getting this award today,” she further said.

    According to Ifaturoti, PZ Cussons placed emphasis on CSR. Her words: “We do good business and we believe business must give back to the community. We have always been giving back to the society and this is our own special way of focusing on the children whom we know as the leaders of tomorrow.”

    Last October, thousands of senior secondary students in Lagos State participated in the inaugural edition of PZ Cussons Chemistry Challenge with 16-year-old Emmanuel Ejiogu Onyekachi of Miketoy College, Ikotun, emerging the grand prize winner at the end of a rigorous three-stage contest. His reward were N700,000 cash, a laptop, a trophy and gold medal, while his chemistry teacher, Mr Jossy Ogunniyi won N100,000. Chemistry books worth N100,000 were also presented to his school.

    Three other runners-up, their teachers and schools also received fabulous prizes.

    An initiative of PZ Cussons Foundation, the corporate social responsibility arm of PZ Cussons Nigeria Plc, the second edition of the competition would soon commence.

    PZ Cussons Foundation focuses on education, health, road rehabilitation and provision of portable water. It has extended its interventions into constructing and donating blocks of classrooms, boreholes, health and youth centers as well as road rehabilitation.

     

     

  • I suspect arson in Edo ministry inferno – Oshiomhole

    I suspect arson in Edo ministry inferno – Oshiomhole

    Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State has said the fire that gutted a building at the state ministry of Education might not be unconnected with on-going investigation into mismanagement of teachers’ salaries especially at the primary schools level.

    The building contained archival documents, examination master list and reference materials dating back to the 1950s when Edo was part of the old Western region.

    All the materials were destroyed in the fire that started at about 5am.

    Oshiomhole said he suspected that it was part of the investigation that made some people burn down the archives at the Ministry of Education.

    He said his administration has set up an investigative panel in each of the 18 local government areas of the state to take audit schools, number of teachers in the schools, their qualifications and the total salaries and allowances paid to them.

    The governor spoke when he played host to the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE).

    He said, “What we have been trying to do here is to try to find the courage to clean up the mess we inherited in Edo State and to see that we leave behind not just roads, schools, street lights and a school system that works but also institutionalised paperless government so that the level of manipulation can be minimised if not completely eradicated.

    “If there is one matter that has engaged my time and those of my lieutenants in government, it is trying to see through what is going on with regards to teachers salaries. Because the problem has been there for a very long time, those involve in it are so deeply entrenched in it,” he added.

    The state president of NULGE, Comrade Young Ilemikhene, said it was necessary to recognize and respect the local government’s operational procedures in line with the existing laws as to enable it perform its constitutionally assigned roles.

     

  • New Rivers teachers for training

    The three-month training for the 13,000 new teachers that have been employed by the Rivers State Ministry of Education is part of an induction recommended during the education summit in Port Harcourt, March this year.

    Drawn from a template recommended by one of the summit speakers, Prof Joshua Aisiku and others, the induction was part of the continuous teacher development pro-gramme they will undergo while in the employ of the Rivers State government.

    Prof Aisiku said the training will prepare them for classroom management and fill gaps in their pedagogical and knowledge skills such that when they are distributed to the over 100 model primary and secondary schools the state government has built and equipped in September, they will be able to offer the pupils quality education.

    “New teachers must know how to meet the varying needs of students in their classrooms,” Aisiku said.

    He added that though all the newly-employed teachers may not be First Class graduates, they can be groomed to become very good teachers.

    Mr Charles Magbe of PriceWaterCoopers, the firm that handled the recruitment for the state, said the grooming is necessary for the teachers to deliver on the state’s objective of providing access to quality education for all school-aged pupils irrespective of socio-economic background.

    “Post recruitment, government must continue to invest heavily in developing the teaching capacity of teachers. A rigorous programme of induction must be pu in place for the new hands; and close monitoring and appraisal of performance is important,” he said.

    The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Country Director, Prof Hassana Alidou, Rivers State Commissioner for Education, Dame Alice Lawrence-Nemi said the recruiting was in recognition of the important roles teachers play in the school system.

    Since Governor Chibuike Amaechi declared a state of emergency in the education sector in 2008, the government has completed 264 of the 750 model primary schools it plans to build, 100 of which have been equipped and now in use.

    However, Dame Lawrence-Nemi said the government recognises that infrastructural development alone will not automatically translate to good performance, hence the decision to recruit and train teachers to meet this important need.

    With their employment, she added that the teachers will be filling a shortfall numbering tens of thousands as the rehabilitation of infrastructure had led to increased enrolment.

    She said: “The recruitment of 13,000 teachers will reduce the burden of teachers teaching several subjects at a time, when in actual sense, they are meant to teach only one subject each. The 13,000 teachers will be distributed to the primary, junior secondary and senior secondary schools.

    “The plan is aimed at boosting the manpower in the educational sector and reversing the poor performance of students in external examinations like WAEC and NECO.”

    Mrs Lawrence-Nemi noted that this recruitment marks the end of the era of cutting of corners in terms of quality. She noted that the government wants to instill professionalism in the teaching profession.

    Of the 13,000 teachers recruited, 90 per cent (11,700) are indigenes of the state, while 10 per cent of 1,300 are from other states.

    The Commissioner said teachers already in the teaching force are not left out of professional development as the state has organised programmes for their training.

    “The Ministry of Education is devoted to continuous teacher training and re-training in order to enhance specialisation and efficiency. The Ministry in partnership with the British Council and Cambridge University introduced the TKT Essentials training and certification. Today, well over 9,000 teachers across the 23 Local Government Areas of Rivers State, 75 per cent of who are in primary and junior secondary schools, have received in-service training.

    “We also embarked on the re-certification and verification of teachers’ credentials in order to ascertain the current numerical strength of teachers in the state to ensure that only qualified teachers are allowed to teach in the Schools,” she said.

  • UniAbuja a mockery of university system – Panel

    UniAbuja a mockery of university system – Panel

    The special visitation panel set up by the Federal Government in July to investigate the activities of University of Abuja since its establishment has described the institution as a mockery of the university system.

    Presenting the panel’s report to the Minister of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Rufa’i on Friday in Abuja, the chairman of the panel, Dr Theo Osanakpo, blamed the under development of the university on poor governance system and financial impropriety.

    Osanakpo said the report indicated that the 2025 target set for the completion of the full master plan of the university might not be realised as only six per cent of the plan had been achieved after 24 years.

    He identified ranking of unapproved programmes, admission irregularities, lack of a governance system and lack of a proper accounting procedures as major challenges facing the institution.

    “Looking at all these irregularities going on in the institution, I would say that UniAbuja is a mockery of the university system; the facilities at the mini campus do not reflect the funds that the Federal Government give.

    “There are no sporting facilities for students, no good lecture halls and the facility is way below the needs of the more than 70,000 students of the institution running the undergraduate, post graduate, sandwich, part-time and distance learning programmes,’’ he said.

    Osanakpo said that the staffing of the institution and the environment were very deplorable and the government needed not just to give funds but to monitor the administration of the funds for effective usage.

    He also recommended that the Vice Chancellor be “bench marked” periodically by the governing council to guarantee standard.

    The panel also recommended that prospective students of the institution must have the JAMB requirement and write the post-UTME examination to curb the excesses of admission.

    It also recommended that the Students Union Government (SUG) should be reinstated in the institution to allow for peer interaction which also enhances their productivity level and help to bridge the gap between students and the school management.

    Responsing, the minister thanked the panel for the report, saying that “UniAbuja in spite of its proximity to the education headquarters and the regulating body, NUC, has been a challenge.’’

    Rufa’i assured the panel that the report would be implemented and that within two weeks, the ministry would produce a white paper that would be presented to the president.

    “The president approved this panel so I know that he would be glad to resolve the issues brought to the fore through this report.’’

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Federal Government on July 25 inaugurated the panel to investigate the financial and governance system of the university since 1988 when it was established after the suspension of four courses due to irregularities.

    The courses are medicine, veterinary medicine, agriculture and engineering. (NAN)