Tag: Out-of-school children

  • FG should empower newly-established parastatal for out-of-school children – Adeagbo

    FG should empower newly-established parastatal for out-of-school children – Adeagbo

    A UK based Non Governmental Organisation (NGO) set up to reduce the number of out-of-school children in Nigeria, IA-Foundation has urged the Federal Government to empower newly established parastatal for out-of-school children.

    IA-Foundation founder, Mrs Ibironke Adeagbo, who is a chartered accountant, stated this at an event while partnering with the Mayor of Southwark, Councillor Micheal Situ to raise awareness and funds to help pick up vulnerable children off the streets in Nigeria.

    Adeagbo explained that there is a correlation between illiteracy and insecurity, adding that those children have grown up without skills and can only resort to crime to survive. 

    She confirmed that the Foundation is willing to work with the government and especially the Northern Governors forum to fund a lasting solution to the menace. 

    Ibironke confirmed that the foundation is planning for a bigger fundraiser in Lagos at the Civic Centre in Victoria Island, Lagos on March 2 at 4pm to raise funds to put the children back in school. 

    The Acting High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Ambassador Cyprian Heen, stressed the importance of education, stating the government cannot do it all. 

    “So we should all socially invest in getting these children off the street. 

    Read Also: Foundation pushes for child domestic workers’ protection

    “So that they can be economically active in future and pay taxes, which is good for the economic development in Nigeria, ” Heen said.

    He confirmed the commission’s support for the IA-Foundation’s wonderful initiative.

    Host of the event, Councillor Situ said education is the only thing that can enable people discover their potentials and therefore achieve in life. 

    The Chairman of the Foundation, Mr Jide Olagundoye, also confirmed the foundation is so resolute in bringing down the number of out-of- school children in Nigeria because it is unacceptable and a ticking time bomb that could exacerbate the insecurity challenges in future.

  • Surge in out-of-school children statistics raises concern in Osun

    Surge in out-of-school children statistics raises concern in Osun

    The surging number of out-of-school children Osun State as the highest in the Southwest is raising concerns, TOBA ADEDEJI reports.

    Brother! Come and buy my mint candy! I sell cheaply. Please buy from me even if it is one or two. My brother over there is also selling bitter kola. You can buy from him too,” an eight-year-old boy, who is a candy hawker at the popular Ola-Iya Bridge, pleaded with this reporter.

      When asked why he was not in school by the early hour of the day? He replied: “We go to school once in a while. We are also sent here once in a while to come and make money. Out of our profit, our parents use it for our school fees. We are attending private school. Our parents decided to withdraw us from public school because our performance is becoming poor.”

      Checks by The Nation indicated that most public places in Osun State have been flooded with children during school hours. These children are either begging or hawking. Others are left for the street urchins to determine their fate.

    Among the places visited in Osogbo, the state capital, during school hours are Ola-Iya, Alekuwodo, Shasha market, Osun Mall, Oke-Fia, Old Garage, Igbona, Aregbe, Oja-Oba, Olu-Ode, Owode-Ede, Ilesa garage among others.

      Other public places in the state’s major towns are not left out, including Ikirun, Ede, Ilesa, Iragbiji, Aagba, and Okuku.

    Despite that every child has the right to education as enshrined in the Child Rights Act of 2003, this seems to be a mirage in Osun State because the statistics of out-of-school children have ever increased.

      A  Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MIC-6) released in 2021 rated Osun as the state with highest number of out-of-school children in the Southwest. The MICS-6 is a National Bureau of Statistics data supported by the United Nations Children and Educational Fund (UNICEF). According to the UNICEF Social Policy Specialist, Muhammad Okorie, 14.88 per cent of male and 11.5 percent of female children in Osun were out-of-school in the state.

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       How Aregbesola’s educational policy boomeranged

     Osun State is one of the states with the highest number of classrooms after the intervention of the administration of Governor Rauf Aregbesola, who tackled infrastructural shortfall in the education sector.

     The administration embarked on the construction of 11 mega schools, including the construction of other major and minor classrooms across the state. Omotunde Young, the Commissioner for Education under the Rauf Aregbesola administration, noted that the Osun State schools were run like zoos before the government came in and “the governor decided to change the undesirable condition previous government had left the sector”.

      Subsequently, the administration introduced a new education policy which consisted of a single uniform for students, school renaming, reclassifications and merging, among others.  

      The school was reclassified to a 4-5-3-4 system as Aregbesola held that the system was introduced by Obafemi Awolowo and he promised that the system would bring to the fore, the importance of education to the society and ensure that no child of school age was excluded from getting quality western education.

     The policy was reversed by the administration of Adegboyega Oyetola, who succeeded Aregbesola on the ground that the policy affected the quality of education negatively, a situation that caused partners and stakeholders, including United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), ex-students associations among others to withdraw from the state.

     In 2022, after the policy was reversed, UNICEF, through its Social Policy Specialist, disclosed that Osun has the highest number of out-of-school children in the Southwest.

    However, the number increased from the statistics of UNICEF of 2022 according to the report presented by the Education Summit committee inaugurated by Governor Ademola Adeleke, which was chaired by Prof. Oyesoji Aremu despite that the state has 1,340 primary schools – 647 in urban and 693 in rural areas – and 387 secondary schools.

    Blame game

      But, Oyetola has blamed the surge on Adeleke for playing politics with the education system, stressing that the governor sacked over 1,500 teachers he employed during his administration.

      Oyetola maintained that the policy of reversal he initiated during his administration had started yielding good results because he followed the recommendations made by the review committee on education chaired by Prof. Olu Aina.

      He said: “My admonition to the government is that it should not play politics with education. When we were in government, we employed about 1,500 teachers. But unfortunately, the present government stopped all of them when they came on board, and over a year now, they have not done anything to fill up the vacancies created. This has led to the recent increase in out-of-school children in Osun State. I want to implore the government to ensure they employ adequate teachers and also the ex-students of schools across the state should partner with the government.”

      However, the Adeleke administration berated Oyetola over his allegation. The state government, through Commissioner for Information and Public Enlightenment, Kolapo Alimi, attributed the huge number of out-of-school children to years of neglect of the education sector inherited from the Oyetola administration.

    Alimi noted that the upcoming recruitment of 6,000 teachers is part of the administration’s three-pronged approach to redressing the situation.

      According to him, “Osun suffered years of educational neglect and misplaced priority under the Oyetola government. It is on record that the last administration in a series of post-election bobby traps employed over 10,000 workers to make the state ungovernable for the incoming Adeleke government, a development the new government promptly addressed with six executive orders to restore normalcy.”

     Despite the government’s defence, findings by The Nation shows that many schools, including schools of special needs, are short of teachers as some schools have 69 pupils against five teachers, 102 pupils to 12 teachers, 86 pupils to four teachers, 310 pupils to 25 teachers, 275 pupils to 15 teachers, among others.

     Osun has 11,000 shortfall of teachers, says ex-Education Special Adviser

      Speaking on the development, the former Special Adviser to Oyetola on Education, Jamiu Olawumi, chided Adeleke’s approach in handling the education sector, stating that the present government placed politics above quality education.

      He explained: “During the administration of Oyetola, we ensured we took education to the doorstep of the people. We organised town hall meetings in nine Federal Constituencies to know their grievances against the policy we inherited. The policies that Aregbesola’s government introduced chased partners away from the state. Imagine, the school merger decision forced male students to attend only girls’ school, and the male will carry a certificate that he attended Baptist Girls College. UNICEF blacklisted us and the state suffered greatly. We were enlisted again after the reversal.

     “Subsequently, we introduced scholarship programmes for indigent pupils, which is a platform we created to bring children into our school. We paid for the WASCE and NECO exams.

     “In the report of the Education Review Committee chaired by Prof. Olu Aina, it was discovered that we have a 6,000 shortage of teachers in our schools and we commenced a recruitment exercise. We employed 2,500. But, Adeleke came on board to sack 1,500 politically. Every month teachers retire from service and others leave their jobs every day for several reasons.

     “By projection, Osun has an 11,000 teacher shortfall in schools, which is one of the factors that is contributing to the number of out-of-school children in the state. Instead of the government addressing the matter, their education summit only addresses how they will renovate classrooms. They do not think about the teachers that will teach them.

     “The present government is only interested in how they will make money through contracts of refurbishing the school. They are not tackling the challenges holistically. They renovated 31 schools out of about 380 schools in bad condition. They are looking for soft matter to address in the sector.”

      He added: “On school feeding, the money budgeted per student is till N100 per pupil and each of them has to eat an egg per day. The cost of an egg per one in the current economic reality is N120. Despite the fact that education is free in Osun, the current government’s action is discouraging students from going to school.”

     Osun govt: we are making education encouraging to children

      The Commissioner for Education, Dipo Eluwole, boasted that the government’s rate of awareness to woo children to school was superb.

      He lamented that “in the past, the previous administration neglected the national policy on education; they formulated their policies and did their own. They said they were running an unusual government, and Aregbesola said so. They dumped the 6-3-3-4 policy and adopted their style. We also have the issue of Mega School that is giving us problems now.”

     “Why is Osun home to out-of-school children? It is because Osun is a civil servant state. We are into farming, and the low-income earners in Osun are many. Many students in Osun before they go to school have to hawk before they can get a stipend to feed in school. They do that for one hour before they go to school. It is easier for them because the school is close to them. But when they started their mega school nonsense, whereby schools are very far from them, this made many students opt out.”

      He added: “Tackling the problem from the previous government is a big challenge because most schools have been abandoned. We are renovating the schools in catchment areas so that students can attend schools close to them. We are improving on school feeding which made the students stop hawking before they go to school. The school population is now increasing.”

      Eluwole noted that the government is tackling truancy in schools and also commissioned special marshals to arrest children and parents who are found on the street during school hours, saying, “We are tackling the menace of truancy, absenteeism and insecurity in schools now; it is not business as usual”

     The surge in out-of-school children is pathetic

      A Child rights advo cate, Dr. Chuks Okoji, who is also a lecturer in the Department of Mass Communication, Federal Polytechnic Offa, Kwara State, described the surge in out-of-school children as pathetic.

     He said: “The first blame has to be on the parents who refused to enroll and ensure their children go to school. It is unfortunate that in this age, some parents are lackadaisical about the acquisition of universal basic education that is available for free at least at the primary school level.

     “I have heard people point to poverty as the main reason for pupils dropping out of school. But, the question is what the reason is for pupils dropping out of Government Primary school, which is free? The problem is most parents give birth to children they can’t cater for. I am not saying there is no poverty in the land, but if proper family planning is in place, ensuring that a child has access to basic education wouldn’t be a problem for serious parents.”

      Okoji lamented that irresponsible parents will hinge the blame on the government and the economy, which are not the main cause of the surge in out-of-school children.

    According to him, the government is also culpable in contributing to the surge.

      “Visit most Primary and Secondary schools and you will pity the learning condition of the students. Most students sit on the floor under dilapidated buildings. The maintenance of these school structures, especially in the remote areas is zero. It will be hard to convince students to go to school under this harsh condition and the government has a role to play in making the learning environment conducive.  “In furtherance to this, the welfare of the teachers in primary and secondary schools in Nigeria is not encouraging. Gone are the days when teachers will look out for the child not seen in school. The teacher who is sad about the pay of his work will not go the extra-mile to encourage the attendance of pupils in school.

     “The economy has played a damning role in the surge of out-of-school pupils. Most parents can’t afford to give meals to their wards and as such, the child is pushed to the street to fend for himself. It is not surprising to see children who are within primary school age hawking beverages and bottled water on the street and inside traffics in major towns of the country. The ones in the villages resort to menial jobs to have money to survive,” Okoji said.

  • FG to get Nigeria’s 20m out-of-school children to school

    FG to get Nigeria’s 20m out-of-school children to school

    The Ministry of Education, says it plans to focus on getting back Nigeria’s 20 million out-of-school children to school in the next four years.

    Prof. Tahir Mamman, the Minister of Education, said this on Monday at the 2024 budget defense before the joint committee of the National Assembly on Education in Abuja.

    He said that there were millions of out of school children in Nigeria saying that it was a major problem for the country.

    ‘’At the tertiary level, we need graduates who have skills and competence to be able to contribute to national development.

    ‘’We need graduates who can be employed by willing employers, right now we have that complain on the quality of the products from our universities and polytechnics.

    “Basically the policy trust of the government and this ministry is on these major areas. There are about 20 million out-of-school children or even more in Nigeria.

    “We are working on it to ensure that as many as possible of these children, for those of them that can come back to school are given the opportunity to come back,’’ he said.

    Mamman added: “For those who cannot, we want to ensure they are empowered though short term skills training that will give them the opportunity to connect with the society to have a meaningful likelihood.”

    The minister said that the ministry had engaged with stakeholders to review Nigeria’s school curriculum to ensue skills acquisition for students.

    He encouraged universities to include skills training, and entrepreneurship into their curriculum to ensure that they produced self-reliant graduates.

    Mamman said that a total of N101.45 billion was allocated for the ministry it 2024 out of which N5.88 billion was for personnel cost, N1.08 billion for overhead cost and N94.48 billion for capital expenditures.

    The Chairman, House Committee on Alternative Education Rep. Aliyu Mustapha, said that the House was concerned by the rising number of out-of-school children in Nigeria.

    Read Also: Carving a brighter future for out-of-school children

    “I am happy that the minister has highlighted out-of-school children, youth and adult literacy in the ministry’s programme and vocational training that has taken the centre stage.

    “In the 2024, we have seen that you are still limited by funding, the National Assembly is doing its best to see that those allocations are raised,” he said.

    Alliyu assured of the required support to the ministry and oversight where necessary to ensure proper implementation of programmes.

    (NAN)

  • Out-of-school children: Fed Govt to focus on basic education

    Out-of-school children: Fed Govt to focus on basic education

    The Federal Government said to reduce the number of out-of-school children, it intends to focus more on basic or primary education than tertiary education.

    Minister of education, Dr Tahir Mamman, said in the past, more focus was placed on universities, polytechnics and Colleges of Education but the administration has decided to shift its focus to basic education in the country.

    He said although the responsibility of basic education lies mainly under the purview of states and local governments, the Federal Government is developing policies and backing it with funding.

    The Minister said this yesterday in Abuja at a ministerial roundtable on National child wellbeing at the ongoing 29th Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) summit with the theme: ‘Pathways to sustainable economic transformation and inclusion’.

    Mamman also said the government intends to make the teaching profession more attractive to Nigerians to enable it to reduce the number of out of school children in the country.

    His words: “And so, for us, in the education sector at this time, we are focusing attention at that level of basic education. In the past for some time, we focused on tertiary education, the universities, polytechnics, Colleges of Education but now our attention has shifted to that level. Now not because it is our mandate. Ordinarily, at that level it is actually state and local governments that have the bulk of the responsibility, that is what the Constitution says as basic education is compulsory.

    Read Also: EU earmarks N32.9b for out-of-school children

    “For now, what we’re doing is to develop policies at the federal level and engage the governors who have responsibility and not only just engaging them by word of mouth, no, there’s also some funding, which is provided for that through the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).

    “And then the issue of the teachers you know, who have to have the requisite background, you know, to be able to train them properly, and then ensure also that the condition of service is suitable and the teacher profession is also attractive to those who want to go into it. Not like the situation that we met on the ground where a lot of people who go into teaching are people who don’t have anything else to do. So, these and many others are some of the policies we are looking at.”

     Country Director, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Cristian Munduate said the government needs to set priorities and stick to them to achieve its mandate of reducing the number of out-of-school children.

    She said about 2000 children die everyday from preventable diseases which can be accelerated at the local levels with the correct investments to prevent diseases rather than its cure.

    Munduate added: “About 2000 children die everyday from preventable diseases, so, talking about rapid responses and quick wins, these can be accelerated at local level with the correct investments to prevent and not cure diseases.

    “What we spend on one child you can prevent through giving quality preventive actions,I commend the government because we have just finalised a consultation where the history of education was leaning on quality learning. Why? Because when the government came into office, the numbers were there. Three out of four children cannot understand what they are reading or cannot do arithmetical calculations.”

    Chief Executive Officer (CEO)-designate, NESG, Dr Tayo Aduloju said the present numbers say the country is in a crisis that must be treated now in terms of the huge number of out of school children in the country.

    Aduloju suggested that the government uses social investment incentives like the conditional cash transfer that it is implementing to force parents to send their children to school, ensure birth registration and vaccination.

     He said this could be done by making sure that every head of household that plans on benefiting from the programme ensures their children are in school, provides the birth registration of all their children and vaccinations.

  • Abbas, Kalu decry increasing sexual violence against children, out-of-school children

    Abbas, Kalu decry increasing sexual violence against children, out-of-school children

    House of Representatives Speaker Tajudeen Abbas and his deputy, Benjamin Kalu, have condemned the growing spate of child labour and sexual assaults on children in the country. 

    The Speaker also decried the high rate of out-of-school children in Nigeria, while his deputy spoke of the need to educate the girl-child.

    They said doing so would encourages the Girl-child and opens them up to more opportunities in the social space.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Musa Abdullahi Krishi, the Speaker said it would be to the benefit of the nation if government at all levels could make education, especially at the elementary level, free and compulsory.

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    Abbas said as the world marked the International Day of the Girl-Child yesterday, all stakeholders have a role to play in their education, growth and welfare.

    The Speaker noted that the responsibility of educating the girl-child starts with the parents, especially with their moral upbringing.

    He said the society also needs to ensure their safety and education.

    Abbas stressed that educational, religious, and traditional institutions as well as the government have complementary roles to protect, nurture and ensure the mental development of the girl-child, and all children alike.

    He restated the readiness of the 10th House to give legislative backing to any programme or policy designed for the wellbeing of the girl-child and all children across the country.

    Kalu urged fellow Nigerians to invest in the girl-child, saying doing so would increase the visibility of the female gender in the political space and aid Nigeria’s economic growth and development.

    In a statement by his Special Assistant on Press Affairs, Udora Orizu, the Deputy Speaker said the day is designated to eliminate gender-based challenges that girls face around the world, such as child marriages, poor learning opportunities, violence, and discrimination.

    According to him, the theme for this year’s celebration of the girl-child is: Invest in Girls’ Rights: Our Leadership, Our Well-being, is apt and timely as investment in girls upholds their rights and assures a more equitable and successful future.

    Kalu recalled a recent visit from the Female Student Vanguard for Girl-Child Education in Nigeria from Kano State, during which he expressed concern over the rising number of uneducated girl-child and pledged his support to the reduce the trend to the barest minimum.

  • How to end out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria, by CSOs

    How to end out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria, by CSOs

    In commemoration of International Literacy Day 2023, Policy House International, in collaboration with the Social and Economic Research and Development Centre (SERDC), Ready to Lead Africa (RTLA), and TiFA-CDI, have set a roadmap to end the out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria by 2027.

    The roadmap, which was developed by a team of experts from the four organisations, is a comprehensive four-year strategy that will address the root causes of the crisis.

    The strategy includes the following key priorities: Investment in identified infrastructure, including ICT; Increased teacher training, recruitment, and targeted deployment; Incentives for parents in the most vulnerable regions; investment in curriculum and prioritization of STEM, and encouraging nutrition and school feeding.

    The roadmap also calls for the enrollment of 11,341,854 children in school, the construction of 89,9000 new classrooms, the training and deployment of 48,000 teachers, the deployment of 92,000 offline tablets, and the provision of complimentary financing of $400 million.

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    The strategy according to the organisations will be implemented in 20 states of Nigeria, which are home to 75% of the out-of-school children in the country. The organizations are calling on the government, donors, and other stakeholders to support the implementation of the strategy.

    Executive Director of Policy House International, Taiwo Akerele said the roadmap is a significant step towards addressing the out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria.

    “If implemented effectively, the strategy could help to ensure that every child in Nigeria has access to quality education.”

    International Literacy Day is celebrated every year on September 8 to raise awareness of the importance of literacy. The theme for this year’s International Literacy Day is Promoting Literacy for a World in Transition: Building the Foundation for Sustainable and Peaceful Societies.

    The out-of-school children crisis is a major problem in Nigeria. According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), there are an estimated 10.5 million out-of-school children in Nigeria, the highest number in any country in Africa. The crisis is caused by a number of factors, including poverty, conflict, and discrimination.

    Akerele emphasised that presentations have been made to the presidency and other relevant bodies of government, including the Nigeria Governor’s Forum.

    The roadmap developed by Policy House International and its partners is a comprehensive plan to address the out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria. If implemented effectively, the strategy could help to ensure that every child in Nigeria has access to quality education.

  • Out-of-School children’s figure drops – Minister

    The Federal Government says the number of Out-of-School (OSC) Children in the country has reduced from 13.2 million to 10.2million, following various interventions of the government and development partners.

    The Minister of Education Malam Adamu Adamu said this at the 12th Edition of the Ministerial Press Briefing on the OSC Phenomenon held in Abuja on Friday.

    Adamu, who was represented by Mr. Sonny Echono, Permanent Secretary of the ministry, said that conflicting figures of out-of-school children were being given, ranging from 10 -13 million.

    Ministerial strategic plan states that Nigeria has 10.5 million children aged 6-14, out of school.

    However, a recent Demographic Health Survey (DHS) has shown that the population of out of school children in Nigeria has risen from 10.5 million to 13.2 million.

    According to him, the reasons adduced for this unfortunate phenomenon include, though, not limited to the following: financial incapacitation, violent conflicts and ignorance on the part of parents/guardians.

    He added that lack of political will to confront the ugly phenomenon, socio-cultural complexities, distance to schools; physically challenged children, child labour, migration and orphanage were other challenges of the OSC.

    He listed the most endemic states of the OSC to include: Kano, Akwa Ibom, Katsina, Kaduna, Taraba, Sokoto, Yobe, Zamfara, Oyo, Benue Jigawa and Ebonyi.

    According to him, the concerns of this administration are two-fold; to find an empirical means of getting the figures right and the best ways of reducing the number to the barest minimum.

    “ln the last four years, therefore, we have been making efforts to determine the exact number of out-of-school children.

    “However, the good news is that the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) and other stakeholders have been working towards this common goal of determining the number of children of school age who are not in school.

    “Similarly, the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), the World Bank, United Nations International Children Education Fund (UNICEF), and other development partners are collaborating to reduce the number of out-of-school children.

    “For now, based on the recently conducted National Personnel Audit of both Public and Private schools, Nigeria has an estimated out of school children population of 10,193,918,’’ he said.

    Adamu explained that the ministry has, however, encountered some challenges in a bid to reduce the number of OSC.

    He enumerated the challenges as inadequate security due to banditry/insurgency, misconceptions about the value of education and slow implementation of UBEC programmes by States Universal Basic Education Boards (SUBEBs).

    He listed other challenges to include: low draw down of matching grant by SUBEBs, inadequate funds for special education, inadequate grassroots needs assessment before project execution and wrong location of projects.

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    Adamu added that the ministry in collaboration with the National Mass Adult and Non-Formal Education Commission had also developed a template to capture the OSC within the space of the next five years.

    “We have sent out our team to countries like Pakistan and Indonesia that have similar issues with Nigeria and find a way they were able to overcome it.

    “We have also carried out advocacy and sensitisation programmes on monitoring and mentoring of School Based Management Committees (SBMCs) on school governance in 36 states and FCT.

    “Steps are being taken under UBEC to construct 2,493 new classroom, 2,457 VIP toilets,19 laboratories, 91boreholes, 1,266 renovated, classrooms, procured 192,985 pupils and 10,038 teachers’ furniture,’’ the minister said.

    He said these interventions would further reduce the number of OSC in the country.

  • FG, UNICEF partner to reduce number of out-of-school children

    FG, UNICEF partner to reduce number of out-of-school children

    The Federal Government and the United Nations Children’s Fund ( UNICEF ) have called for collaboration to reduce the number of out-of-school children.

    Nigeria currently has the highest number of out-of-school children with 10.5 million.

    UNICEF’s Education Specialist, Swadchet Sankey, at a media dialogue in Kano, on early childhood development (ECD) said the figure was alarming.

    The dialogue was organized by UNICEF in collaboration with Federal Ministry of Information.

    She said Nigeria needs to get its early preprimary education right in other to begin to reduce the huge figures.

    According to her, building Amajiri schools would not reduce the figure, adding that the federal government  must get its early learning and preprimary education right.

    Sankey, who commended the rate of enrollment in schools, called for more efforts to keep children in school.

    She said: “We are contributing to the number of out-of-school children.

    “One of the strategies of reducing out of school children is not just building amajiri schools, it is not just doing school feeding programmes but we need to get our early learning approach and preprimary education right and ensure that children are enrolled in school.

    “We need to be able to create opportunities that allows everybody to have access to quality learning.

    “We need a national parenting education program. We need parents to understand what ECC means. We need government to understand what ECC is.

    “Preprimary education is very important. We need to create an opportunity that gives room for early child learning. Early learning matters because it helps the children to lay the foundation for school.

    “Development cannot occur without adequate attention to early childcare. Parents no longer have time to engage with their children. We need to create an enabling environment for parents to support their children.

    “Right now in Nigeria our enrollment shows 20 per cent even though the survey is a little bit higher.”

    Also, Assistant Director, Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) Mayowa Aleshi, said the federal government has allocated funds to early childhood development program.

    He called for adequate planning and utilization of  resources to expand ECD in the country.

    He disclosed that there are about 62,406 primary schools as at 2014, adding that only 28,026 of them had Early Childhood Care and Development Education centres.

    According to him, the centres have 56,588 teachers and caregivers with 74% of these population qualified.

    He also disclosed that the federal government has set aside “2% of consolidated revenue fund for implementation of UBEC Programme Funding; segregated to a matching grant of 50%,  instructional materials at 15%, teachers’ development at 10% and 5% each of the three components on pre-primary schools.”

  • Zamfara SUBEB gives cash to boost enrolment

    The Zamfara State Government has embarked on a massive enrolment campaign to reduce the number of out-of-school children (OOSC) in the state.

    Murtala Adamu Jangebe, Executive Chairman, ZSUBEB, said the state was implementing a programme that provides money to families to send their wards to school.

    He said the ‘Cash Transfer Programe” was designed as a “Cash Support Programme” for indigent parents and households to encourage enrolment.

    According to him, about N200 million has been earmarked for the programme in partnership with UNICEF.

    “It is an initiative aimed at supporting parents to purchase uniforms, writing materials and other aids for their wards to boost enrolment level in primary schools,” he said.

    “We have engaged all stakeholders in our mass enrolment drive campaigns by using the traditional and opinion leaders.

    “We set machinery in motion to assess the general and remote situation of pupils, classrooms, teachers and utilities in our schools when we discovered in 2012 that only 283,000 were enroled against the 500,000 or 600,000 previously. But now, we are fast improving on the figures,” he added.

    The ZSUBEB boss also noted that in the past, the state had no presence of donor agencies, but with relentless efforts, the presence of the likes of UNICEF, DFID, MC Arthur Foundation were being felt.

    “Today, we have no fewer than five development partners, with the World Bank coming soon to articulate the issue of OOSC in the state,” he said.

    Janegbe said the state was not stopping at that. To improve the quality of basic education across the state, he said funds accessed from the 2014/2015 funding year from the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) in Abuja has been used to build and rehabilitate schools.

    He said no fewer than 114 schools had been earmarked for the intervention project, which include the provision of 11,887 chairs and desks for pupils and 1,456 tables and chairs for teachers.

    “This will also include the provision of utilities as water? and toilet facilities to make the environment more habitable”, he added.

    Janegbe, a one-time Deputy Speaker in the state House of Assembly, said the projects would boost local economy as they are being handled locally.

    “We want to sustain the tempo and passion for improved education standards at the basic level across the state.

    “The contract have been awarded to 326 indigenous contractors to also boost the state’s socio-economic activities and promote positive empowerment. We are glad it paid off as we have made some of them millionaires, increased their skills and collective participation by carrying them along in the execution of the purposeful project.

    “We selected people for the contracts from the areas where the schools earmarked for the renovations are located across the state. It will further support a lot of professional artisans like furniture craftsmen, welders, carpenters, among others, in earning a living because money has been injected into the communities and the grassroots across the state,” he said.

    Jangebe, the longest serving SUBEB chairman in the federation, having been appointed since 2011 by the Governor Abdul’aziz Yari administration, said the intervention projects would reposition schools.

    “The baseline intention is to expand the schools by building more classrooms with the objective of decongesting the schools that may be over-populated with pupils,” he explained.

    Also, Janegbe said the board planned to build at least 10 befitting offices for Education Secretaries in each of the 10 councils in the state.

    He said: “Each one will be equipped with an ICT facility and fully connected to a 24-hours internet service for efficient and effective office activities.”

    On the state government commitment to teachers’ welfare, the Board chairman said it had kept faith with the prompt payment of teachers’ salaries and other entitlements, as well as the training of teachers.

    “We also realised that welfare is beyond taking money home. The state government is driving its focus towards sustaining capacity building templates for teachers by exposing them to training workshops, seminars and learning excursions within and outside the country. Only recently, we sponsored 10 of our teachers to the UK for a learning programme. Besides,  we are into responsive partnership understanding with reputable donor agencies and institutions as the DFID, UNICEF, Jolly Phonics, JAKA which is being funded by NTI to improve the quality of teaching and learning in our schools”, he said.

     

  • Large number of out -of- school children worries Atiku

    Large number of out -of- school children worries Atiku

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has expressed concerns over depressing statistics that Nigeria has as the highest number of out- of- school children in the world.

    He asked wealthy Nigerians to support charity and humanitarian causes that will help in giving such children formal education.

    In a statement from his Media Office in Abuja, the chieftain of the All Progressive Congress (APC) pointed out government alone cannot successfully fund education in the country.

    While saying that education form the most critical tool for transforming individuals and spurring growth and development, he asked government to declare a state of emergency in the education sector.

    The former Vice President said the current situation in the education sector requires Nigerians with means to support education charity initiatives such as the Feed and Read initiative of the American University of Nigeria (AUN).

    Atiku, who is the founder of the American University of Nigeria (AUN), said the Feed and Read Programme initiated in 2015 is designed to provide a decent meal per day for the most vulnerable of children in Yola, Adamawa State.

    He also stated it will grant them exposure to classroom experience where they are taught Basic English, Arithmetic and Hygiene.

    According to him, the Feed and Read programme was a response to the effect of destruction and displacement caused by the Boko Haram menace in the North-East area of the country which further escalated a surge in the number of out-of-school children in the zone.

    “I have always been bothered about the parlous state of education in the North.

    “Bad as the situation was, the Boko Haram destruction tore apart the little that was left of the infrastructure for formal education especially in the North-East.

    “I personally had to intervene by giving encouragement to this initiative, ensuring that the meals meet with the standard of a balanced diet for school children. “

    “I eat food with these children to show that the food is safe and to lure more of them into the programme. I do this every time I visit the school.

    “I am happy when I see these children return a formal greeting in English language and when they solve simple arithmetic.

    “There remains a large swath of distance to be covered. Nothing is too much to give in providing formal education to all children who are yet to be captured by the education infrastructure that the government is trying assiduously to create.

    “That is why I implore more Nigerians who can afford it, to stretch a helping hand to these children. Any amount, no matter how little, will go a long way in making a difference in providing good education for the most vulnerable children not only in the North-East but in other places in the country,” he said.