Tag: school

  • Rotary renovates school’s toilets

    Rotary Club of Onigbongbo has spent N1.5 million on the renovation of toilets, provision of water and wash-hand basins at Wright Memorial Primary School, Somolu, Lagos.

    The inauguration of the projects held recently as part of activities to welcome the District Governor, Pat Ikheloa, to the club’s area of jurisdiction.

    The club’s President, Sola Benson, said he was overwhelmed by the district governor’s visit. He said the project was started by his predecessor, Mr George Dasaolu, but completed by him as soon as he assumed office few months ago.

    He said the club embarked on the project when it discovered that the school had only one pit latrine for over 400 pupils.

    He said the initial cost for the project was N.5million, but it was done for N1.5 million due to inflation.

    Ikheloa said Rotary believes in assisting people and the school’s programme was one of their numerous contributions to Nigeria and making life better. He said the funds for the project came from Rotary and that the government had no hand in it. He urged the school’s authorities to ensure that the toilets were well-maintained.

    The school’s Assistant Headteacher, Mrs Iyabode Quadri thanked Rotary for the gesture, which she said would avert an epidemic and promote good health in the school. She promised to maintain the toilets, adding: “That will be no problem.”

    The school’s Headgirl, Adewoye Oyinkansola said: ”We thank Rotary Club. We are grateful for the new  toilets you have provided for us.”

     

  • Community, school  relish rebuilt bridge

    Community, school relish rebuilt bridge

    For 15 years the only bridge linking Phase One and Three  of  Jikwoyi  community  in Abuja  was abandoned after flood waters washed it off. Now, it has been rebuilt, much to the joy of the community as well as the Cheery Field College, which contributed to the construction effort.

    While the bridge remained unusable, commuters suffered greatly. The bridge served over 3,000 people.

    The Chairman, Board of Governors, Cheery Field College Ajune Emmanuel said the college  contributed to the  construction of  a new bridge  to link the two communities  because it wanted to help the host community following its request for intervention.

    Emmanuel said the move to embark on the bridge construction project was the only way to give back to the society which he described as partners in progress.

    He said, “I am happy to see that vehicles, okada and pedestrians now move freely from one end to another because of the new bridge.”

    Emmanuel who spoke at the 7th graduation   ceremony of the college on the school’s achievements in the ending academic year of  2016, disclosed that Cheery Field  since inception  in 2004 has continued to  maintain  a good relationship with the host  community and has  left no one in doubt of his developmental  projects for the people around.

    In the area of security, the college has also received commendation from the residents as it has mounted 24 hours security check point and streetlights to compliment the effort the security men.

    Emmanuel urged corporate bodies to always give back to the society as a way of complimenting government effort.

    Emmanuel explained that the school will continue to touch the lives of people living within the school and that the school has visited some orphanages homes in Abuja   and donated food items and learning materials for the less privileged.

  • CSR: 3XM Ideas donates library to school

    The 3XM Ideas, an advertising agency founded by Steve Babaeko, has donated a library to Ikeja Senior High School as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) initiatives. The school is at Ikeja GRA, Lagos.

    Its Principal, Mrs. Ibidun Olawuyi, who complained about the absence of a library in the school, said: “Since I was posted to the school, having a school library has been a burden on my heart.”

    Mrs Olawuyi said prior to the new library, the school shared an existing poorly-equipped library with junior school and “this had made it difficult for an effective use of library by both the staff and students of the school.

    An SS2 student of the school, Josep Eunice also lauded the agency’s generosity and spirit of giving back to the society.

    Meanwhile, Babaeko said when the company started “one thing that we thought important was the need for corporate Nigeria to co-operate with the government, especially in the area of education”.

    “We are here today to show you young people that you can be anything you want to be in the future if you believe in it. The foundation starts from here, it starts from reading. I can’t even imagine a school not having an adequate library,” he said.

    The Tutor-General /Permanent Secretary, Education District VI, Lagos,  Anifowoshe Amidat  Abimbola, also commended 3XM Ideas’ effort.

  • “Battered” by soldiers, expelled from school

    “Battered” by soldiers, expelled from school

    Three months after Folashade Leshi was allegedly battered by soldiers, the Mass Communication student of the Abraham Adesanya Polytechnic in Ijebu-Igbo, Ogun State, has been expelled for allegedly “molesting” soldiers. Folashade alleges victimisation, vowing to fight her expulsion. SANYA BOLUWATIFE reports.

    Folashade Leshi, a Mass Communication student of the Abraham Adesanya Polytechnic in Ijebu Igbo, Ogun State, may have paid a heavy price for a protest that rocked the school last April. During the protest, she was allegedly brutalised by soldiers attached to a military security outfit code-named Operation Mesa (OP Mesa). About four months after, she was expelled by the school management.

    Folashade believes the school’s action  was not fair. She has alleged victimisation and vowed to fight her expulsion.

    Already, she, through her lawyer, Habeeb Whyte, has given the school a seven-day ultimatum to reverse the “unjust decision”, threatening to go to court to enforce her rights should the school fail to do so.

    Folashade’s expulsion came on the heels of an invitation she got to appear before a panel of enquiry set up by the Ogun State Ministry of Education. She was preparing to go to Abeokuta, the state capital, when she got a letter dismissing her from the school.

    The development, CAMPUSLIFE gathered, prompted the government panel to stop the inquiry. A source at the ministry told CAMPUSLIFE that the panel members were disappointed over the school’s “hasty decision”.

    Folashade’s travail began when she attempted to gain entrance into the school to pay a fee that would allow her to write an examination. Some students staged a protest against the school’s directive to bar those who did not pay their fees from writing the examination. The protesters burnt down the polytechnic’s Information Communication Technology (ICT) Centre.

    The 28-year-old Mass Communication student was battered at the polytechnic’s gate by the soldiers, who tried to disperse the protesters.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the soldiers told Folashade to leave the vicinity, but the student refused, insisting that she wanted to pay the examination levy. It was learnt that the soldiers descended on her, allegedly beating her with horsewhip and the butt of a gun.

    The soldiers took Folashade, who was bleeding, to the Rector, alleging that the Mass Communication student tore their uniform.

    The Rector, Prof Bilesanmi Awoderu, was said to have directed the Dean of Students’ Affairs (DSA), Ms Sade Jokotagba, to hand over Folashade to the police. The student was released from Ijebu-Igbo Police Station after the intervention of a local chief.

    After she was released by the police, Folashade wrote a petition to the Ministry of Education and the school management, alleging battery. The school responded with a letter inviting her to face the Students’ Disciplinary Committee (SDC) headed by the DSA.

    On April 22, Folashade was invited to face the school panel. It was learnt that the panel accused her of violating the school regulation by disobeying security officers attached to the school. But Folashade denied that she was part of the protesters, claiming she was making effort to pay the examination levy when the soldiers pounced on her.

    On July 18, she got a call from the Ministry of Education to appear before its panel on July 22. However, two days to the panel’s sitting, she got a letter from the school management, which stated that she has been expelled from the institution because she “molested” the soldiers attached to the school.

    Folashade alleged that the SDC did not give her a fair hearing, noting that the school panel failed to produce the soldiers she allegedly “molested”. She claimed that the soldiers of the OP Mesa invited by the school to disperse the protesting students assaulted her with horsewhip and the butt of a gun. She also accused the school management of unlawful detention, demanding compensation for abusing her rights.

    Whyte’s petition to the school and Ogun State Governor. Ibikunle Amosun reads: “We have gone through the content of your letter and in addition to further facts and available documents obtained from our client, we arrive at the following: that our client, indeed, attended the SDC, but the chairman and members of the committee did not accord her fair hairing.

    “The Operation Mesa officers, who our client was alleged to be unruly to, were not invited by the committee to substantiate their claim. The commandant of the OP Mesa was also not invited. The security officer went beyond their authority to harass, intimidate and recklessly assault out client.

    “We hereby give the school seven days to reverse the letter of dismissal, re-absorb our client as bonafide student of the institution, failure of which we shall not hesitate to institute a legal action to enforce our client’s rights.”

    When CAMPUSLIFE met Folashade last weekend, she told our correspondent that the move by the school was wrong, describing her expulsion as “unjust” and “wicked”.

    She said: “I feel so bad, learning that the school management took that unjust and wicked decision. How could an arm-less lady molest heavily-armed military officers? These people are just being wicked and they want to make me a scapegoat for the protest. I don’t know what I did wrong. But, I assure you that justice will prevail.”

    A student of the polytechnic, who pleaded anonymity, said: “Everyone is scared to fight for Folashade. Even members of the Students’ Union Government are scared. This is wrong and I just hope the management retraces its step and reinstates her.”

    A former student leader, Olusegun Olupona, advised the management to reinstate the student, saying: “An injustice done to one is an injustice done to all. Why would the school expel a student, who was unlawfully battered by soldiers on the order of the Rector? Students will rise up to defend their colleague if the school does not reverse this decision.”

    CAMPUSLIFE made attempts to get the school’s side of the story. Jokotagba, who spoke to our correspondent on telephone on Monday, confirmed Folashade’s expulsion, but declined to give further comments. She said the school did not have any reaction on the issue, but asked our reporter to visit the campus for further clarification.

    She said: “We don’t have anyone that can speak on the matter. I will advise you to come to the school for further clarification. The issue of Folashade Leshi’s expulsion has gone beyond what you think. Unfortunately, I cannot give you further details except you come to the school.”

  • School refutes bullying allegation

    AUTHORITIES at Grace Schools, Gbagada, have refuted claims that that the multiple fractures suffered by Miss Ebunoluwa Adegboyega, a JSS1 pupil, resulted from bullying.

    The school’s Administrator, Mrs Tokunbo Edun, told a news conference yesterday that the 10-year old slipped on the school field after a downpour on April 15.

    The Nation had reported on Saturday that the school did not unmask who allegedly bullied her and that the school Principal, Mr Ronald Cilliers, was in haste to cover up for the school when asked about a Close Circuit Television (CCTV) footage as the school claims to have one.

    The newspaper reported that the school failed to enquire about her health as well as not foot her hospital and nursing expenses.

    But Mrs Edun said it was an accident as other pupils who witnessed the incidence declined seeing anybody pushing her as they all maintained that Ebunoluwa slipped on the wet grass which resulted to her falling.

    The administrator said: “The recent alleged event of bullying is so unfortunate. It was not a case of bullying, as the students fell down while running out of the dining room across the field on a rainy day.

    “There were other children on the field and when they were questioned, none of them saw anybody push her. Also, every student signs an anti-bullying document as we do not condone bullying in any way.”

    Besides, Mrs Edun claimed the ‘victims’ parents had never reported any case of their daughter being bullied by any pupil or persons before the unfortunate incidence.

    She added that the pupil was well attended to at the school’s sick bay for first aid treatment immediately after the incidence before being transferred to the school hospital, adding that the girl’s mother, a medical doctor insisted on taking the girl to their clinic.

    Mrs. Edun said: “The school also made concrete efforts to ensure that while having the injury, she was properly taken care of in terms of her academics. A car and a driver were provided for her, for ease of transportation.

    “The school had never defaulted in its core responsibilities of total commitment to the well being of its students. We were reaching for a settlement of the issue before the publication on Saturday. We wish to reiterate that the school focuses on providing qualitative education to every student.”

    Also speaking on the issue, the Parents Teacher Association chairman, Mr Steve Onyemah, said since his four-year sojourn in the school, he had never heard of any bullying report perpetrated against any pupil and it could have been resolved on the PTA platform without being blown out of proportion.

    “This is news to me. We have never had a case like this. Also this is an issue that could have been resolved internally without being put in the public domain,” Onyemah said.

  • Bullying scandal rocks elite Lagos school as victim suffers dual fractures

    Bullying scandal rocks elite Lagos school as victim suffers dual fractures

    Parents accuse high school authorities of shielding mystery
    perpetrator in elaborate cover-up School expresses
    disappointment, dismiss allegations as ‘very wrong’

    The school was silent when Ebunoluwa Adegboyega became the bullies’ favourite. At age 10, her bruises were legion. Her mind was a mist of scars. But nobody could see her wince. Through her ordeal, a battle ravaged in Ebunoluwa’s head; harsh words lunged like savages to scathe her fragile mien. The bullies called her “Orobo,” and that was almost too farfetched, as Ebunoluwa didn’t exactly cut the picture of obesity – at least by her parents’ standards.

    While the bullies taunted her over size, Ebunoluwa lived the blithe life of a castle princess in her parent’s homestead. Nonetheless, the 10-year-old student of Junior Secondary School One (J.S.S.1) class, Grace Schools, Gbagada, Lagos, stirred every morning with a violent tremor in her heart. As she dressed up for school, she girded up like a medieval warrior, to brave the taunts and insolent jeers of peer that deemed it fit to pick on her.

    From whispered slurs and spoken taunts about her size, which often elicited the derisive remark, ‘Orobo,’ to the occasional blow on the head from the palm and book of “Uchenna,” one of her alleged assailants, Ebunoluwa suffered interminable hurt and sorrow in pursuit of a high school education.

    Her experience at Grace Schools was hardly what she and her parents expected at her resumption in the educational facility. But it was easier not to ask too many questions or raise a ruckus about Ebunoluwa’s plight. Although her mother, Dr. Bande Adegboyega, a gynecologist, wished to raise hell, her father, Dr. Temitope Adegboyega, a pediatrician, believed in letting the hostilities thaw out. “Children will always play,” he said,

    But that childish ‘play’ would degenerate into a vicious encounter. Ebunoluwa, unfortunately, could neither avoid nor ride the tide of the playful viciousness. A trip to the school canteen would cost the 10-year-old and her parents very much. On April 15, 2016, during lunch break, somebody shoved Ebunoluwa violently from the back while she stood outside the school canteen. She fell face down; the impact of her fall crushed both her legs and bruised her skin. Consequently, Ebunoluwa suffered fractures on both legs.

     

    Ebunoluwa’s story: ‘They did not try to find out who pushed me’

    “On that day, I went to the dining hall to eat during lunch break in my school. When I came out of the canteen, I came out with three people in my class. Their names are Jumaima, Grace and Sophia. I talked to them a little. Then they started moving on their own. They were going. When I now wanted to take my own step, someone came from the back and pushed me. I didn’t see the person that pushed me. My three classmates didn’t see the person that pushed me. We were all backing the person.

    “I fell on my face. Then I started calling for help. One boy, a J.S.S 2 student, came to carry me to the clinic. In the clinic, the nurse put Savlon (an antiseptic) and bandage on my left leg. I was bleeding from that leg and a wound on my right leg. I was crying because it was very painful.

    “Then she said she would fix my bone back but I had a fracture and she could not fix my bone back. Then she put bandage on my leg. I could not leave the clinic on my own. I could not walk on my legs,” said Ebunoluwa.

     

    What happened to her was an act of wickedness – Victim’s mom

    Shedding light on the intrigues, Ebunoluwa’s mom, Dr. Bande Adegboyega, a gynaecologist, said: “On April 15, I was called. I had a phone call from the school nurse that I should come to the school that my daughter could not walk. While I was in the school, the driver brought Ebunoluwa with the nurse. I saw her in the car. She was crying. She was in serious pains. I looked at her legs and I noticed that they had bandaged one leg, that was the leg that was fractured, and the other leg was plastered.

    “I was angry. I said they should bring her out immediately. At this point, the Principal, Mr. Ronald Cilliers, a South African, came and I challenged him: ‘I thought you had CCTV camera that covers the school?’ What surprised me however, was that the principal was too much on the defensive, trying to cover up for the school…We told the principal that what happened to her must be an act of wickedness and that we would like to see the person responsible for her accident. Instantly, he became very defensive. He said I shouldn’t say it was an act of wickedness. I didn’t see empathy in him so I just ignored him,” she said.

    According to the victim’s mom, Ebunoluwa was not running when she was pushed, she was not standing on a ledge or some other elevated outthrust from the ground or platform. “She was on level ground. I saw the spot,” said Dr. Adegboyega.

    There is no gainsaying Dr. Adegboyega met her daughter in a state of agonising pain. Her left leg was very swollen from the knee down to the feet. Also, the right leg which had a deep cut and had bled a lot, was plastered, while the fractured leg was bandaged. She was informed that Ebunoluwa had been administered Paracetamol. The gynaecologist, thus on her own, unaccompanied by any member of the school, rushed her daughter to the Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi, Lagos. She was later transferred to the Orthopaedic clinic, Gbagada General Hospital, Gbagada.

     

    Echoes of indifference and undetected fracture

    Dr. Adegboyega expresssed her disappointment at the school’s reaction to her daughter’s plight. “I was surprised that none of them called me from the school afterwards, to ask me what happened or enquire about my daughter’s health. This made me very angry. At the hospital, we did x-ray and confirmed that she suffered fracture on her left leg. But because she was able to stand on the other leg, we didn’t know that there was something wrong with her right leg. But soon we noticed blisters on her right leg. We consulted one of the consultants at the Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi and the consultant emphasised that the blisters were telltale signs that there was something wrong with Ebunoluwa’s right leg. The consultant surgeon confirmed that they were fracture blisters and that we shouldn’t have allowed her to stand on that leg.

    “So they put Plaster of Paris (POP) on her left leg and ordered an x-ray of her right leg. The x-ray revealed that Ebunoluwa had also suffered fracture on her right leg. The consultant recommended that we confined her to a wheel chair pending the time that her fractures would heal.

    “We took her home and still nobody called us from the school. I now got angry and invited a lawyer. We called the Principal but he persistently ignored our calls again. The father subsequently called the Vice Principal to complain about the school’s nonchalance to our child’s plight,” she said.

    Corroborating her, Dr. Temitope Adegboyega, Ebunoluwa’s father, stated that the Vice Principal later came to meet them in Igbobi with the school’s chaplain. “He said we should give Ebunoluwa adequate medical treatment. He said we should not mind the Principal. He said we should give her all the treatment that she needed claiming the school would foot the bill.”

     

    Seeking recompense

    Afterwards the parents, accompanied by their attorney, and a close relative, allegedly held a meeting with the Vice- Principal of the School on April 19 and April 26, 2016 respectively. At the meeting, the Vice Principal reportedly assured them that the management of the school was ready to bear the costs of treatment of the injury and to also take on the responsibility of transportation of Ebunoluwa, to and from the school premises every day.

    Efforts made by their lawyer to see the Principal, both in his office and on phone, and get his commitment on the above however proved abortive as he bluntly refused to give any audience, disclosed Dr. Adegboyega. The family thus, represented by their lawyer, also made demands in the letter dated April 18, 2016 as follows: that the full cost implication of treatment, nursing care and consequent management of the victim will be borne by the school management. They also demanded that the result of the investigation carried out by the school should be sent to the office of the family’s lawyer within one week of the completion and penalties imposed on the perpetrator. They demanded that Ebunoluwa’s safety be guaranteed and security measures in the school strengthened.

     

    A history of bullying

    Before Ebunoluwa’s accident, there had been previous incidents. According to her mom, “She had been bullied. She said one boy (Uchenna) used to hit her on the head. I told the father but he dismissed it, stating that it’s one of the pranks children indulge in among themselves. Even Ebunoluwa’s teacher, Mr. Balogun, said she was one of the most gentle students in the class. She was no troublemaker. She was a victim of bullying. She was persistently picked on by her mates because of her size. They called her ‘Orobo.’ The Vice Principal said we should have reported the situation a long while ago.”

     

    Discordant tunes

    The VP, Balogun subsequently provided a driver to convey Ebunoluwa to and from school every day, until the school went on midterm break. To our surprise, the following Monday, which was the school’s resumption day, we waited till 9 am and the driver that used to come for Ebunoluwa did not show up. I went to the school to see the VP but he told me off. He said my daughter should not resume in school as she was a debtor. He said my daughter was a debtor and the rule is that she must not come in. He said they only allowed her into the school that day on compassionate grounds. I was angry. I reminded him that the school did not foot the bill of my child’s medical treatment as he promised and that they abandoned us and forced us to handle the medical bills which was over N500, 000.

    “But he told me to go and pay the school fees. He said we can go ahead and do whatever we liked. He said the school has competent Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) that can prolong the case. He said what can we do with our small lawyer? He said he had been personally responsible for providing transportation for my daughter to and from school all along. He said the school was never ready to assist.

    “So we paid her school fees and she resumed on another day. But since the driver the VP provided had stopped coming, her father started taking her to and from school every day,” she said.

     

    ‘Leave everything to God’

    Further findings suggested shady manoeuvrings after the incident. The VP reportedly instructed Ebunoluwa’s classmates to write statements about her accident, according to Dr. Adegboyega. According to her, a teacher within the school revealed to her that the next day after the incident, the VP instructed some of Ebunoluwa’s classmates to write statements indicating that nobody pushed her when she fell. He allegedly ordered them to write that Ebunoluwa was running when she fell.

    “He allegedly did all that without our knowledge even though he later came to the hospital to beg us not to take legal action against the school. The teacher begged me to keep quiet and leave everything to God. I was mortified. I wondered how the Vice Principal could make minors commit such act,” she said.

     

    ‘Duty of care

    Yemisi Adepoju, the victim’s lawyer, argued that, “Once a student resumes in school, the school owes the student duty of care from the moment he or she steps into its premises till closing hours when he or she departs the school for home. That was what the school (Grace Schools) had sold. The school claimed to install CCTV cameras as a security measure and the school also makes students sign anti-bullying statements.”

    Indeed, the duty of care means schools must do everything reasonably possible to protect their students from foreseeable harm, injury, and death. This duty includes providing a safe environment for students, according to Sulaiman Tella, a lawyer.

    According to him, when a school fails to protect its students from foreseeable harm, the law says it acted negligently. A school’s negligence makes it responsible, or liable, for the injured student’s damages.

     

    The legal doctrine of in loco parentis

    In loco parentis (a Latin term meaning “in place of the parent”) is a legal doctrine that applies to school administrators and teachers. The doctrine means that while a child is at school or away on a school-sponsored, extracurricular activity, the teacher has the responsibility and duties of the student’s parents. While in loco parentis gives teachers latitude in supervising students and student activities, the legal doctrine makes teachers and administrators liable for accidents and injuries students sustain while under their supervision.

    If a child has an accident in the school, in the schoolyard, on the way to school, on the school bus or while on a school trip, the question of whether or not the school or the teachers were negligent may arise. Everything however, depends on the facts of the individual case, argued Tella.

     

    The grim picture

    Ebunoluwa’s case represents a microcosm of the violence malaise afflicting Nigerian secondary schools. Some victims however, do not live to tell their story. For instance, Iyanuoluwa Dahunsi, a 15-year-old SSS 2 pupil of Bishop Philip Academy, Ibadan, Oyo State, was hospitalised after she was reportedly slapped by Funke Fashina, who was then the secretary to the school’s Principal, on January 29, 2015.

    Dahunsi subsequently developed a lingering eye problem, causing her partial blindness. Although Fashina was later arrested and charged to court for the assault, Dahunsi, never recovered from it. Barely six months later, and five days after her 15th birthday, Dahunsi died on July 22, 2015 at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). The late teenager was buried in February this year.

    And few people would forget in a hurry the heartrending saga of American elementary school girl, Ava Lynn. Photos of the bruised girl went viral on social media back in 2014 after she was reportedly attacked by a bully on the playground. According to the young girl’s mum, Lacey Harris, on Tuesday, August 26, 2014, she was called to come pick up her daughter at Arlington Elementary School in Pascagoula, Mississippi, because AvaLynn had been injured in an accident. The sight Lacey met when she got to Ava’s school was every parents’ nightmare: her daughter’s face was swollen, cut, and bruised beyond recognition.

    Ava informed her mum, Lacey, that she was assaulted by another student; that she was kicked repeatedly in the face until she fell off of the slide on the school’s playground. But the school informed Lacey that there were no teachers present when the incident occurred, and because of that, no one could prove whether or not another student had harmed Ava. That there had been an accident, no other students were involved, Ava got injured, they gave her medical treatment and that was as much as they could do.

    While the American constitution amply provides for and implements provisions for the protection of the American child, both at home and in school, Nigeria still fights a losing battle to replicate such feat within its social and legal framework. Nonetheless, the Child Rights Act clearly outlaws battery and physical abuse in any form, according to Betty Abah, the Executive Director, Centre for Children’s Health Education, Orientation and Protection.

    Approximately six out of every 10 children in Nigeria experience some form of violence before the age of 18, while half of all children experience physical violence, according to a finding from a 2014 national survey on “Violence Against Children in Nigeria.” Hence eminent scholar of United States’ University of Georgia, Moradeke Aderibigbe Abimbola,  suggested a more proactive and effective anti-bullying law for the country. She said the law should be operationalised to enhance Nigerian schools’ capacity to promptly investigate bullying cases in a timely manner and determine whether bullying has indeed occurred. She suggested a procedure for a teacher or other school employee, student, parent, guardian, or other person who has control or charge of a student, either anonymously or in such person’s name, at such person’s option, to report or otherwise provide information on bullying activity.

    Oftentimes children who are repeatedly bullied and assaulted in school start to wonder if they deserved. The teacher and other administrative staff can counteract this by sitting with the child at lunch to offer counselling. “They may visit the child at home to show support and offer emotional counsel. Any expression of support is good,” argued Olayinka Otun, a child psychologist.

    However, when bullying takes on a more dangerous facade, as it frequently does in high school, bystanders should be encouraged to intervene by speaking up in support of a bullied classmate. For relational aggression – name calling and gossiping – the school authority and bystanders should always take a stand, argued Rachel Oyibo, an educational psychologist and school counsellor.

    “The best form of intervention is teaching kids and enlightening staff to always speak up and stand in defense of the abused particularly in established cases of bullying,” she said.

     

    We will make sure that the press is closed down —Grace Schools’ Vice Principal, Balogun

    At exactly 1:52 pm on Wednesday, July 13, 2016, The Nation reporter arrived at the school to see the Vice Principal, P.A. Balogun. About five minutes after his secretary informed him of the reporter’s presence, a very hesitant Balogun received the reporter in his office. He demanded to know The Nation’s mission in the school. No sooner was he briefed than he began to issue warnings to the reporter. He threatened that the school would “close down” any newspaper that published anything against the school.

    He said: “The lawyers are already handling the case. We received a letter from their (Adegboyegas) own lawyer, and our lawyers have responded. I cannot confirm to you whether the matter is in court now or not.”

    When our reporter told the Vice Principal that the lawyer to the Adegboyegas had not filed any suit in court as the aggrieved party, Balogun responded: “I don’t know, but the matter must have been in court.”

    The Vice Principal condemned the allegations raised by the aggrieved family. He said: “All the allegations are wrong. The letter the family wrote to the school was very wrong. That is why the owner of the school said we should not entertain anything on the matter again.”

     

    Playing legal roulette in Grace Schools’ administrative offices

    “If anything is published, we will sue that publishing house for libel,” the VP threatened. Balogun dismissed claims that the school victimised Ebunoluwa. “How is the school victimising the child? Try and ask the family how their child is being victimised. Is it verbally, physical assault, beating? Just how? The parents of the child are medical doctors. If medical doctors are talking like that, what do you expect of a layman on the street? I am highly disappointed in them. Come, let me take you (reporter) to the Principal,” he said.

    En route the Principal’s office, VP Balogun engaged the reporter in the following discussion:

    Balogun: The school has two SANs (Senior Advocates of Nigeria) that are on the board here. We have notified them. They will take it over as well if any paper makes any malicious publication!

    Reporter: We are not making any malicious publication. That is why we are here to get your own side of the story.

    Balogun: In fact, we will make sure that the press is closed down! Honestly!

    At the Principal’s office, Balogun asked the reporter to stay with the secretary while he went inside to discuss with the Principal. Three minutes later, he placed a call to the ‘owner of the school,’ to inform her of the reporter’s presence.

    He said: “I have somebody here that said he is from The Nation newspaper. And he said that the family of Adegboyega made some allegations and that he has come to verify those allegations. I said they can only see our lawyers. I told him that we can’t give him any information here, that it is only our lawyer that he can talk to. I told him that if they publish anything, we will contact the SAN (Senior Advocate of Nigeria) straightaway. They shouldn’t publish anything. I told them that our lawyer is seeing their lawyer. I told him that they cannot get any information from the school. He is here now. I told the Principal and the Principal said I should report to you.

    I just want him to go…I will tell him that we are not ready to give any information here.”

    After making the call, he told the reporter: “I just talked to the owner of the school. She said you have no right to publish anything. And you cannot get any information for now. If there is any need for us to give you information, you can contact our lawyer. We can give you the contact,” he said.

    Promptly, the reporter requested for the contact of the school’s lawyer but the Vice Principal refused to give him the lawyer’s contact. He assumed a hostile posture and ordered the reporter out of the school.

    “Please, you may take your leave! If there is any need to contact our lawyers later, we can book an appointment with you,” he said.

    Thus at exactly 2:15 pm, the reporter took his leave with Balogun marching briskly beside him to ensure that he (reporter) did not stop by to speak to any student or member of staff.

    As he marched the reporter to the gate, the following conversation ensued:

    Reporter: “The parents also alleged that the school management forced her (the victim’s) colleagues to write false statement on how the incident happened. They claimed you coached her colleagues to write that she was running when she fell and that nobody pushed her.”

    Balogun: “Which of her colleagues?”

    Reporter: The victim’s colleagues who were present at the time of the accident.

    Balogun: (Silence)

    Reporter: “So when can we book the appointment with your lawyer?”

    Balogun: “Don’t worry, we will contact our lawyer. When we do so, whatever the lawyer says, we will let you know.”

    Reporter: “We don’t have time, because the story will go to press soon and we need to get the school’s account.”

    Balogun: “You just don’t rush to the press. It is not done anywhere.”

    Reporter: “I was here yesterday (Tuesday) but I was told you had left the premises before I got here.”

    Balogun: “Please, forward a letter to us to book an appointment with our lawyer.

    Reporter: This is the press sir. We don’t need you to contact your lawyer on our behalf. We can always do that. We will save time if you can put a call to your lawyer now.”

    Balogun: “The owner of the school has contacted the lawyer. And I have told you, our lawyers are speaking to their lawyer. Nobody should publish anything.”

    As the reporter drove out of the premises, Balogun was seen discussing with the school security personnel, pointing to the reporter’s car.

  • School fetes press club

    Proprietress of Oasis Montessori School, Adalemo in Ado/Odo-Ota Local Government Area of Ogun State, Deaconess Olapeju Adeitan, has urged parents, guardians and school owners to help children to identify their talents early in life.

    She made the call at the fourth anniversary of the school’s Press Club.

    She said the school does not only focus on curriculum activities, but considers activities that the pupils could do outside the classroom that could help them discover and develop their talents. She said the Press Club was instituted to encourage the pupils to be creative.

    “The school has four major clubs – Press, Jet, Home Makers and Road Safety Clubs. The children were allowed to choose, after which they are directed to the coordinator for an interview, who records their performance to fully detect the child’s ability to join the club,” Mrs Adeitan said.

    A member of the club, Esther Adeitan, a JSS 1 pupil, said she joined the club because she hopes to become a journalist and publisher. She said she likes writing, sourcing and passing information, and has written several story books.

    David Oyewo, a JSS 3 pupil, also wishes to become journalist.

    “Most people won’t be alive if not for information. They would be ignorant of what is going on within their environment,” he said.

    The one-week programme featured talent shows, drama presentations, quiz competition, singing and dancing including talent shows. Each group performed excellently to the admiration of the audience.

  • Old Student donates to school

    AN alumna of the International School, University of Lagos (ISL), Mrs Idowu Offokansi, has donated copies of her book, “Can Do” to her alma mater.

    Mrs Offokansi, who delivered the books through her mother, a former principal of the school, Mrs. Olusola Peters, said she donated the audio visual book, which is a collection of inspirational quotes for teenagers and young adults, because of her passion for helping the youths.

    Receiving the donations at UNILAG Main Auditorium, Principal of ISL, Mrs Adora Emily Ojo, urged parents and guardians not to abandon their responsibilities to teachers and the society alone, but complement their efforts through regular visits to their schools.

    This, she said, would stimulate their efforts and mould their wards’ future to enviable heights.

    Mrs Ojo also tasked those in authority to increase investments in the education sector in order to create level playing ground for sound education and regular, functional counselling, which would fast-track the realisation of the children’s objectives as future leaders.

    On her part, Mrs Peters charged the pupils to pursue their careers with zeal, mindless of whatever challenges, as “no gain is achieved, without pain.”

    SS 2 pupil, Chisom Oguama and her classmate, Oladipo Oduwole, thanked God and the donor and assured them of their continued best to be disciplined and excel in all ramifications.

  • Founder names school after late wife

    Founder, Morning Glory Private Schools,  Amuwo Odofin, Chief Israel Moradeyo, has rechristened the school as Margaret Moradeyo Memorial Schools.

    Moradeyo announced the new name to a shocked but excited audience of guests, teachers and pupils during the school’s 10th graduation.

    According to him, the ‘Margaret’ in the new name reflected that of his wife, who passed on in February, last year.

    Going down memory lane, Moradeyo said: “The school was not established as a business venture; rather, it was as a result of the health challenge that my wife had. She was treated in London and when we were returning, the physiotherapist looking after her asked us where our grand children were; and I said they were in Lagos; and he said it’s a very good idea if the grand children come to play and  trouble their grandmother, that will be a form of physiotherapy.

    “I laughed and wondered how I could bring children from Lekki, Victoria Island and Ikeja to come and play with their mother in Amuwo Odofin. So, I had an idea, a flat was vacant here and I thought if I had a daycare centre here, the exercise the children will give my wife will be great.”

    He said he invited his wife’s friends of over a decade to help him set up the school which later grew to kindergarten, nursery and now primary section.

    “In the church programme, the tribute I wrote was that the school was established to make life better for her and, in fact, it prolonged her life. She got up early in the morning and stayed with the children till 5pm. I was so engrossed that my wife was now happy and the school was even growing. My tribute was that the school which was established on her account would be named. So, today, it will be renamed Margaret Moradeyo Memorial School,”, said Moradeyo.

    The founder announced that more classes will be aded to the school, and it would be refocused as a business venture to improve the quality  of the school, among others.

    ounder, Morning Glory Private Schools,  Amuwo Odofin, Chief Israel Moradeyo, has rechristened the school as Margaret Moradeyo Memorial Schools.

    Moradeyo announced the new name to a shocked but excited audience of guests, teachers and pupils during the school’s 10th graduation.

    According to him, the ‘Margaret’ in the new name reflected that of his wife, who passed on in February, last year.

    Going down memory lane, Moradeyo said: “The school was not established as a business venture; rather, it was as a result of the health challenge that my wife had. She was treated in London and when we were returning, the physiotherapist looking after her asked us where our grand children were; and I said they were in Lagos; and he said it’s a very good idea if the grand children come to play and  trouble their grandmother, that will be a form of physiotherapy.

    “I laughed and wondered how I could bring children from Lekki, Victoria Island and Ikeja to come and play with their mother in Amuwo Odofin. So, I had an idea, a flat was vacant here and I thought if I had a daycare centre here, the exercise the children will give my wife will be great.”

    He said he invited his wife’s friends of over a decade to help him set up the school which later grew to kindergarten, nursery and now primary section.

    “In the church programme, the tribute I wrote was that the school was established to make life better for her and, in fact, it prolonged her life. She got up early in the morning and stayed with the children till 5pm. I was so engrossed that my wife was now happy and the school was even growing. My tribute was that the school which was established on her account would be named. So, today, it will be renamed Margaret Moradeyo Memorial School,”, said Moradeyo.

    The founder announced that more classes will be aded to the school, and it would be refocused as a business venture to improve the quality  of the school, among others.

     

  • School denies attack by Hausa youths

    Hausa youths did not attack Lagooz School in Agege, Lagos, last Tuesday, the proprietor and the Arewa Council of Chiefs, Agege Kingdom, have said.

    At a press conference in the school, the proprietor, Mr Yomi Otubela, and representatives of the Arewa Council of Chiefs said the report could create ethnic tension in the community.

    Otubela said there was a fight at the school’s car park after a valedictory service last July 16, which the police contained.

    He said a teacher, Mr John Nwakam, was hit in the eye while attempting to separate the brawlers.

    The proprietor said nobody entered the school or vandalised its property, adding that there was also no theft and the woman principal was not attacked.

    He said the fighters were released by the police the next day and have since apologised for causing trouble.

    “We distance ourselves from the report that the school was vandalised by the Hausa community. This is an area that is tense with a lot of political/tribal tension, so spreading this kind of news is not right.”

    “The fight happened outside the school; they did not in any way come into the school. It involved two young well wishers of the graduating pupils. One of them unintentionally used his car to hit the other and an argument ensued between the two car owners that consequently led to a brawl. When the school management noticed it could not control the situation anymore, they had to involve the police at Elere Police Station. However, parents of the detained persons visited the school to plead and an understanding was reached. The culprits were later released by the police.”

    The Arewa Council of Chiefs, spokesperson Alhaji Kabiru Dinar, condemned the report, which he said could tarnish the Hausa community’s reputation.

    He said: “We are no more considered as settlers; we are part and parcel of this community and have a track record of peaceful coexistence. We don’t allow our children to cause trouble. This kind of publication can cause ethnic crisis. We are not happy because it can tarnish the reputation of our community which we worked hard to build.”

    The group’s Mogaji Alhaji Zango Abubakar, said the incident was reported to him on the day it happened and he met with Otubela the next day and all was amicably resolved.

    The principal, Mrs Olivet Otubela, and Nwakam denied being beaten.

    Parent of one of the arrested youth, Alhaji Sabiu Rabiu, said the story misrepresented the incident.