Tag: schools

  • Ajimobi gives condition for return of mission schools

    Ajimobi gives condition for return of mission schools

    Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi has promised to hand over mission schools to owners who have genuine proposal for the development of such schools and proven commitment to education advancement.

    The governor made the promise in his address at the archdiocesan reception for the 34th council of Bishops at the Bishop Ayo Ladigbolu House, Molete, Ibadan, which was attended by bishops and archbishops of the Methodist Church.

    He said this in response to a request by the Prelate, Dr. Samuel Uche, for the return of mission schools to their original owners for what he called proper running of such schools.

  • Should flogging be retained in schools?

    Should flogging be retained in schools?

    Corporal punishment is not new in schools. Teachers cane erring pupils without their parents raising eyebrow. But the “inhuman treatment” of Ogechi Anyalewechi, a Junior Secondary School Two (JSS II) pupil of Eva Adelaja Girls’ Secondary School in Bariga, Lagos, who was said to have been flogged on her bare buttocks and back has provoked a debate on the punishment.

    The welts on Ogechi Anyalewechi’s bare buttocks and back are healing gradually after being flogged by her teachers about a fortnight ago.  But the case has provoked debate about how to instil discipline in schools.  Ogechi, a JSS2 pupil of Eva Adelaja Girls’ Junior Secondary School in Bariga, Lagos, was flogged by two teachers on the directive of the Principal, Mrs C.O. Coker, for being rude to the head girl.  The 14-year old was taken to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH).

    She has chosen not to continue at the school because of alleged persecution by her mates who protested the removal of the principal and four other teachers by the Lagos State government.

    Last Thursday, the Lagos State Commissioner for Youth and Social Development, Princess Uzamat Akinbile-Yussuf, described Ogechi’s punishment as an overkill. She assured Lagosians that the government would not condone physical assault of minors in the name of discipline.

    Flogging is a common form of punishment for maintaining discipline in schools.  It is also commonly used by parents to call their children to order.  While some teachers and parents think it should be phased out, others disagree.

    Those who disagree are mostly teachers who teach in public schools, like Eva Adelaja, which is run by the Lagos State government.

    A teacher, who teaches in a public school in Education District V foresees danger and loss of morals if flogging is banned.

    “You have to experience what we go through with these students before you can ask us not to flog them.  Some of them display bad attitude. Some are hardly punctual. Some come to school barefooted or unkempt. Some smuggle phones to school and all they do is waste their time on social media. Some steal or fight. But the only punishment that has been so effective over the years is flogging; and believe me, we are getting result,” he said.

    Another public school teacher, Mr Salisu Ibrahim (not real names), also thinks flogging is necessary. But he said teachers should beat pupils according to their sizes.

    “Most teachers abuse the use of cane by using it unequally.  For me, I look at a student, his physique and other things which determine how I apply the cane on him. Some students are fragile and so cannot withstand heavy punishment. If you flog such students heavily they may collapse or suffer stripes that could result in injury to their body. Some teachers apply cane on students’ head and other sensitive places. I do not support this,” Ibrahim said.

    On her part, Mrs Margaret Osifo (not real names), described flogging as a corrective measure, which teachers know how to apply with experience.

    She said: “Even though we flog, many of us have experience in doing that.  I can beat as many as 100 students without feeling any pain. Caning students is not punishment but corrective measure.

    “In a public school where you have more than three or four principals, who would a parent go to report that his or her child was caned? We don’t tolerate nonsense here.  This is not a private school! The more an aggrieved parent chooses to withdraw their wards, the better for us because they are too many in the first place.

    “This has been a part of our training right from school and we do it well.  The Bariga incident was just unfortunate and accidental. However, my greatest fear is that those who take over from us when we are gone don’t even know how to apply punishment on students in a fair manner,” she said.

    However, not all public school teachers support flogging.  A guidance counselor complained about the tendency.

    “When I see teachers beating students, I get worried; I cannot take it.  But when I complain, the teachers tell me counseling would not work on them,” said the counselor.

    Many adults who grew up in Nigeria attested to being flogged in their school days.  Some of them argue that since it worked in disciplining them, it can work on young people today.

    Mr Babatunde Owadusi recalls being beaten in school.

    “I still have some of the marks on my back and my parents didn’t do anything.  It actually helps in moulding the children.  It should go hand-in-hand with advice.  But too much flogging should not be condoned,” he said.

    Another parent, Mr Williams Oladeji, is worried that the anti-flogging sentiment is an imported culture, which if adopted may not augur well for Nigerian youths.

    He said: “During my days (mid 60s-mid 70s), there was discipline.  If you did anything wrong you were flogged.  In the secondary school, especially in the boarding house, we were given corporal punishment. However, society has changed and we are looking up to America.  In America you cannot beat children.  But the maturity of children in America is different from our own children here; so if we just import those laws and behaviour, it’s going to spell doom for us.  In America, where you don’t beat children or use verbal abuse and all that, you now have gun problems. Students go to school with guns and they shoot their classmates, it is indiscipline.  So if you refuse to flog your children, it’s going to spell doom for Nigeria. In my days, in the boarding house you have senior prefects, they can flog you and you have bruises and you won’t even have the guts to report to the house master. It is discipline. If I flog my child, and he has bruises, the government will tell you it is wrong; but if we don’t, it will spell doom for us.”

    Whatever level of discipline flogging may achieve, some teachers and parents are nevertheless against it as a form of punishment.

    Mr Ugochukwu Ukaegbu, a parent, said children should be corrected in love.

    “It is barbaric; you don’t discipline a child by hitting him/her to the extent you give the child physical injury.  Such teacher should be dealt with. During my days they used cane, but you don’t go to that extent to incur physical injuries on any student.  During my days there were other measures you could use to discipline your student. For example cut grass or stay out of class but not beating. There are so many ways to discipline children these days. You can actually correct them in love,” he said.

    Mrs Fabusiwa Olapeju, who is based in the United Kingdom, said children should be counseled.

    “I did my secondary school in Cross Rivers.  If something like that happened, what they do is that they punish, they don’t beat us.  If they want to discipline us they give us a field to cut the grass or clean the teachers’ houses. Such beating should never be condoned.  Punishment should be better so that they will sit down and reflect on what they have done.  After the punishment, they should sit the student down and make sure he/she writes a reflective essay, ‘What happened? Why did it happen? What could you have done differently? So next time should anything like that happen what would you do?’ tell that person to sit down and reflect on it, I think that should help this children better”.

    A teacher from Ojo High School, Ojo, who pleaded not to be mentioned, also says other forms of discipline work better than flogging.

    “One thing I have realised as a teacher who once taught in private school is that there are certain subtle punishments that can change students’ attitude for better.

    “When you ask an erring student to stay outside during a class session or you announce his or her name for punishment during assembly, such measure makes the students feel so  ashamed of their deeds,” the source said.

    “I remember I once punished a female student notorious for noisemaking; and while she was kneeling during a class, her mother visited the school and was emotionally shattered seeing her in that state. The mother burst into tears, saying the girl had put the entire family to shame.  The girl did not know when she started crying too. Since then, her behaviour changed. She stopped being a distraction during classes. She now spends more time in the library instead of the company of noisemakers she usually associated herself with before the incident,” the teacher said.

    Dr Jonathan Akpan, proprietor of Access Schools, Magboro, said dialogue works.

    “You dialogue with the child; let them see why they are wrong,” he said.

    Mrs Oluwabunmi Oteju, head of inclusive schools, Lagos State Universal Basic Education Board (LSUBEB), shares her view.

    “Flogging is not allowed in schools. It is referred to as corporal punishment. The educationists believe it is not the best punitive measure to take on children. It is better to counsel children. When you resort to flogging all the time, the student will misbehave over and over again, under the pretext that after all, it is just for them to cane me and it would not change anything in that child. But when you counsel, monitor adequately, involve parents and teachers, you would see changes. Effective counseling and monitoring is better than flogging,” she said.

    For Mrs Florence Aderibigbe, Proprietress, Diamonds Mine Schools, Ogba, said flogging is child abuse.

    “If you are angry and you flog a child, it can lead to something else, like wounds and scars on the children, which is child abuse. So schools should not be flogging pupils,” she said.

     

     

  • Okorocha to launch Igbo teaching in schools

    Okorocha to launch Igbo teaching in schools

    Imo State Governor Rochas Okorocha will today launch the Compulsory Teaching and Learning of Igbo in Imo schools. He will also present the maiden edition of Igbo language newspaper Ikoro.

    Okorocha’s pecial Adviser on Igbo Affairs, Chief Samfo Nwankwo, described the launch as “a bold initiative to stimulate and rediscover our common heritage, the Igbo language, which is fast going extinct.”

    He lauded Okorocha for the initiative and noted that as a grassroots politician, the governor reads the pulse of the people, hence, the introduction of the free education scheme, now the toast of sister states.

    Nwankwo noted that instructional materials, software’s, Igbo language teachers and other necessary infrastructure, coupled with meeting of stakeholders, have been arranged to ensure a smooth take-off of the scheme.

    Apart from cultural dances and public presentation of the Ikoro newspaper, a summit, “Globalisation of the Igbo Language: That the world will hear us”, will hold as part of activities lined up for the programme.

    The summit paper will be delivered by Prof. Jerome Okonkwo while former Chief of General Staff Ebitu Ukiwe, Second Republic Vice President Alex Ekwueme, foremost banker Pascal Dozie and Dr. ABC Orjiako, will be special guests.

  • Bring back history, to schools, says Elder Ayomike

    Bring back history, to schools, says Elder Ayomike

    The Federal Government and education administrators have been urged to re-introduce history into the curriculum.

    Elder statesman and foremost history writer Pa J.O.S Ayomike made the call last weekend when he received the ‘Exceptional Lifetime Achievement’ award from the Class of 72/74 of Federal Government College, Warri, in celebration of their 2016 reunion and their alma mater’s Golden Jubilee.

    The 89-year old Pa Ayomike, who expressed surprise at the award, announced the donation of historical tools, including books and museum materials to the school’s library, to aid the teaching of history.

    “I wish to use this occasion to make a call close to my heart. It has bothered many Nigerians that history, as a formal discipline, is no longer taught in our schools. I call on education planners to have a rethink and go back to teaching history.

    “I donate to your library, historical tools (obtained from the United Kingdom museums) significant to our development”, he said.

    The Class Captain of the 72/74 set, Dr Bribina Samayin, described the award as “first of its kind”, noting that he had contributed much to Nigeria and the Niger Delta region.

    He said the 72/74 set was unique because it was the set of the Civil War, symbolising unity, adding that, over time, they gave back to the institution that moulded them.

    Other awardees were the Chairman of the Delta Broadcasting Service (DBS), Dame Felicia Adjago; Class Secretary Mr Henry-Otis Amurun; Goodluck Efemayi and Mr Jerry Osemekhian.

  • Lagos strategises to improve  performance in schools

    Lagos strategises to improve performance in schools

    With plans to build new schools, recruit qualified teachers, introduce school meals, and increase the number of technical colleges among others, the Lagos State government is expecting to improve education service delivery in its public primary and secondary schools.

    Deputy Governor of the state, who is also the Commissioner for Education, Dr Idiat Adebule said the government would use the 17 per cent share for education in the 2016 budget to achieve these goals – as well as the $42.3 million World Bank long term loan for the Eko Secondary Education Project.

    In an interview with journalists, Dr Adebule said the Eko Project fund will be used to fund the IBILE (Ikeja, Badagry, Ikorodu, Lagos-Island and Epe) Tablets it plans to purchase for secondary school pupils.

    “Given the importance of the tablet as a tool for learning, the senior students will be the first beneficiaries of the tablet that would be deployed soon. We will be providing for students in the 324 schools in the state,” she said.

    Mrs Adebule also showcased the IBILE prototype school buildings the state plans to build in areas of need around the state.

    The three-storey u-shaped structure will boast of 15-18 classrooms, four laboratories, library and media centre, a lobby to showcase trophies and historical artifacts, art room, conveniences, cafeteria, applied technology room, administration and counseling office, among others.

    “It would be sited in schools and community that needs it. We know that there so many schools or communities demanding or schools or additional structures, we will yield to their cries,” she said.

    Mrs Adebule said Lagosians should also be expecting the establishment of new technical colleges to add to the existing five, naming Badagry as a likely location for one of the colleges.

    In addition to physical infrastructure, the Deputy Governor said the state would be focusing on how to improve performance in the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) conducted by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) and the National Examinations Council (NECO), which presently stands at 37 per cent.

    “We are determined to provide enriched educational experience for our students through the provision of quality standards. There would also be a deliberate attempt to improve on pass rate for Lagos State students at the WAEC and NECO examinations from the present 37 per cent.

    “We are aware that majority of the public secondary schools in the state lack essential amenities such as water, electricity and toilet facilities, thus the need for the state government to provide and also ensure safety and friendly environment for learning in our schools,” she said.

     

  • Lagos  to light up streets, schools

    Lagos to light up streets, schools

    The Lagos State Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources will light up all the streets in Lagos and 172 schools in the rural areas, the Commissioner, Mr. Olawale Oluwo has said.

    Oluwo, who spoke during the unveiling of light up Lagos campaign and the commissioning of some projects in Ikeja said the campaign is imperative to educate the public on the purpose of light up Lagos project and its importance to the people, adding that a community in Badagry was lit up after having black out for 16 years.

    Oluwo said: “We are taking street lights to all the streets in Lagos and not just the major highways, but also the third Mainland Bridge, and Ikorodu roads. Light up Lagos initiative is the idea of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode who used it in his campaign. The Light up Lagos project is not just about street lighting but we also intend to light up all healthcare centres both at the local and metropolitan levels, and water corporations in Lagos so that people can have light 24 hours, as well as public schools and most importantly their libraries, staff quarters, among others.”

    The Commissioner said the United Kingdom deployed solar panels to 172 schools in Lagos rural areas, and trained people to make sure the deployed solar equipment is readily available.

    He said Lagos State as a government do not generate, transmit, distribute or supply the gas to power generation companies, but the investors who bought the power assets following the privatisation programme of the Federal Government are to make it happen. Lagos state Government has the responsibility to ensure that while the private sector people are setting out, the government must be with them as a partner to ensure that there are no bottlenecks.

    He said lots of enforcements need to be put in place to avoid the issue of bypassing meters and power theft. Those are the areas the government is concerned about, he added.

    Light up Lagos concept is divided into six, power advisory committee, independent power supply at Lekki, Berger, Alausa, among others.  Lagos State is moving away from providing to itself, institutions to working with stake holders to make sure they transmit power to the people.

    The street lighting project aims at putting all the street lights into operation, adding that sometimes management of the street light project is difficult because other agencies such as Lagos State Electricity Board, Lagos State Ministry of works, New Town Development Authority, Local Governments have stakes. Even at the federal level, we have Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria, some Senators and House of Representatives members have powered street lights as part of their social responsibility, he added.

  • Our fee collection headache, by schools

    Our fee collection headache, by schools

    What has the economy got to do with school fees? A lot, say school proprietors who are lamenting the late payment of fees by many parents. They are seeking the government’s intervention to prevent the collapse of their business. KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE and OLUWATOYIN ADELEYE report.

    FOR many private schools, these are not the best of times. They are feeling the pinch of the economic downturn as many parents are struggling to pay school fees.

    School proprietors and managers that spoke to The Nation complained about the delays in fees payment by parents in the past one year compared to what obtained in the past.

    Dr Jonathan Akpan, proprietor, Access International School in Magboro, Ogun State, said nowadays, not all fees are completely paid by mid-term.

    “Before, by mid-term, you have all school fees complete.  Last year, it fell to 80 per cent of the fees.  This term, it is even worse because some parents have been laid-off.  Some parents are yet to receive December and January salaries because some states are yet to pay their workers.  We are living on promises -’I will pay once they pay us;’ or ‘I will pay at the end of the term,” said Akpan, who charges those in the primary section N22,000 and their secondary school counterparts N35,000 per term.

    Mr David Jaiye, Head of School, Ol’ Bharms Height School in Ogba, Lagos, also said there has been noticeable delay in fees payment in his school.  He said up to 50 per cent of parents have resorted to part-payment compared to before.  And by the end of the term, he said about 90 per cent pay in full. The school charged between N56,000 and N67,000 (lunch inclusive) this term.

    “I can tell you that up to 50 per cent of the parents do part-payment. Many of them, about 90 per cent, would have finished paying before the end of the term,” he said.

    Lamenting the increasing challenge of running schools, Prince Shakiru Raji, Proprietor, Golden Light International School at Ejigbo, Lagos, said between 65 and 70 per cent of parents pay fully at the end of the term.

    “Payment of fees has been very difficult.  There has been a lot of withdrawal of students to public schools or schools of a lower cadre.  Apart from those that I give scholarship, those that will not carry their payment forward again are probably like 65, maximum 70 per cent,” he said.

    Mrs Abdulrahmon Khadijat, Head Teacher/Principal, Radab Schools in Isheri-Osun, Lagos, said with the downturn, the percentage of full-fee payers reduced to 60 per cent last year.

    “Last year, the economy greatly affected us.  But we thank God we are surviving.  At the end of the term 60 per cent pay fees in full.  Of the remaining 40 per cent, about 10-20 per cent pay part; the remaining pay nothing at all,” she said.

    fees payment is said to have even been slower since the new academic session began.

    Mrs Taiwo Ahmad, proprietor of Alywasi’ Children’s School in Mushin said the school has not collected up 30 per cent of fees this term.

    “So far, only about 20 to 25 per cent of parents in my school have paid their school fees. This is mostly due to the current economic situation in the country, because that is what the parents have been complaining about. It has never been this bad before,” she said.

    Mrs Chidi Adebayo of Basil International School, Ilupeju, said her school is owed even more by parents; while Pastor Violet Michael of Zing-Zam Crest Montessori School, Apapa, said parents have also fallen short in their schools.

    “About 10 per cent of the parents have paid full school fees. Others are still paying in bits,” said Mrs Adebayo.

    “Only about 20 per cent of my parents have paid full school fees.  Before, by now, at least, 40 per cent would have paid. But recently, we have experienced a drop in the percentage of parents that pay full school fees early, Pastor Michael said.

    Many parents admitted that they owed all or part of their children’s school fees, blaming the problem on the economic crunch.

    One of them, Mrs Bukola Omotosho, a trader in foodstuff, said: “I have paid part of my children’s school fees. They attend Jibralta School, Ifako Ijaiye. Even the school fees have increased.”

    Another parent, Mrs Florence Okewole, said she is seeking additional work to augment her family’s income to afford fees.

    “I am a hair dresser but I am learning how to sew now so that I can make extra money. My husband’s job has become very bad. Before, he used to work 12 hours and make more money. But now, they have cut down the time he works at the office, which means the money has reduced. We have paid part of our children’s school fees,” she said.

    Mr Emeka Chukwu, a business man, also has problems paying fees. “I have three children in three schools, and I have only paid part of their fees. Their school fees altogether add up to N120, 000. The economy is killing me. I am a business man, but there is no business, so how can I survive? My condition is critical,” he said.

    However, a few other parents said that they have paid school fees in full because they prioritise.

    For instance, Mr Ayodeji Oni, whose daughter attends Hallmark School, Ikeja, where he paid N118,000 this term, said he reduced other expenses to ensure he could afford her fees.

    “Yes, I have paid my daughter’s full school fees because I hold education in very high esteem. So, even if I have to cut down on my eating and other expenses, I would not compromise her education. I would not change her school, no matter how bad the economy gets, because good education is very important,” he said.

    The delay in payment of fees is however affecting schools negatively.  School owners lamented that they are finding it difficult to pay salaries, suppliers, and buy materials on time.

    Deaconess Funke Geshinde, proprietor of Triple Cross Schools, Ogba, said schools incur cost they cannot offset.  “Before resumption, there are a lot of things we have to do which we borrow money for; and the money is due immediately we resume.  So if parents don’t pay early, then it affects the repayment of those loans. This really affects us because when salary is due and we don’t have money, we have to go and borrow and the interest rates are so exorbitant, as high as 10 per cent per month. So the money that should have served as interest for the school is used to pay interest to the banks,” she said.

    Pastor Ajisafe Joshua of Best Generation Nursery and Primary School, Shogunle, also said poor payment has delayed salaries in his school.

    “Normally, by the 24th or 25th of the month, I always pay my staff; but I am seeking for bank loan now to assist us to collect some over draft so that we can pay our staff,” he said.

    Mrs Ahmad said not only salary is being delayed in her school, but the rent of the property has not been paid as a result.

    “Normally we would have paid (salaries) between 20th and 26th of the month. Now we would have to pay January salary in February. Our school rent is being delayed also,” she said.

    Pastor Michael also said his teachers would receive their January salary this month.

    “We would have to go into February to pay. Thank God our teachers understand and they are patiently waiting, because they know things will get better,” he said.

    Despite the delays, the school owners said they find it difficult to send defaulting pupils away.

    Alhaji Akande Kamal, President, National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS), Lagos Chapter and proprietor of Supreme Pillars College, Badagry, said schools have to empathise with parents.

    “When the parents come, they table all these issues to us and we reason with them,” he said.

    Mr Jaiye of Ol’ Bharms Height School, added that schools have to be supportive, especially when the parents used to pay on time in the past.

    “School business is a relationship business.  If you are not close to the parent, you will not know their complaints. So this kind of children, you just have to let them stay until their parents recover,” he said.

    Prince Raji also takes a similar approach in his school.

    “If somebody that has been paying regularly carries over fees to the next term, we understand.  For example, we had a man whose wife had to give birth through Cesarean Section, we had to relax,” he said.

    However, Dr Akpan urged the government to revive the economy so it does not affect quality education in schools.

    “There is need for government to intervene.  If not, the outcome in the next five years will be half baked graduates.  Because what most schools would do is to employ unqualified teachers to teach in their schools when they cannot afford trained teachers,” he said.

     

  • ‘Extend anti-corruption war to schools’

    ‘Extend anti-corruption war to schools’

    A trainer, Dr Ayo Ogunsan, has urged the Federal Government to extend its anti-corruption war to all tertiary institutions in the country.

    Ogunsan, whose firm, Executive Trainers Limited (ETL), runs local and overseas training programmes for workers of tertiary institutions, said such institutions need strong leaders and institutions to attain global standards.

    He said: “The President should extend the corruption net to all higher institutions. Search them out; there should be no sacred cows. We need strong institutions and leaders. Higher institutions should be run like universities, not like an empire. They should be able to run without the presence of the Vice Chancellor or provost. Government should empower the systems in the higher institutions. Institutions are very difficult to manage and immediately the strong leaders leave, the problems would resurface.”

    He urged the government to beam its searchlight on cultism at higher institutions to prevent them from growing into a network of cabals after graduation.

    “President Buhari is a blessing to Nigeria. He should be strong and put his leg on the ground to change things. Tackle cultism and cabals at higher institutions, because it is these same cultists that grow up to be cabals later. Anybody caught should be immediately dealt with. We are ready and willing to support,” Ogunsan said.

    He advised managers of higher institutions to be transparent.

    “It is not going to be business as usual. Do what is right because it is more honourable, otherwise, you might tarnish your image for the rest of your life. Be good role models,” he said.

    Highlighting plans for the year, Ogunsan said his firm, whose vision is to raise all higher institutions in the country to global standards, has a timetable of training programmes in various parts of the world to expose chief executives, Vice Chancellors, lecturers and other workers to international best practices.

    He said the next training, which comes next month at Yale University, United States of America is to “train the trainers; bring to them what they do not know; expose them to the world; make them compliant with modern technologies; provoke them to get out of their comfort zones and learn to train others.”

     

  • FirstBank offers educational solutions to schools

    FirstBank offers educational solutions to schools

    First Bank of Nigeria Limited is set to support schools and educational institutions with their educational requirements to enhance preparations for the school year.

    The bank’s support for educational development of the child and the institution is an offshoot of its initiative for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs). The lender has developed an array of products and solutions targeted at enabling schools at all levels to seamlessly automate their administrative processes and optimise the process for school fees collections whilst they also acquire attractive educational facilities to support their business.

    The bank’s educational products and solutions include the FirstEduPortal, SkoolPay, and theFirstEdu Loan. Others are Operational Vehicle Loan, Commercial Mortgage and Personal Loan against Salary (PLAS) which enhances Parents/Guidance’s capacity to pay their wards’ school fees.

    The FirstEduPortal facilitates online application and admission, result checking, course scheduling, transcript request, e-learning as well as school fees payment and confirmation amongst others. The portal gives educational institutions the option of receiving payments from their students via debit cards online, Point of Sale, Automated Teller Machines and through any FirstBank branch.

    A web portal will be developed for the schools where it is non-existent. The SkoolPay solution is for educational institutions that do not require a sophisticated system in supporting their collections. SkoolPay enables schools to receive payments through FirstBank branches nationwide. The solution provides detailed online real-time reports of payments received by the school and the payments are updated on the school’s internal system if required.

    The FirstEdu loan is targeted at private Nursery, Secondary and A-Levels schools. The product offers opportunity for private schools to access flexible funding to meet urgent cash flow needs, replace old furniture and equipment, as well as refurbish dilapidated buildings and classroom blocks.

    The Operational Vehicle Loan is targeted at registered businesses. It allows the entrepreneur to acquire brand new vehicles for the day to day operation of the business. Organisations can take advantage of this facility to purchase school buses in the case of school proprietors and even upscale their staff welfare schemes through provision of staff buses.

    The commercial mortgage facility offers flexible financing options for the acquisition of landed property for commercial purposes. Customers can now own their business premises and even earn rental income on acquired property. This product enhances wealth creation for customers given the capital appreciation on the property on the long run as well as the additional source of revenue from rentals. Again, the property financed is the only collateral required.

  • Behind the Boom

    Behind the Boom

    …Why patronage soars for low-cost schools

    Housed in cubicles and dilapidated structures, the number of low-cost schools in Lagos is soaring. HANNAH OJO writes on how parents, in their craze for private schools, are shunning well structured public schools to patronize the low-cost ones that now pimple the city.

    It is break time at Ishaga Close Primary School, Mushin. The pupils are out on the field playing with a kind of excitement that would make an adult long wistfully for the good old days in early school.   The expansive compound which boasts newly refurbished blocks, also houses the Islamic Model Mission Primary School.  The two public schools are owned by the Lagos State Government. Although their uniforms were different, the pupils were all playing together, oblivious of the difference in their schools’ names.

     

    In a part of the compound, an irked gateman whips some erring children with a cane. “They are mischievous little things”, he told the reporter without being asked. Well manicured flower beds adorn parts of the expansive compound. But the beautiful sight is neutralized by a heap of refuse that blocks the entrance to the long lines of toilets. It is obvious that the waste managers have not been showing up in a long while. To urinate, most of the pupils make use of a gutter at a corner of the compound and only manoeuvre their ways through the garbage to the long line of toilets if they need to pooh.

     

    “Many people did not know we have nursery a section here,” said one of the teachers who asked not to be named because civil servants are not allowed to speak to journalists.

     

    “When it was discovered that these jeleosimi (low-cost schools) were springing up everywhere, the state government set up a nursery section where parents can register their children from age three. But I don’t know why parents till patronize these schools that are opening everywhere because of unemployment.

     

    “We have enough classrooms, toilets and the facilities are okay. The only problem is lack of sufficient furniture for the pupils to sit on. But the local government has helped us with some,” the teacher said.

    If there is a place where a stubborn sense of hope defies the logic of reality, it is Adenike Memorial Nursery/Primary School, Bariga, a private school.  The vision of the school contained in a cardboard that was pasted on the wall in the drab looking office of the head teacher’s reads: “To ensure that our pupils are best in school academic throughout Lagos state. Also, to prepare our pupils for future.”   When our correspondent visited the school’s vicinity on a Thursday, sight that confronted her did not seem to synchronise with the school’s avowed vision.  The infrastructure needed for the implementation of such lofty ideals was simply nowhere in sight.

     

    The classrooms were partitioned with planks. The fans were not working and there was little space for children to play. The environment notwithstanding; the head teacher, a middle aged woman who did not want to be quoted, reluctantly explained how the school was helping to provide education for the children of the poor.

     

    She said: “We have 109 pupils manned by a staff of 10, two of whom are non-teaching. If parents are not happy with what we are teaching their children, they would have stopped coming. There are many schools like this in this area.”

     

    Investigation revealed that tuition at the school ranges between N6, 000 and N7, 000 per term. Children in Adenike memorial school

     

    Newly painted with a colourful banner displayed at its gate, it is not hard to notice Best Future Nursery and Primary School in Aborishade Street, another private school in a suburb of Idi-Araba community, which harbours a high number of low income earners.  The school occupies a compartment on the floor of a one-storey ‘room and parlour’ building.

     

    Youthful Yusuf Ayuba, the headmaster and son of the proprietress, says his teaching experience spans eight years.

    “Our parents don’t earn much, so the fees have to be affordable,” he said. “Once they see the performance of their children, they don’t like to withdraw them from school.

     

    “We charge N6000 for nursery and N6, 500 for primary.  It will surprise you to know that some parents elsewhere pay three or more times of that amount.”

    Although Ayuba would not give the actual number of pupils and teachers in the school, a keen observation suggest that the school may be short-staffed as Ayuba was seen manning two classes at a time. But the children seemed happy.

     

    Pasted at the gate was a vacancy notice on cardboard asking experienced teachers to apply within. The required qualification was not stated.

    Vision of Adenike memorial school

     

    Parents do have a say

    Given the rate at which low income schools are springing up and the level of patronage they enjoy from low income earners, it appears that parents are not particular about the structures in those school but the academic performances of their children and wards.  This is in spite of the efforts the state government has made in recent years to improve the standard of education in its public schools.

     

    Ruth Alhausa, a secondary school teacher with a child in a low-cost nursery school, said parents are shunning public primary schools because they want the best for their children.

    She said: “Most of the public schools are overcrowded while parents want schools where their children can get individual attention.  The issue of protection is also key, because teachers in private schools wait for parents to pick up their wards while in public schools, teachers don’t have the patience. The children are just too vulnerable.”

     

    Another parent, Adenike Aderogba, a petty trader whose children attend Canaanland Nursery and Primary School in Bariga, affirmed that despite the meager income she makes from trading, she would not consider sending her children to a public school.

    She queries: “How many of the big men have their children in public schools? Not even the government officials.  As for me, I will starve to pay the fees. My children are my only hope.  It is because of them that I am fasting and depriving myself to see that they become important persons in the future.” Individual attention, a plusfor low income schools

     

    Felicia Folorunsho, a single mother with a four- year-old daughter, also told The Nation that although she would not mind sending her daughter to a public secondary school, she would rather patronize a low income school with a manageable environment at the elementary stage.

     

    “Primary education is the foundation.  I don’t want to take chances. I doubt if children often get individual attention in public schools because of the large class. I desire a better life for my child”.

     

    The total number of private schools in Lagos stands at about   12, 093, according to DEEPEN (Developing Effective Private Education in Nigeria), an NGO funded by the UK Department for International Development. Data from the Lagos State Bureau of statistics in 2009 indicate the number of public primary school to be 1, 081. Public junior secondary schools are 323, while public secondary school stands at 303.  This brings the number of public schools to a total of 1, 707.  The term ‘low income’ is used to refer to schools that charge between N1, 000 and N25, 000 school fees per year. Mr Aiyesetemi

     

    With the staggering statistics,   the reality is beginning to set in that the ‘low-cost’ schools are playing a complementary role in the provision of education in the state.  Some of them are members of an association known as Association of Formidable Education for Development (AFED). AFED, which has been in existence for 16 years, works with the state government and NGOS to ensure better standard in those schools.

     

    AFED’s president, Ifejola Dada, in a chat with The Nation, confirmed that their schools use the same curriculum as public schools. She added that the over 12, 000 schools registered with the association also participates in a unified AFED examination used in grading students.

     

    On the possibility of extracurricular activities since most of the schools have the challenge of space which tend to limit the scope of activities pupils can participate in, she said:  “We are trying to organize joint sports activities which will take place from time to time. We are looking forward to one at the zonal level by November and another one at the national level by February next year.”

     

    She also said that AFED was working with government to ease the burden of multiple taxations by getting exemption from some of the levies payable to government because of the low-cost education they are providing.

     

    Pupils lunch pack in Ken Ade“The AFED schools have also been given the inclusion to write common entrance exam, and they record 80-90 percent pass,” she added.

     

    Incidentally, some of the schools from the slums are getting attention from the international community. Ken Ade Private School in Apollo Street, Makoko is one of such.

    Bawo Ayeseteminikan,  a trained quantity surveyor, who had gone ahead to acquire an  educational degrees from the University of Lagos  founded the school in 1990 shortly after finishing youth service. The school had benefited from a hole-in-the- wall learning station for children, courtesy of the William Family Charitable Trust Association in conjunction with Newcastle University. However,  at the time the reporter visited, the gadgets powered by solar energy were no longer working.

     

    Ayeseteminikan prides himself as offering a school where any person who thinks education is important can benefit from. “The international community has been interested in me. From a CNN exposure of what I was doing, I was invited to the United kingdom and other places of the world to explain how I am able to manage the school with the peanuts I charge parents”, he enthused.

     

    Although Makoko reels with poverty-stricken slum dwellers, parents hardly withdraw their children from Ken Ade because the school operates a flexible system where records are opened for parents to pay the fees by installment.

     

    “Asking them to pay in full at once scares parents.  I try to let them understand they can come per day and pay what they have. I have a register where parents can make payment bit by bit”.

     

    On sourcing qualified teachers, he admitted that teachers with higher degrees in education are expensive to keep.   However, he was quick to allude to the success stories of education in the slum. “Majority of my teachers passed through this place. Some have HND, NCE and we have those who did not go beyond primary 6 but they are now managers in their various fields. We also have those who are in universities. My son is a medical doctor and he is a product of this school”.   Mrs Dada, Afed president

     

    Different stroke for secondary schools

    While some parents favour low-income schools for primary education, it is a different case for secondary school education in the state where more pupils are enrolled in public schools.

    When The Nation visited Obele Community Grammar school in Surulere, the place was alive with learning activities as cane wielding teachers took turns to teach students.

    A principal officer of the school, who spoke off records, bemoaned the fact that low-income earners strain themselves to send their wards to private schools as a result of lack of information.

     

    The officer said: “Teachers in public schools are far more qualified than those in private schools, but parents think that sending their children to private school is a kind of status symbol.  The only advantage I’ll say they have over public schools is that their uniforms are beautiful. And I think some public schools also have very beautiful uniforms. Apart from that, the public school teachers are better.”

     

    On external examinations such as WASCCE and NECO where private schools outdo their counterparts in private schools, the officer said such grounds should not be used in judging the quality of the schools.

     

    “We all know what happens during those exams. Most of the examinations done are not based on true performance of the children. And unless we get that right, most of the problems we have in the educational sector will continue. Thank God for the high fees in private schools, a lot of parents are bringing their children to public schools and they are realizing that there is really no difference,” She stated.

     

    Although public secondary schools in Lagos attract more patronage, there is also the challenge of crowdedness, owing to the growing population.

     

    Dr. Modupe Adefeso-Olateju, an education policy consultant, is of the opinion that not all unapproved schools are wholly illegal entities. Some, she said, are simply in the process of applying for state approval.

    She said:  “As a concerned citizen, I can fully appreciate the position of the state ministries of education, and if I was a government official, I would probably want to shut these schools down immediately save for one ugly reality: parents continue to opt for these schools despite their knowledge that public schools (which in a state like Lagos are tuition free) are available!

    “It is not that the parents who patronise these schools hate their children. On the contrary, they love their children and value education, wanting their offspring to have better life chances than they had,” she admitted in a recent publication.

     

    With the rising population and the need for education, it could be debated if Lagos ‘low-cost’ schools have come to complement or supplant government’s effort in providing education. Nigeria with 10.5 million children without access to education is said to have the highest number of out of school children in the world, according to the 2015 Global Monitoring Report (GMR).

     

    Nigeria recently joined the rest of the world to adopt the Sustainable Development Goals in New York. With goal four of the SDGs seeking to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all, it is glaring that government alone may not be able to deliver on actualizing the goal.  In a situation where the state of the economy discourages parents from patronising standard private schools, low cost schools tend to bridge the gap in catering to the educational need of low income earners.