Tag: Success Adegor

  • The education of young Success

    Many of us are familiar with the story of Miss Success Adegor, the spunky little girl whose natural charm over the matter of her school fees took hold of the Nigerian scene. We met the little girl when a certain Miss Stephanie Idolor shot and distributed a video in which Success spiritedly expressed her feelings of grave dissatisfaction with the way her school had gone about collecting school fees from its pupils. According to that video, which is said to have gone ‘viral’ (like many computer-related terms, this is not logically comprehensible to me), little Success vowed to ‘show’ her school for sending her home over school fees.

    When I first encountered the video, I thought it was a put-up affair; you know, one of those short comical sketches done by a playgroup. However, the subsequent comments from the public soon convinced me it was real. The genuineness of people’s sympathies with the little girl’s plight also convinced me this was no job borne of idleness. What finally had me was the amount of money the public was said to have poured into the bosom of the girl’s family. I was in consternation. I mean, I thought, all those lollies had to be real, even if the story was shaky.

    Actually, rather than being fooled, the public sprang into action, from what I hear. From the news reports alone, I understand the family of little Miss Success has received donations well in excess of the girl’s school fees, while the girl herself has been given more than one scholarship. This is nothing compared to the sudden fame that has come to her. I mean, no one is likely to forget the note of stubborn despair in her voice any time soon when she said, ‘den go flog me, den go tire, the cane go tire…’ I really should like to see how a cane gets tired. Such creativity.

    The story has highlighted one of the facets of our modern social system that this column has grumbled and moaned about endlessly: that we are not paying attention to our children’s education enough! At this point in our story as a nation, it should not be said that a little child was sent home by her teacher in a public primary school for not paying her school fees. What school fees?, we should all be asking. Actually, this is what I am asking.

    The dilapidated nature of our public school system is only comparable to the dilapidated structures used to support it. The corruption bedeviling the Nigerian public life has not spared the school administration system too. Then, the classrooms are of ground zero standard in everything, from the teacher to the flooring, if there is one, to the quality of the stuff the children learn. I will not get tired of repeating myself until something is done; I only urge that you should also not get tired of reading my repeats too. After all, when DStv repeats itself again and again, no one sanctions them.

    Anyway, most schools are faced with dealing with the government’s shortfalls in allocation either by charging their charges, or closing down. Most choose to charge their charges, hence little Success’s story. For this exposure, I don’t know if this is true, but I understand that the girl’s teacher has been made the scapegoat in all this and has been sacked. If it is, then I would cry foul on her behalf. It is not the teacher or school administrator that we should sack, it is the government. It is the responsibility of the government to provide funds and set the standards on how those funds are to be used.

    The plight of little Success has become a metaphor for this country’s failing educational and even socio-political system. Every animal species takes the education of its young very seriously. Mama bird would not rest until she has seen that her young can fly and hunt for food by itself. Mama lion would not consider her job done until her young one knows how to pin down an antelope for his/her dinner. Public primary education is supposed to be free and should be a spring board for greater life education, but this is not the case. This story happened because we have a country which does not consider the education of its young sufficiently important to engage its energy but considers political expediencies much more urgent. So, all the little Successes are left to learn to fly by themselves, often with painful results.

    I have, however, found the response of the public somewhat disappointing. It is too…too… fire brigade-like! I would have loved the public to have asked questions about how we got to this point where all our ‘Successes’ who are in their millions have become infected by this syndrome – having no money to pay school fees and being ready to suffer for it! We need answers. The public should not just throw money at one isolated case and ignore the remaining millions of other children who are also suffering like this girl in the hands of our insufferable educational system. That’s treating the symptom and leaving the engendering disease well alone to grow. We need to scrub the system clean.

    Certain things are basic concerning the education of Miss Success Adegor. The first is that in plying her with so much money, we are not really helping her. As it is, her life is already altered inexorably forever. From having no money before, she has suddenly been catapulted into the millionaire class, i.e., wealth beyond her dreams even before she can spell the word. So, before she can even add her math together, she learns that life can be unpredictable.

    Don’t count on her parents to help her add the math together, either. I suspect that they would be busy fighting off the vultures that will suddenly swoop down on the family in the name of family. I think that has begun to happen too, from news reports. Now, she knows nothing goes for nothing; no free lunch, baby.

    Then too, even success may also begin to go to the head of Success, after savouring all that admiration. First, all that money will certainly go to the little girl’s head. Then all the fame will collide with the money and we will have one colossal case of pride. Then she may learn that not all gifts are designed to make us richer. As a matter of fact, that is why they tell us to beware of Greek gifts.

    Certain things are basic to our education too as a people. First, we must fix our educational system so that every child can have access to quality education across this country. Spunky Success has helped to draw attention once more to an educational system that is not working and which we must make workable. We should begin by motivating our teachers, as we have said before, and overseeing their individual development, to the last of them so that they can be more effective. Well-motivated teachers make a working classroom. Then, we need to overhaul the supervisory system to ensure no teacher or headmaster/mistress is left on his/her own.

    Everyone should be interested in the education of our young ones. The children are our future so we need to show them the way, so goes a song. We should not wait for ‘tragedies’ like this to be written before we go into act one. I think our act needs to be well put together into one coherent whole for the sake of our children’s future.

  • Success sparks revolution in Delta education sector

    Success Adegor, the seven-year-old Primary 3 pupil whose outburst in Sapele, is now talk of the town, has sparked an instant revolution in Delta State’s education sector. BOLAJI OGUNDELE and AIWERIE OKUNGBOWA examine the questions being asked about the management of primary and secondary education in the state, especially as it concerns the government’s free education policy.

    Success Adegor, the seven-year-old girl from Sapele who set the social media ablaze as she gave vent to her anger at being sent away from school for not paying N900 examination fees, has no worries at present.  The video posted by Stephanie Idolor on Instagram, attracted celebrities, politicians and other well-wishers who came to the girl’s rescue and offered her money and scholarship up to university level.

    However, the 28-second video raised some pertinent issues even after Success has been settled.

    One of such issues is the illegal levy collection in state-run educational institutions; another is the deplorable state of her school, Okotie-Eboh Primary School 1 and other public schools.

     

    How free is Delta ’s free education?

    The Delta State government, like many others across the country, runs free education policy at primary and secondary school levels in government-owned schools.

    The pupils do not pay tuition to attend school.  However, the Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Dr Chiedu Ebie, said though education was free, there were approved levies for consumables (N100) and sports (N750). Any other levy, he said, was illegal.

    “We operate free education in Delta State. However, we discovered overtime that some school heads take the law into their hands by imposing illegal levies. We have battled this in the last three and half years of this administration. We have had school heads suspended and demoted. This may well be another case of a school head taking laws into her hands and imposing levies that ought not to be imposed on the students. We have what we referred  to as ‘approved levy’ in our schools. It is issued by the ministry (Education). Approved levy is N100 for consumables and no school head has the right to collect above N100. Also, for sports wears because of inter-house sports and other sporting activities, we have a flat rate of N750. It’s clearly specified and clearly defined. In this case, I understand that it was exam levy of N800 and a levy for a book of N1,000 and another one for N300.

    Success was sent away from school for not paying examination levy of N900. Her mother, Mrs Vera Adegor, said it was not the first time she would be sent home for failing to pay for one thing or the other.

    Findings by The Nation revealed that parents in many public schools pay levies apart from the two stipulated by Dr Ebie.

    Mr. Sunday Nwanyinmike, a tricycle driver, has three daughters at Hussey College, Warri, where he pays lesson fee, an unidentified levy called NSS, Identity Card and others.

    He said: “We are paying a lot of money without receipt, which I am very angry about. They call one NSS and I pay N2,500 on that one for each person. There is also another one they call lesson fee, for which I have to pay N500 and it is not like they are teaching them; it is just to keep them there.There is another N800 they collected recently. They said it is for ID card for the one writing WASC.

    “There is another one I paid recently. It was N750 and I paid for two of my daughters. I paid N1,500 and there is none of them we got receipt for. They said if they asked the teachers, the teachers would tell them there is no receipt.

    “For the NSS, we pay that one per session. I asked for the meaning, but they couldn’t tell me and I’ve asked my children to ask their teacher for the meaning. They said it is the money they are using for past footballers, like those who have passed out and are unable to take care of themselves, as a matter of fact, I can’t understand what they mean. The one of N750 is every term, while the lesson’s levy is every month; they collect N500 every month.”

    Mr. Blessing Ikuku has children in Dom Domingos College, Warri.  He said they pay for electricity and the like.

    “Sometimes they may say it is electricity or NEPA fee.  If it is not NEPA fee, it will be inter- house sports, if not inter-house sports, it will be PTA, if not PTA, it will be another thing. Like this session, we have had to pay for inter-house sports and we paid N2,500. Last year, we paid for PTA and other levies. I can’t remember the amount we paid last year again because they didn’t give us receipt, they just said it was PTA and I gave the children the money.

    “We also pay N50 light bill for each student, which is supposed to be every month, but they have not asked for that one in the last two months because it seems like there has not been light.”

    Read also: Delta proud of football fest –Ebie

    Another parent, Mr Gabriel Ojiko, a member of Tsekelewu (Polobubo) community in Warri North Council Area, said his children attend Ogonoma Model Primary School, Tsekelewu, where parents pay so the school could employ more teachers.

    “In Ogonoma Model Primary School, children do pay school fees; they pay N950 per term and N500 for examinations. The N950 goes to the teachers because it is for PTA. They do not have sufficient teachers, as a matter of fact, I pay one of the community teachers.  I had to commit to being responsible for the salary because the Headmaster complained to me that the school is not adequately staffed. I think they have only about three teachers on government’s pay roll, which cannot go round the entire school. So as one of the community leaders, after we had put our heads together, we decided on PTA, which should be going for the payment of the teachers.”

    Despite the suspension of the Head Teacher of Okotie Eboh Primary School 1 over illegal levies, parents said teachers in their schools were still demanding levies.

    Mrs Chinonso Oghenekevwe, a house wife in Sapele, said she still paid N1,000 for her son for examination fees last Friday.

    “My two kids are in Abbot Primary School, a government school in Sapele. We pay all kinds of levies and even after Success issue, they did not stop collecting cash from us, even last week Friday, they sent my son to me that if I did not pay the examinations fee, they would drive him from school, I had to look for the money for them.

    “Let the government come to our aid, we are tired of having to pay for this and pay for that. The school is not free and if you calculate how much we are paying, you will find out it is even more than private school. Let them help us. If you say school is free then, let it be free,” she said.

    Ezekiel Etinagbedia, a sign writer in Sapele, said he had thought the Success saga would check illegal fee collection at his son’s school but it did not.

    “I have a son in Orodje Secondary School, Sapele. When the Success Adegor story broke out, we all heaved a sigh of relief, thinking they would stop, but as I speak to you, they are still collecting. They have not stopped. Last week, my son demanded for N3,000 for another levy he said was for vigilante, examination levies and chairs and I have paid. Despite the suspension of the Head Teacher of Okotie-Eboh Primary School, Sapele, they are still collecting illegal fees from the children in schools,” he said.

    Etinagbedia wondered whether the fee collection was because the government does not fund the running of the schools.

    “Sometimes we tend to blame the teachers for these collections, but the truth is; is the government providing subventions to run these schools? So as far as the school is not provided for, this kind of issue will continue to rear its ugly head and the illegal collections will continue to go on,” he said.

    Dr Ebie said Delta State government provides between N20,000-N100,000 as subvention for schools depending on their size and nature.

    He told The Nation that while the local government areas were responsible for funding primary education through the UBEC Act via local council secretaries, school subventions at secondary level was solely the responsibility of State government.

    To ensure regular payments of school subventions, Ebie said his ministry during budget review canvassed for subventions to schools be de-classified from non- regular subvention to regular subvention sub-heads.

    Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), Delta State Wing, Mr Titus Okotie-Eboh, said the government was not providing enough funds for school heads to run the schools.  He added that what the government claims to pay as subvention does not get to the schools on time.

    He said: “The issue of subvention is not so much as the amount given to school heads; the real issue is irregular and late release of subvention.  It is not all school heads that have the capacity to get loans pending when government finally releases funding.”

    He said due to scarce resources and competing needs state governments nationwide are unable to meet all its financial obligations.

     Collection of illegal fees

    Following Success’ viral video, Mrs. Vero Igbigwe, the Head Teacher of Okotie-Eboh Primary School 1, Sapele, was suspended.  Dr Ebie said she would appear before a panel of inquiry inaugurated on Tuesday.  He said she would be given fair hearing.

    “There is a suspension on the head teacher pending the outcome of the panel of inquiry which will be inaugurated today. Everyone has a right to fair hearing and we will follow due process. The reason for the suspension stems from the video that went viral about seven- year -old sent home from school over unpaid levy.It is obvious that some illegal levies were being charged by the school. She is the head of the school so the buck stops on her table,” he said.

    The NUT Chair, Okotie-Eboh declined comment on Mrs Igbigwe’s suspension.  He urged patience as stakeholders await the outcome of the probe panel.

    However, the NUT Chairman, Warri South Council Area, Confidence Ikuejawa, said Mrs Igbigwe could not have acted alone.  He called on all guilty parties in the illegal fee collection saga to be punished.

    “All the parties involved should be brought to book. The woman should not be dealt with in isolation because it was collaboration.  The Ministry of Education is involved, the management of the school authority is involved; the Local Educational Authority is involved. You see the parties involved, when you see the way they design the money, everybody has his own part.

    “So, if they want to bring that woman to book, all parties involved should be brought to book. The woman should not be dealt with in isolation because she didn’t act on her own. The woman did not even have the right to or power to collect money without taking directive from some quarters,” he said.

    Public schools and poor facilities

    The outcry against the dilapidated state of the Okotie-Eboh Primary School 1 has been much.  The school buildings which have many of the roofs in various state of disrepair and decrepit classrooms has been in use for over six decades.

    The back of one of the buildings is even water-logged.

    Nevertheless, the Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education defended Governor Ifeanyi Okowa’s administration, saying it places premium on education and was not behind in payment of counter part funds to the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).

    “In line with the Universal Basic Education Law, the state government has paid its counterpart funds of about N6 billion from 2013 to 2017 which has enabled it attract about N13 billion to fund education in the state.

    “In Delta, we have a total of 1,125 Nursery and Primary, 465 secondary and six technical schools.

    “To enhance access to education and in consonance with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) four, the Governor Ifeanyi Okowa-led administration established 46 new schools made up of 12 primary and 34 secondary schools,” he said.

    Ebie added that the funds had been deployed towards infrastructural development, curriculum development, teachers training, school sports development among others.

    He said Okotie-Eboh Primary School 11 was currently being renovated following the contract awarded on November 29, 2018.  He said with the viral video, the education ministry would fast track renovation work on both Okotie-Eboh Primary Schools 1 and 11.

    “I am looking at the positives of the video. One of it is that we need to expedite action on the second phase of Okotie-Eboh School 1 which is the other half of the school.  We are working on that because we have started work on it.  Instead of waiting for Okotie-Eboh 11 to be completed we are fast tracking the execution of both schools,” he said.

    He appealed for support from the private sector to collaborate with government in the development of education in the state, adding that though the burden of funding free education was huge and Delta State would not renege on its promise to providing free qualitative education.

    Ikuejawa testified to the government’s effort towards infrastructural development of schools in the state.

    He said: “Let me give kudos to the Delta State government to a large extent. When it comes to infrastructure in schools they’re trying, but they need to do more. What they’re doing is not yet enough, but they have tried.  (But) I want to say something, 90 per cent of the contractors they are using to build schools in Delta state are doing rubbish work and even when you make attempt to report these things, they tell you that it is our people that are there and they do nothing. Even when you see structural defects, when they’re building and you complain, they don’t bother. Those engineers from Ministry of Education will come and they collected money and nothing happens. Even the communities don’t bother.

    “A lot is going on. Like when it comes to chairs, Delta State government supplies almost all the schools every term with desks, but it was discovered that these desks do not last for a term because of the quality and we keep complaining, telling them that they should go for better quality and still they do not do that. They keep awarding and people keep taking money from the government at the detriment of the schools. Go round the schools, you’ll discover that those desks supplied don’t stand the tests of time. You go to most of the schools that they supplied last term, go round, you will see that the desks are no longer available there. You’ll see the pieces outside.”

  • Our Girls; Success – a girl failed by governors

    Our Chibok girls were kidnapped on April 15, 2014. Leah Sharibu and others are not yet released.

    Study the total votes in Kano, Plateau, Benue and Rivers; where are the voters? They do not exist. Our population is probably around 130-150m as we had under 30million voters. INEC is blameless, not responsible for violence during elections – political parties are. Face the parties, not INEC!

    The Success Adegor story is about a delightful Delta State articulate girl-child sent home for not paying what government quickly labelled an ‘illegal exam levy’.  Her parents, out of penury or protest or pride or ignorance or arrogance or anti-corruption, did not pay.

    Do your research before apportioning blame. Is the acting headteacher an honest soul struggling to educate children with no government grants for running costs? Governments rarely give running cost grants beyond salaries. Parents and governments always misinterpret the slogan ‘free education’ for ‘total free education’. Unfortunately they then refuse to substitute for a negligent government which under-provides equipment and learning environment and is also guilty of lying about its policy desire or ability to provide total education.  This leaves the pupil at an educational disadvantage when compared to pupils in liberal schools and private schools. In the latter, parents are encouraged to add value through donations of funds, magazines, books, sports and other needed equipment, buildings and payment for excursions.

    No school or university anywhere in the world has enough despite fees and good education budgets. It a painful paradox that only Nigerian ‘free education’ schools are not allowed to admit that they need help. Nonsense! Not allowing teachers to request, under supervision, for support is stifling initiative and the quality of education delivery. Allowing them to ask is not an admission of failure of free education policy but a reality check and a required supplement. No budget is ever enough, especially in education. Do not deny parents and PTA their primary responsibility for their children’s education. And stop deceiving teachers. Rather give awards to the best-supporting parents and PTAs and Old Students Associations and corporate bodies. Is the corrupt teacher extorting?

    While we castigate our teachers as the education funds are repeatedly stolen, one Kenyan maths and science teacher Peter Tabichi in a religious brother’s habit has won the Global Teacher Prize of $1m by the Varkey Foundation in Dubai for turning around the fortunes of a similarly neglected school as the one that Success goes to. We saw on TV the accursed pigsty quality of the school facilities making it more dangerous than the private Lagos collapsed school building because it is a government entity, protected from inspection and closure.

    No government has closed its own schools, yet across the country, there are thousands of government schools like the Success school- pigsties. The Delta State school is not ‘Child and Teacher Friendly Learning Environment’. It is a shameful pigsty in a state which is has the 4th highest per capita income in the country and receives 13% derivation and exposes a flaw in governance, repeated nationwide. Shamefully, every state has 500-1000+ such neglected schools. The teacher said the levy was for photocopying etc. The travail of the girl Success is a failure of political and education services.  Free education is often ‘Rubbish Under-funded Education’ with little help beyond delayed salaries provided by government especially at the primary level where there are not even Old Students Associations to help out.

    We all conduct or have participated in exams and know what they take in terms of material and logistics from time-table to question papers. If government does not give exam grant, do we expect no exam or the teachers to take funds from their tiny salaries for the purpose? I can bet you there is no grant from the Ministry of Education for anything including examinations and sports and co-curricular activities. The abysmal and selfishly myopic or ignorant or misguided refusal of Nigerian parents to provide the missing support to the abysmal free education efforts of governments coupled with the rejection of support from willing parents and the absence of primary school  Old Students Associations and the non-accessing the UBEC counterpart funding and of course the refusal of states to give needed grants to schools for running costs culminate in killing the potential of millions of children like Success and the denting and dampening the dedication of any wonderful Nigerian teacher/education leader.

    Saraki’s and senate’s N30,000 minimum wage is a Greek Gift -the Trojan Horse- and a poisoned chalice and is classic Saraki like the forced 1+ year calamitous delay forced on Nigerians by the slashing and diversion of a budgeted N15b Lagos-Ibadan expressway budget to untraceable corruption-driven National Assembly (NASS) constituency projects. It is a parting present which is a financial burden to his enemies currently in power. Who will face dwindling capital budgets from this rising recurrent wage bill above the N27,000 recommended by the federal government. Governors always manage, like Saraki, to forget that their own huge salaries overburden the budget. The extra money will come from huge funds of governance that would otherwise have been stolen. It is a desired parting gift dangled before workers but undeliverable. Now Saraki is in a win-win situation. He will retire laughing as Buhari may not sign it into law. Saraki will be long gone by the 30 days senate needs to override the president as senate seeks to keep their own fat-fat salaries and constituency projects.

  • UPDATED: Delta suspends head teacher over Success’ viral video

    The Delta State government has suspended the headmistress of Okotie-Eboh Primary School 1, Sapele Local Government of the state, Mrs. Vero Igbigwe.

    She was suspended following the viral video where little Success Adegor was sent home over her parents’ failure to pay her examination levies.

    Igbigwe was suspended on Monday when the Commissioner for Education, Barr. Chiedu Ebie, visited the school.

    The head teacher, according to the commissioner, could not explain the alleged illegal collection of examination levies from the school students.

    A statement by the commissioner explained why primary and secondary education in Delta remained free, insisting the head teacher had no right to impose any levy.

    READ ALSO: Breaking: Delta suspends head teacher over Success’s viral video

    He said: “In my brief encounter with the Head Teacher this morning, there appeared to be numerous inconsistencies in her response on this issue as she was unable to categorically state who authorized her to impose the levies or fees which is in clear breach of the extant rules.

    “Consequently I have directed the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) to suspend the Head Teacher pending the outcome of a formal enquiry into the issue of unauthorised levies/ and fees imposed by her in the School.”

    On concerns over infrastructural decay in the school, Ebie said: “Having discovered the dilapidated state of the infrastructure in the Schools, steps were immediately taken by the State Government, through the Ministry of Basic & Secondary Education, to carry out a phased renovation and upgrade of the infrastructural facilities beginning with Okotie Eboh Primary School II.

    “It is important to place on record and for the avoidance of doubt that the Contract of the first phase was awarded on the 29th of December, 2018 and work has since commenced.”

  • Breaking: Delta suspends head teacher over Success’ viral video

    The Delta State government has suspended the headmistress of Okotie-Eboh Primary School 1, Sapele Local Government of the state, Mrs. Vero Igbigwe.

    She was suspended following the viral video where little Success Adegor was sent home over her parents’ failure to pay her examination levies.

    Igbigwe was suspended on Monday when the Delta State Commissioner for Education, Barr. Chiedu Ebie visited the school.

    The head teacher, according to the commissioner, could not explain the alleged illegal collection of examination levies from the school students.

    Details later…