Tag: teachers

  • Teachers honour journalists, others

    Teachers honour journalists, others

    Five journalists were honoured by the Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools of Nigeria (ASUSS) and Basic Education Staff Union of Nigeria (BESUN) for their contributions to the growth of the education sector last week.

    The groups presented awards to the journalists and two other citizens and 60 of the associations’ retirees during the World Teachers’ Day celebration, held at the Nigerian Army Officers’ Mess, Yaba, Lagos State, last Monday.

    The journalists honoured were: Mr Adegbola Adedigba, Senior translator, Bond F.M. 92.9, Lagos; Mrs Taiwo Omilani, Education correspondent, Leadership Newspapers; and Mr Abiodun Elugbaju, Radio Nigeria, who all got the Emerald Chamber of Tutors awards. Mrs Oluyemisi Ayodele, Producer, Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (FRCN), got the ‘Rugby Chamber of Tutors’; while Mr Oyeniran Apata of Daily Independent, was presented the Diamond Chamber of Tutors’ award.

    Other recipients were Dr Uche Okeke, Registrar, Chattered Institute of Local Government and Public Administration of Nigeria, who chaired the occasion; and the guest speaker, Prof Victor Edun.  The retirees were decorated with broaches of the title of ‘Senior Citizen’ and got retirement benefits and cheques worth about N10 million.

    Speaking on the awards, ASUSS Chairman, Comrade Labaika Kazeem said: “These people are the ones that are promoting the image of the education industry. For the journalists, with their credible reportage and specialised reports, they help us to point the government and society to loopholes in the education sector and the individuals have contributed in no small way to education in this country. So, we felt the need to appreciate their efforts and tell them thank you.”

    Kazeem also called on government to confer recognition of ‘Senior Citizen’ on retired teachers and called for recruitment of more teachers to fill the gaps that exist in public schools.

    In his lecture, Edun, a Professor of Education at the Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago-Iwoye, called for an upgrade of the teaching profession through continuous professional development, higher remuneration and establishment of teachers’ licensing authorities.

    Speaking on the theme: ‘Empowering teachers, building sustainable societies’, he suggested that the teaching profession  should have a legalised Code of Conduct bureau, and that teachers’ councils should be run by teachers, rather than government.

    Edun emphasised the need for a proper standard of qualification in specified fields (primary, secondary or tertiary) for teachers before they are allowed to practice and to be allowed flexibility to switch specialisations, if they are not satisfied with their initial choice.

    Advising the teachers, the professor said: “Let us all fight corruption and fight for our rights, but before you can fight, you must position yourself to fight. You must ensure that you are competent and skilful and you can compete favourably with any other professional. You must ensure that you build yourself. The Council has identified what you need to do to be professional, so do it. If you position yourself properly, nobody can rubbish you.”

     

  • Private school teachers fail subjects they teach – study

    Many teachers in private secondary schools in Ogun state have failed the Senior School Certificate Examinations (SSCE) of the West African Examination Council (WAEC) subjects they teach.

    The teachers were examined recently in the respective subjects they teach at school, using the 2014 past papers of the WAEC/SSCE as the test questions.

    Many of them scored below 28 percent in their own subjects.

    An academician, Chief Nelson Ayodele, made this known during the 2015 edition of the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) Day which was observed in Abeokuta, the Ogun state capital on Tuesday.

    Ayodele of the Standard Mandate, Lagos, said the shocking discovery followed an “appraisal of teachers in Private  Secondary schools in Ogun state” where he was part of the team that carried out the task.

    He said the revelation was based on the need to show how inefficient and ill – qualified teachers being engaged by some proprietors of private schools in the state to save cost, contributes to the  steady failure of their students in external examinations.

    Ayodele who spoke on “Persistent Failure in External Examinations – The Rescue  Mission of Private Education Providers and its Implication for Nation Building,” advised school owners to engage competent hands as teachers.

    He noted that compentent teachers are expensive, but said ill – qualified teachers are more costly as the harm they could inflict on students with their poor quality teachings, may prove difficult or impossible to cure at the end.

    He also identified poor reading culture among students, negligence by parents, lack of standard library among others, as factors equally responsible for the persistent mass failure in external examinations by students.

  • Teachers and the society

    Just this Monday, October 5, Nigeria joined its peers all over the world to roll out the drums to celebrate teachers, who to all intents and purpose, constitute the engine room through which society overcome ignorance and disease, conquer poverty and the environment as well as overcome tribalism and extremism among others.

    With the up-beat global celebration of teachers, there can be no better time to x-ray the place and import of teachers in the society than now.

    The questions then arise as to who is a teacher and who is a teacher properly so called?  There are so many definitions/descriptions of a teacher: For example, a parent is a teacher to his children because he inculcates the virtues of morality, discipline, industry, humility and respect for constituted authorities in them. Equally, coaches in different vocations teach their apprentices the nitty-gritty of their trade. This is the same way the clergyman teaches his congregation.

    But then, there are good, average and bad teachers. It is not however everybody that holds a University degree that is ipso facto a good teacher. In the colonial days, teachers were categorized as CD, C, CA and A. Colleges were established for the training of teachers. Nevertheless it may still be said that the first factor in the making of a good teacher is a requisite qualification. This is why there are several academic programs designed towards the production of teachers. Many Universities in Nigeria today offer degree programs in Education while some are out-rightly designated as Universities of Education.

    However the making of a teacher does not and cannot end at mere acquisition of academic degrees: constant training and retraining of teachers must of necessity follow. Teachers must constantly acquaint themselves with modern teaching methods so that they don’t disseminate ignorance and half knowledge to their students, thereby producing a bunch of unemployable graduates. A teacher, after all can only teach what he knows and in a manner in which he knows how best to.

    Haven said this, who then is a teacher properly so called? He/she is that person trained in the art of teaching, especially in the art of imparting knowledge in students in different schools starting from primary to tertiary institutions. Among those who teach in formal schools today are two categories: those who are gifted, who find teaching interesting and therefore love it and radiate it and those who fortuitously find themselves in teaching because they could not find any other form of employment.

    That brings one to the issue of teachers properly so called: teachers properly so called must have quality education, must be masters of the Subject Matter, must be interested in the art of teaching, not seeing it as means of making ends meet and must also be able to arouse the interest of their students. Other qualities of teachers properly so called are that they must be able to keep students awake during the duration of their class, keep a Register for attendance, prepare their lesson notes in advance and give advance notice of the Subject Matter to enable their students prepare ahead and do some research.

    They must also be timeous in class, must be firm, fair, frank and friendly,  must be able to use modern teaching equipment, including the Interactive Boards and all forms of ICT platforms, must be audible, confident, affectionate and approachable and above all, they must be disciplined.

    As was the practice in those days, they must be well-dressed and clean, keep records of what they do, be original and innovative, be cooperative and collaborative and move with trends as well as give assignments to their students

    It is all these parameters put together that qualify teachers to be described as teachers properly so called and above all, it is only by being teachers so properly called that they will be able to stand in their position to change the face of education in Nigeria, entrench quality and functional education and restore the lost glory of education in Nigeria.

    For this to happen however, the Federal Government must make deliberate efforts to comply with UNESCO’s recommendation of devoting 26% of the country’s yearly budget allocation to education and put teaching under essential services like the Army, Police, Fire Service and Water Corporation and make it a punishable offence for them to go on strike. After all, whenever children are in school, their teachers automatically become in loco parentis. And standing in the position of parents for these children should ordinarily deactivate them from going on strike because no reasonable father/mother goes on strike against his/her own children the same way the shepherd, the clergy, does not abandon his sheep (church) for pecuniary reasons.

     

    • Olofintila wrote from Lagos.
  • Don recommends regular training for teachers

    A professor of Guidance and Counselling at the Delta State University, Okobiah Otete, has called for training and retraining for teachers in public and private schools across the country.

    Otete spoke at the Great Teachers Conference, organised by Jes’s Lord International Services Limited with support from Master Energy Group, held at the Home Science School, Lagos.

    The conference tagged: “Promoting teacher’s status in the interest of quality education” was attended by over 100 public and private schools teachers and proprietors.

    According to him, the need for professional teachers who have up to date knowledge of the subjects taught in schools is germane for improved performance of learners.

    Otete blamed teachers for the poor performance of students in the May/June 2015 West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), claiming that the candidates failed because many teachers could not teach their subjects well because they are not grounded in them.

    She noted that mathematics and English language have become dreaded subjects for students because of this reason. She noted that regular training of teachers would help to change their attitude to work and enhance the development of the teaching profession in Nigeria.

    “Regular training will impact on teachers’ attitude, the students and the teaching profession. They will learn how to handle difficult subjects and issues of discipline, as an alternative to flogging children. They will learn what teachers need to do to become effective on the job,” she said.

    In her welcome address, the Principal Consultant/Programme Director Jes’s Lord International Services Limited, Mrs. Celistina Atuegbe Eradagherse , said the conference was aimed at building the capacity of teachers and provides a platform for exchange of knowledge and ideas.

     

  • Benue Speaker  advocates better  welfare for teachers

    Benue Speaker advocates better welfare for teachers

    Speaker, Benue State House of Assembly, Mr. Terkimbi Ikyange, has advocated a better welfare package for teachers so as to compliment the important role they play in reshaping learners into better citizens.

    He said the time has come for people who are in position of authority to consider themselves as the creation of teachers, and as such begin to fashion out policies and programmes that would reposition the teaching profession to its pride of place in the country.

    The Speaker in a message of felicitation to teachers in the state as they celebrated this year’s World Teachers Day, said the theme for the celebration, “Empowering Teachers, building sustainable societies” and the sub-theme as “Better working conditions for teachers as a means of better learning conditions for learners” were not only apt but timely.

    He argued that a society that does not empower its teachers through training, enhanced welfare packages and comfortable working environment would witness a steady decline in the quality of graduates.

    While acknowledging the difficulties being faced by teachers in the state as a result of delayed payment of salaries, the speaker blamed it on the last administration and appealed to teachers to be patient with the Ortom administration, assuring that everything was being done to alleviate their hardship.

    Ikyange charged teachers to rededicate themselves to the task of building a solid educational base for the country.

     

  • Teachers stage ‘walk for sound health’

    The Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT), Oshodi/Isolo, Lagos branch, staged a walk to keep themselves fit for the tasks ahead of them.

    The teachers, who adorned themselves in green polo attire, were led by the Chairman of the state wing of the union, Mr Adesegun Raheem.

    He said the exercise tagged: ‘walk for sound health’, would help prevent untimely death resulting from lack of regular exercise by teachers.

    “We discovered that most deaths that occurred to teachers are as a result of excessive stress; we feel that the cheapest way to reduce this is through exercise because it is not all of them that understand the importance of sound health to their health mentalities. That is why we introduced a monthly walking scheme as a form of exercise to keep them fit,” he said.

    According to him, the fitness and sound health of a teacher will ultimately tell on students’ academic performance.

    “This in turn will help improve their teachings in schools which will in turn improve academic performance,” he added.

    He called on the government to improve on its welfare package to the teachers. He also called for a total revamping of the education system.

    “The best way to improve the society is through education and this is possible by investing in teachers through improved welfare package.  The learning environment must also be looked into for improved education system,” he said.

    Chairman, Oshodi/Isolo branch of the Union, Mr Salawu Adams, said: “We discovered long time ago that as our teachers grow old, their health deteriorates; hence the unions’ decision to organise a monthly walk for health exercise to help maintain sound health for our teachers, to watch their weight and body system for them to be able to discharge optimally in their various schools.’’

     

  • Why change depends on teachers, by Amosun

    Why change depends on teachers, by Amosun

    Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun has said the plan to change the nation’s socio-political climate depends, not just on the political leadership, but also on effective teaching and positive impact of teachers on learners.

    The governor also said the state government would recruit 600 teaching and non-teaching staff for newly built model secondary schools.

    He spoke at the 2015 World Teachers Day Celebrations at the M.K.O Abiola International Stadium, Abeokuta, Ogun State.

    “In the light of this, we are in the process of recruiting over 600 teaching and non-teaching staff into our new model schools across the state,” the governor added.

    While congratulating teachers in Ogun State and all over the world, the governor, borrowing the words of Plato, a Greek philosopher said, “no society develops beyond the capacity of its teachers.”

    He added that the success of the change mantra depended on the teaching-learning process and proper curriculum development to inculcate in the youngsters, the positive attitude of change.

    Amosun said the Ogun State government, under his watch, had always been mindful of this fact, adding that this accounts for why the provision of affordable, qualitative education took the No.1 slot on the list of his administrations’ five cardinal programmes.

    The governor said this also explains why his administration had “consistently dedicated 26 per cent to education in our budget since inception,” in May 2011.

    “The choice of education as the first on the list is not a coincidence. It is a pre-determined motive towards building a society where citizens will not only be easy to govern but be useful to themselves and their various communities,” Amosun said.

    He added that beyond distribution of educational materials, including textbooks, to pupils at no cost to their parents, the state government continued to deploy different motivational strategies to encourage teachers.

    This, he said, included “increment in emoluments” and “regular payment of salaries and allowances.”

    The governor also seized the opportunity to announce that the backlog of promotion of teachers in the state was being critically addressed while adding that “training and re-training of teaching and non-teaching personnel are being organised time and over again.”

    Responding, Hakeem Lawal, president, Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools, ASUSS and Dare Ilekoya, state Chairman, Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT both commended the governor for teachers’ welfare in Ogun State.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Ekiti teachers condemn seizure of membership dues

    •Unions clash over Teachers’ Day

    The Academic Staff Union of Secondary Schools (ASUSS) in Ekiti State  has decried its exclusion from the World Teachers’ Day celebration today.

    The union said the  government owes its members arrears of 13 months of membership dues.

    ASUSS accused the state wing of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) of blackmailing it before Governor Ayo Fayose, which made his administration not to recognise the union.

    State ASUSS Chairman Olusola Adigun, in a statement yesterday, said the “union was worried that the governor had allowed the NUT to influence him to openly hate us as we celebrate our day”.

    Adigun affirmed that ASUSS has been legalised to unionise secondary school teachers through the approval of the  Ministry of  Labour and Productivity.

    The state NUT Chairman, Kayode Akosile, at a briefing last Wednesday,  described  ASUSS “as an illegal body”.

    He accused “ex-governor Kayode Fayemi of breaching the law to recognise it ”.

    Akosile said: “Before any union can operate, it has to be registered by the Registrar of  Trade Unions in Abuja.

    Former Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola did not recognise ASUSS. He told members that as a senior lawyer that he could not breach the law. So, ASUSS to us,  is an illegal body.”

    But Adigun countered: “It is highly disappointing to see our governor`s preference for NUT,  particularly in the  preparation for the Teachers’ Day celebration.

    “Our members have complained bitterly of their exclusion from the last education summit,  even though our members are the ones to implement the outcome in  secondary schools.

    “In view of the wicked roles which the NUT has been playing to make sure that we are not recognised in the  Fayose administration, we want to state that Ekiti NUT is the biblical Cain, who killed his brother Abel, ASUSS .

    “The NUT has been inciting the people against us, telling them that we are not legally constituted and that we don’t have the legal rights to membership dues.

    “We wish  to point it out that ASUSS has won more than 50 court judgments  against the NUT and the most recent one, at the National industrial Court of Nigeria, Enugu, last December 2.

    “In that judgment, Justice A. Ibrahim held that ‘the rights of the claimant (NUT) to collect checkup dues; or subscription; is limited to its members; it is only the claimant’s members who are obliged to pay membership dues or subscription dues’.

    “The court pointed out that ‘there is nothing averred to show that secondary school teachers are members of the claimant and therefore their contributions,whether as check off dues or subscriptions, belong to the claimant and cannot be taken away from it (ASUSS)’.

    “The judge, therefore, submitted that ‘on the whole the preliminary objection of the first defendant succeeds as I uphold the submission that the claimant lack locus standi to bring this action. I further uphold the interlocutory order of the court on the funds kept in an account on the orders of the court made on July 27, 2012. The suit is accordingly hereby struck out’.

    “Equally, the Ekiti State Ministry of Justice has given two  legal advice in 2011 and 2012 that ASUSS has the right to exist and to collect dues from its members, and which the government has obeyed until recently.

    “Despite our financial constraint, we went ahead to celebrate our annual award day amidst funfair in commemoration of the  teachers day, where 40 ASUSS teacher-retirees were feted with gifts, 16 students who emerged the best in the ASUSS annual essays in each local government were given both cash and books. e ASUSS also paid for the WASSCE fees of the overall best pupil in the state”.

  • Why pupils shouldn’t use phones, by teachers

    Why pupils shouldn’t use phones, by teachers

    The advent of the Global System for Mobile communication (GSM) in Nigeria in 2000 revolutionised every facet of societal life – affecting how people communicate, conduct businesses and even socialise.

    The effect of GSM and advancement in mobile and Information Communication Technology (ICT) have also impacted on the education sector.

    Today, schools have invested in ICT equipment to access the many benefits of the Internet.  They have also introduced e-learning to enrich curriculum in their effort to groom pupils to compete on the global stage.

    The average teacher is expected to be computer literate and know how to use the internet to enrich his teaching.  Pupils are also given projects to complete which require them to have access to internet through computers or smart phones.

    However, schools have also had to deal with the negative impact of mobile technology.  As beneficial as it may be, mobile phones have been identified as a huge source of distraction for pupils at primary and secondary levels, and even for undergraduates.

    As a result, many schools, especially primary and secondary, have put in place policies on the use of mobile phones while school is in session.  The majority of schools  visited do not allow mobile phones at all; while some allow limited use for specific situations.

    Though they can be veritable tools for learning, many teachers and school owners said pupils use phones for the wrong things. Dr. Maggie Ibru, founder of ST&T Regency International School, GRA, Ikeja, said pupils are more likely to use the phones for the wrong things.

    “Mobile phones are not allowed because it distracts them and they do all kinds of things with mobile phones these days. Technology has advanced. It is true they can take their notes on their phones but they are not sensitised well enough to use them to take notes; so, they receive calls, send text messages or even tweet during school hours. I think these are distractions. My students comply with the school rules because they know we are strict. At the initial stage, there were times we had issues with them using their phones so we seized them. The parents are happy about it; they know it is not important and no parent wants their child to be distracted,” she said.

    At the primary school level, teachers complain that children caught with mobile phones usually use them for games.

    Assistant Head Teacher, Papa Ajao Primary School, Ladipo, Mushin, Mrs. Roseline Oyewole, said teachers cannot afford the distraction mobile phones create.

    “I do not buy the idea of pupils using phones, because they would not pay attention in class anymore. Even without phones now, primary school children are very prone to distraction, so phones would only make it worse. For secondary school children, it is even worse. They are at the prime of peer group influence and they can get carried away with these gadgets. I saw a boy of about secondary school age get crushed by a vehicle because he had plugged his ears with earphones and did not hear the horn of the vehicle as he was trying to cross the road. So, no, I cannot accept that secondary school children should be using phones.”

    At secondary level, though older, the pupils are not necessarily wiser.  They go beyond playing games on their mobile phones to being distracted by pornography, movies and excessive chatting.

    Mr. Akorede Kehinde, a teacher at Great Anchor Schools, Agbede Ikorodu, said his school disallowed phones because pupils lose focus during lessons.

    “Mobile phones are not allowed in this school due to various reasons which include the abuse of the privilege. Some of them get distracted in class; some will be using their phones under their desks while teaching is going on, chatting on social media or watching movies,” he said.

    But, despite not being allowed, a teacher in a public school in Ojo area of Lagos (names withheld) said pupils still bring them.

    “If you go to the principal, he would tell you that in each term, we seize an average of 18 to 20 phones. Unfortunately, most of these phones are the sophisticated ones and the contents are sometimes very obscene.

    “I once caught a boy and a girl seated at the rear during one of my lessons watching pornography on the boy’s handset. I reported them to the principal who seized the phones and asked them to bring their parents. The female one brought her father but the male boy disappeared from school for weeks and later reappeared few days to third term exam.  Of course, he was prevented from writing the examination,” he said.

     

    Bridging the communication gap

    Mobile phones make it easier for parents to easily communicate with their wards.  But teachers say it is not enough reason to allow them in schools.  Many schools prefer parents to call the teachers instead, who would in turn reach the pupil.

    Mrs. Temitope Osibosi, proprietor of Santoi Nursery and Primary School, Lagos, said the school coordinates this communication process.

    “We do not have problems with the parents because we have their contacts so, if there are any emergencies we call their parents. The school is the middleman between both parties,” she said.

    Many schools that run boarding houses have mobile phone policies in place.  Dr. Ibru said for day pupils, phones are kept with teachers; but for boarders, they are not allowed at all.

    “When they bring their mobile phones to school, they are advised to drop it with their teachers for safe keeping and they get them back after school. Of course, we understand their mothers are worried and for safety reasons they will want to be in touch. So, it is important, sometimes, that they are allowed to communicate with them. But after school, boarders are not allowed phones because we have phones in their hostels and those they can use during school if need be,” she said.

     

    Home use

    Though schools are unanimous on disallowing mobile phones in schools, many teachers agree that pupils can use them at home.

    “They can use the phones at home, but they cannot bring it to school. They can improve on their skills in terms of research and technology with the phones when they are at home,” said Acting Principal, African Church Model College, Ifako-Ijaiye, Mr Abimbola Olawoye.

    However, even at home, phone use, especially by teenagers, can be excessive.  Using the phone at home should not be without supervision, says Mr. Yomi Otubela, proprietor of Lagooz Private School and Lagooz College, in Orile-Agege area of Lagos. Otubela said phones are necessary in this age.  Nevertheless, he warned that parents must know what their wards do on the phone (and internet) to protect them from online predators.

    “Well we all realise that with the applications available on mobile phones it has become important that we monitor how they are being used when they (children) are at home. In mobile phones there are applications such as Whatsapp, Facebook, 2go and others. Most discussions there lead them towards social life and not really academics.  It is an open entry for them to login in logout at anytime which affect children that are not matured enough to face issues of life.  They are exposed to pornography, meet with strangers that pretend to be teenagers in other to gain their attentions into homosexuality, sexuality, drinking, smoking.

    “We advise parents to guide against such dangers whenever they are at home. And we encourage them to get software which could be used at home to limit where they can go on the internet.  Internet cannot be taken away from the children but we can only guide them,” he said.

    Mr Sunday Eboigbe, a parent, has been unable to control his son’s phone and internet usage.  Though barely educated, the panel beater who resides in Volkswagen area of Ojo Lagos, is worried that one of his son’s addiction to phone is not healthy.

    Eboigbe said Samson (not real name) does not study but is glued to his phone most times – even at midnight.

    “I know I did not go to school like you.  But I believe you can use your knowledge in education to help me out. I have flogged this boy and abused him on countless occasions to no avail. I and the mother are always watching out for him. Once we discover he has a new phone, we seize it and destroy it in his presence. But within two weeks, he will get another one,” he lamented.

    However, Mr Bolanle Omotoso, an ICT expert, does not allow his three children to own phones.  He also has a firm hold on what they do on the internet at home.

    He said: “To protect yourself, you need to be conscious of the fact that there is a threat attached to the internet and that is why you take conscious effort to protect your family.  For instance, my daughter is going to be 16 and she does not have a phone.  The internet is like a country of its own; once you go there you can get corrupted, especially at their tender age.

    “To protect them, ensure the environments they go to are well protected and controlled, especially the type of school they will go to. You can also protect them by using some tools that are used to monitor and control what they do – just like the type used in offices. We have intrusion detection. This is to see that when your system has virus it can easily be detected and you will be alerted even though there won’t be 100% security, you’ll still be alerted if there is any breach in security. I also monitor what my children on the internet because it is not always on for them so they do not misuse it and I do not expose them to devices that can corrupt them.”

    The need for parents to be sure of what their children do on their phones is an international concern.  In the UK, over 50 per cent of children own smart phones in some places.  Groups like Internet Matters, an NGO focused on providing safe internet for children, is urging parents to hold their wards more accountable about phone usage.

    Caroyln Bunting, General Manager, Internet Matters, urged parents to start early to inculcate a culture of healthy phone and internet phone usage in their wards.

    “We would urge parents to ensure they have the conversation with their children about how to be responsible on their phones and ensure that the safety settings are in place across all their devices and search engines,” she said.

     

  • NTI boss to govts: train Mathematics and Science teachers

    NTI boss to govts: train Mathematics and Science teachers

    Director General and Chief Executive of the National Teachers’ Institute (NTI), Dr. Aminu Ladan Sharehu, yesterday called on governments at all levels to be proactive to the issues of training and retraining of Mathematics and Science teachers.

    He also urged stakeholders to support the training and re-training of the Mathematics and Science teachers, rather than complain about their quality.

    Sharehu made the call, while declaring open a two-week training for Mathematics and Science teachers drawn from four states of the country.

    The training, which is the first Cohort of the third Cycle under the Strengthening Mathematics and Science Education (SMASE) project, drew participants from Nasarawa, Enugu, Osun and Ondo states.

    He said teachers had always been at the receiving end, whenever students performed woefully in Mathematics, stressing that he had not seen much efforts from stakeholders in supporting the teachers to improve in their profession.

    The NTI DG, while commending the Universal Basic Education Boards across the country, advocated for stronger collaboration for the sustenance of the SMASE project.

    He said state governments had not taken advantage of the professionalism and expertise of the NTI in the development of their teachers, saying “the institute is always and ever ready to partner states for the benefit of the country’s education sector.”

    The representative of the Federal Ministry of Education, Mr. Joseph Aguiyi, challenged states to adhere strictly to SMASE guidelines in conducting their local trainings.

    Aguiyi, who is the SMASE National Coordinator, lauded the efforts of the NTI under the leadership of Dr. Sharehu in sustaining the project, after the Japan government had pulled out.

    He said the NTI DG’s effort at rapidly propelling the wheels of the SMASE training qualifies him to be honoured with what he called “SMASE Fellowship.”

    Similarly, NTI SMASE adviser, Prof. Emmanuel Odubunmi, lamented stakeholders’ failure to utilize opportunity given by the SMASE project to improve the quality of teaching and learning Science and Mathematics in Nigerian schools.

    He said the country would remain a dependant of finished products, if it could not develop its production sector.

    He noted that “it is only when there are good students of Science and Mathematics that the country becomes a producer of finished goods.”

    Chairperson of the Enugu State Universal Basic Education Board, Miss Nneka Onuora, expressed the state readiness to always support the National Teachers’ Institute in the training and retraining of Mathematics and Science teachers.

    She said her state knew the importance of Science and Mathematics in the quest for national development, stressing that the state had taken steps to ensure the success of the SMASE project.

    NTI Principal Consultant on quality assurance, Professor Emeritus Thomas Kolawole Adeyanju, said “the answer to overcoming mass failure of Nigerian students in Mathematics is with the teachers.”