Tag: teachers

  • Kano retrains 30,000 teachers

    The Kano State Government has retrained 30,000 primary school teachers.

    A statement signed by Ameen K. Yassar, the Director-General, Media and Publicity to Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, said the step was considered better than sacking the teachers, who, he said, lacked the requisite pedagogical skills.

    According to Yassar, Ganduje stated this when he received a delegation from Kano State students studying at Kaduna Polytechnic, at the Governor’s Lodge in Kaduna.

    The statement added that the government has embarked on a critical revolution in the education sector by building infrastructure, class rooms, ensuring teachers’ welfare, their training and retraining, as well as encouraging the youths on the need to acquire education to secure their future.

    “There are challenges in infrastructure, teaching materials and even the quality of teachers but we are not overwhelmed by the problems. We will continue to do our best to improve the quality of education our children get,” the governor said.

    He continued: “We are not unaware of the challenges. That is why we devote substantial part of our annual budgets to education. More classrooms are being constructed, more facilities provided across all sub-sectors of education while it is no longer news that teacher training is our priority.

    “For instance, instead of sacking unqualified primary school teachers, we sent over 30, 000 back to school so that they can be equipped with the necessary skills for imparting knowledge.

    “I am sure you are not unaware that we are paying all our students scholarship while we  have invested seriously to ensure that almost all the courses offered by our state – owned tertiary institutions are now fully accredited. Infrastructure development at our two universities are going on.”

    “Similarly, only about one week ago, I signed the Kano State College of Education and Preliminary Studies Bill into law, which has elevated Kano State College of Arts, Sciences and Remedial Studies to  full tertiary institution which will be awarding professional certificates in education, in addition to other services it is offering.”

    Earlier, the leader of the delegation, Tijjani Abba, who thanked the governor for restoring their scholarships, requested accommodation and a bus for their members, computers for their business centre as well as financial support to host the yearly Kano Day in their institution.

    Ganduje urged students of the state to appreciate the huge investment in education by striving for moral and academic excellence, pointing out that with education, the sky is their limit in terms of job opportunities.

    The governor asked the visitors to present their request for logistics support, for government consideration.

  • Resumption: Teachers visit pupils over low turnout

    There was low turnout in many schools in Lagos State on Monday. A school, De Gloryland College, Ejigbo, Lagos, sent teachers to visit their pupils at home to find out why.

    But some schools began academic work immediately to encourage their pupils to resume.

    Principal of De Gloryland College, Mrs Sophia Onajaefe, said the teachers visits revealed that the pupils were still preparing for resumption.

    “The number of pupils that resumed yesterday (Monday) was really low, so some teachers were sent out for visitation. It tuned out that parents were still preparing their children for resumption,” she said.

    However, by Tuesday, she said the attendance had improved.

    When The Nation visited Anifowoshe Primary School, Ikeja, Lagos on Monday, the pupils were few. In some classes, there were only five or nine pupils.

    The head teacher, who simply identified herself as Mrs Aliu, said the turnout was too poor, attributing it to the habit of the pupils not resuming on time.

    She said academic work would start in earnest to encourage the pupils turn up in school.

    “The turnout is too poor – though we are still expecting them.  That is always the norm with them in Lagos State primary schools and even the secondary schools. When we resume, some of them will still doubt if it is true until they see others coming back from school.

    “I have told my teachers to start work fully today so that when the pupils get home, they can inform others and this will encourage them to join us,” she said.

    One of the teachers who did not want to be named said they had been instructed to start work fully and even conduct a test which would be recorded.

    He said those that resumed would benefit more than those that did not.

    The experience was similar at Mahrifan Keystone Private School, Okepopo Street Lagos Island, where the proprietor, Mahruf Atolani, attributed the low turnout to the unpreparedness of parents.

    He said: ” Owing to the fact that this is the first week of resumption, and that some parents are not ready for resumption yet, there is partial resumption of pupils in school but will not stop us from commencing studies fully as that would propel others to come to school.’’

  • Jigawa to recruit 1,736 teachers

    The Chairman of State Universal Education Board (SUBEB) in Jigawa, Alhaji Salisu Zakar, said on Wednesday that the state government would employ 1,736 teachers, to address the shortage of teachers in its primary and junior secondary schools in the state.

    Zakar told our reporter in Dutse that out of the 1,736, the state government had already recruited 868.

    The SUBEB chief said that the shortfall would be recruited, adding that written test had been conducted for those who applied for the vacant teaching jobs.

    “We have conducted written test and interview for those that have applied the job.

    “Any time from now, the result of those who are successful will be released,” he said.

    Read Also: Girl cuts off boyfriend’s manhood in Jigawa

    Zakar said that the state government was in the forefront of paying the counterpart fund in its arrangements with the board, which has made it easy for the agency to access fund for its projects.

    “It is in view of this that we find it easy in accessing money to execute projects in our schools, to keep them afloat.

    “ In fact, we don’t have shortage of classrooms, instructional materials, vehicles to  go for monitoring and supervision in our schools,” he said.

  • Drugs that destroy

    In our present world, drug education is important to give to youths as they mature just as they receive sex education.  Parents and teachers, for the sake of their wards, also need sufficient understanding of drugs.  Leaders, government, rulers, and religious authorities also all need sufficient knowledge of drugs in today’s world.

    Use of prescription drugs may result in serious problems including fatality when such drugs are combined with other drugs or substances such as alcohol.   Pharmacologists call this drug-drug interaction.

    Prescription drugs may also become harmful if used wrongly or against the instruction of the doctor, pharmacist, nurse or other health care provider. Clinicians refer to this as non-compliance.

    Some people react oddly to drugs used in normal dosage and normal conditions because of their own genetic make-up.  When they react too much, this is called supersensitivity.  When they fail to react, this is called refractoriness.

    Some people are allergic to certain drugs, for example penicillin.  This means that if the drug gets in contact with them, their immune system over reacts.  They end up with symptoms such as hives, rash, itching and a life threatening reaction called anaphylaxis. Anaphylaxis involves multiple systems of the body. This condition develops fast (even within seconds or minutes) and the person can be saved from imminent death if promptly injected with adrenaline and treated in an emergency room in hospital. Thus one should not take drugs that one may be allergic to.

    Some people have enzymes that destroy a particular type of drugs too fast such that the drug is ineffective.  This is dangerous if the drug is supposed to be life-saving or life sustaining.

    Social drug use for recreation or private drug use for emotional escape has destroyed many lives simply because the victims were ignorant of the effects of drugs or were deceived by wrong information about drugs.  Drug abuse is a nontherapeutic utilization of drugs in a manner that generates risk. Drug abuse is a challenge for many governments, parents, teachers and other authorities as there are no adequate means to fight or eradicate this social ill.

    Considering the various examples of how drugs can destroy a person mentioned above, it is difficult to identify some drugs as more dangerous than others.  All drugs are potentially dangerous.

    However some drugs and substances are notoriously dangerous.  Clinical experience, social experience, and the evidence of the cost of such drug use on the individual or the society, on property, on relationships, etc.  underscore some drugs and substances as

    most dangerous and these include alcohol, heroine, fentanyl, cocaine and cigarettes. They are not the most toxic drugs, their toxic levels being less than a millionth of that of botulinum toxin, but botulinum toxin is not notorious for trouble.

    The evil in the use of drugs is in the result of the drug use.  These may include physical damage to body organs from the brain and nerves to blood vessels, the heart, the lungs, the sensory organs, the endocrine system, etc.  Evil effects may also be on the mind with psychological, emotional, and mental derangement.  Evil effects may also be on the character, including drug dependence, criminality, and dysfunctionality.  Evil effects could also be on the family including financial losses, broken dreams, and family breakups. Evil effects could also be on the society including insecurity, consumption of tax-payers’ money, and lack of progress.

    In the next series of articles, we shall discuss drugs that destroy. Some of them are legitimate drugs legitimately used but accidentally dangerous.  Some of them are legitimate drugs illegitimately used.  Some are illegitimate drugs used criminally.

    Some of them are already in our homes and we know they are there.  Some of them are already in our homes unknown to us. Some of them are never brought into our homes but are used by  household members and can potentially affect our homes.

    Drugs are important for health and life but they are also destroyers of health and life – double edged swords.  The economic value of drug usage is humungous and the capitalists would have as many people as possible use drugs. It is important for people to understand the need to use drugs rationally and safely as well as freely (not under compulsion).

    Theresa Adebola John is a lecturer at Lagos State University College of Medicine (LASUCOM) and an affiliated researcher at the College of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Memphis.  For any comments or questions on this column, please email bolajohnwritings@yahoo.com or call 08160944635

  • School sacks five teachers for impregnating SS3 student

    Five teachers of the Polytechnic Academic Staff Secondary School Birnin Kebbi, have been sacked for impregnating an SS3 student of the school.

    Our reporter learnt on Wednesday that the girl was also expelled from the school.

    Sources confirmed that the decision to dismiss the five teachers followed the recommendation of a committee set up by the school to investigate the matter.

    “The committee submitted report on Monday and recommended that all the five teachers should be dismissed from service immediately.

    “The management have dismissed the teachers and the victim was also expelled from the school.

    “When the committee interrogated each of the teachers, they confessed that they have been having sexual relationship with the victim separately, so, they were sacked immediately based on the committee’s recommendations”, the source added.

    Read Also: Teachers arraigned for raping seven schoolgirls

    The affected teachers had forwarded an appeal against their dismissal to the school’s management board.

    The Principal of the school, Malam Muhammed Mahuta was said to be in hospital for weeks before the incident, but his Vice, Malam Oumar Woulandakoye confirmed the development, adding that the affected teachers had filed an appeal against their dismissal.

    ” I will advised that you should wait till the final report of the School Board, because I just received their memo now that they are going to sit on the matter tomorrow,” he told our reporter.

  • Foundation rewards teachers with cash

    Meadow Hall Foundation has reiterated its commitment to encouraging teachers by rewarding their sweat therefore encouraging them to do more.

    Its Head, Mrs. Kemi Adewoye, announced this during the second edition of the foundation’s Inspirational Educator Awards (INSEA) in Lagos.

    Meadow Hall Foundation was established in May 2009 as the corporate social responsibility arm of Meadow Hall Schools to support communities, public schools, pupils and teachers through various developmental initiatives and human capacity development programmes. Similarly, INSEA is an award ceremony aimed at elevating the teaching profession and motivating teachers and school leaders towards excellence.

    She said: “Meadow Hall Foundations pays attention to teacher training, development and rewards because here, we believe that students are mostly influenced by their teachers. Hence, a happy, well-trained and inspired teacher would go a long way in affecting the lives of the students in their care.

    “Meadow Hall Foundation believes that these awards will go a long way in rewarding the hard work of exceptional teachers and in inspiring others to do better.”

    Olufemi Folaponmile of Aduvie International School, Abuja emerged the Inspirational School Leader of the year with a N2,000,000 cheque. Chioma Akin-Adekeye of Preserved Generation Schools, Amuwo Odofin, Lagos who was first runner up in same category, clichéd N750,000. Similarly, Kikelomo Usilo of Ifesowapo/Aboru Senior Secondary School, Lagos, and Olalekan Ademola Adeeko of Baptist Boys’ High School, Abeokuta, Ogun State, went home with N750,000 each for emerging Inspirational Teacher of the year.

    Chairman of Meadow Hall Foundation’s Board Sir Demola Aladekomo, recalled that the foundation opened an online platform through which interested members of the public could vote in teachers and school leaders they considered outstanding in their duty.

  • ‘Teachers’ reward not in heaven’

    It is the tonic for teachers desirous of snapping out of poverty! The age-long mantra that teachers are poor must give way to a new vista that ranks them among their contemporaries in banking, and oil &gas, among others.

    Ashimolowo Ademuyiwa, an educationist, in this book, dissects the jinx that has made his colleagues wallow in poverty for years, offering insight on what to do to liberate themselves and be on top of their game.

    The book, divided into 10 parts, outlines tips to success. To be a successful teacher, Ashimolowo says one should first have a clear vision, love himself and be proud of his chosen career. Then he must desist relishing in the traditional, age long poverty mentality emblematic of teachers. Rather, he must rediscover new thoughts driven by passion and ambition.

    “There is a programme running inside of you that has loads of virus that are sabotaging you. This is what actually determines your thoughts and results, and not your proprietor or the economy. You just must bring something new to the table so as to take away something from there,” says the author.

    “People may not remember you for your status or salary, but they will always remember your impact on them and the society. Teachers, if you lose strength at this crucial stage in life, you may lose all you have worked for and those who will be inspired by your story and passion,” he further warns.

    Ashimolowo also implores them to bring originality into their work and status, and from time to time must constantly pause to appraise themselves should they have gone off track.

    “Why waste time proving over and over how great or inadequate you are when you could be getting better? Why be with friends and bosses who will just shore up your self esteem instead of challenging you to grow? Why do you depend only on tried and true paths instead of seeking experiences that will stretch you?”

    As a teacher, the author says, once you continue to add more value to yourself, you become almost indispensable in your work place, while the school owner is afraid to let go of you. Such teacher, the author says, hardly agitates salary raise or promotion, as the school management already considers him an asset that must be retained at all cost.

    “New mindset leads to new result,” says the book. “Are you fixated in the world of fixed abilities where success is about proving you are smart or talented and validating yourself? I beseech you to enter into the world of changing qualities. It’s about stretching yourself to learn something new and developing yourself to acquire new structures.”

    Once the teacher fulfils the foregoing, the next quality to imbibe is assertiveness, which is mainly the ‘teacher’s identity’.

    “Some teachers have taken on the path of developmental suicide which means people deliberately shutting themselves out of careers development. When you cannot assert yourself in the driving seat of your career with a deliberate path to growth, obviously you have decided and stopped pushing yourself to becoming better through personal development.”

    There is a distinction between ones profession and one’s pattern of action to it, Ashimolowo says. To further substantiate his claim, he juxtaposes entertainers and teachers, saying that even when he has not yet struck gold, the former appears to show more excitement, passion, discipline and ambition. Unfortunately, the latter is often receptive, disinterested and lethargic.

    To guard against this, the teacher must therefore bring back to life the three Ts-thinking, training and testing.

    According to the author, school owners of nowadays are interested in teachers who can effectively combine leadership with classroom work. Unfortunately, while there seems to be enough teachers, there is a lacuna in leadership, a trait which also stunts teachers’ growth.

    “There are proprietors who are well exposed but getting an intelligent and creative head teacher to drive their school is a problem,” the author explains.

    “So as a teacher, what are you aspiring for if, after 15 years in the classroom, you can’t head a school? Some head teachers can’t even think and respond to the yearnings of parents lovingly ad professionally.”

    Further, Ashimolowo admonishes teachers to take three key messages from the palm tree-it does not bend to storms, it lasts long and every material on it has economic value.

    “Teachers, you can become great beyond where you are today if you turn yourself to a fountain of knowledge when everything around you becomes a positive lessons for others. Until teachers begin to utilise all that happens to them, they will never be excited again. your addressing alone may inspire children to be happy and willing to learn.

    Teachers often live in illusion and rather than accept responsibility, choose to come up with excuses ranging from work, background, family, education, among others, to explain their predicaments. This, Ashimolowo fears, may have a long term effect on his colleagues, who after putting in so many years in the profession, end up with little or nothing to show for it.

    “Lies have a strong emotional energy such that when you lie to yourself, you will feel ‘all is well”, Ashimolowo says with a warning: “Until you deal with these lies, a new you will not emerge.”

    The author says, regardless of how small a teacher’s income is, he should earmark an amount for self-development. This may not pay in the short run as the teacher goes through intense pain contending with other responsibilities before he can save up. However, the knowledge he acquires through the savings will individualise him among his colleagues.

    “The fuel for the ‘I’ in you is knowledge. Nobody respects what you know until they see what you can do and are doing with it.  Love yourself enough to invest in yourself and everything else falls into line.”

    He adds: “You need to blow up the boundaries of your thinking so that the conventional teacher in you can die and a new learner arises. The teacher in you was indeed modelled and you can unlearn it; and the time to start is now.’

  • Union: replace Delta’s retiring teachers

    The leadership of Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) in Delta State has expressed concern at the high turnover of retirees in primary and secondary schools since last year.

    State NUT Chairman Titus Okotie, who spoke in Asaba, said over 3,000 teachers retired from the service last year, adding that with another 1,500 retiring this year, the future looked bleak.

    He urged the government to intervene, to avert falling standard of education.

    Okotie said the government lacked the resources to recruit teachers, adding that it must convene a stakeholders’ meeting to adopt a framework to provide manpower for schools.

    Said he: “With about 17,000 teaching staff in primary schools and an estimated 12,000 in secondary schools, our fear is that with the figure that retired in 2017 and those likely to retire this year, our classroom may become empty if something urgent is not done.”

    The NUJ chairman said the government must take a look at decisions reached during the 2015 Education Summit.

  • Ogun civil servants, teachers get N125m loan

    Ogun civil servants, teachers get N125m loan

    The Ogun State government has released N125,465,000 as car and motorcycle refurbishing loan to 1,421 public servants, including teachers, between October 2017 and January 2018.

    Commissioner for Finance Adewale Oshinowo, who spoke through the Press Officer of the Ministry of Finance, Odunayo Ogunleye, said the government took the step to boost the living standard of its workforce and spur them for more productivity.

    According to him, the Senator Ibikunle Amosun-led government has always prioritised workers’ welfare, saying the government was consistent in providing N100,000 as car refurbishing loan and N40,000 as motorcycle refurbishing loan for workers.

    Of the 1,421 beneficiaries, 1,343 were civil servants while 79 were teachers. Oshinowo added that the scheme was a revolving loan.

    He said: “This government is always seeking ways to make life comfortable for its workforce, even within its meagre resources, notwithstanding its quest to continue rebuilding the state towards achieving unparallel socio-economic development in the Southwest and the nation at large.”

  • Osun training 800 Grade II teachers

    Osun State is training 800 Grade 11 teachers under the 2016 Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) TPS programme, it was learnt.

    The training is going on same time at six centres across the state.

    At the opening of the Jolly Phonics training for the teachers in Osogbo, the capital, Executive Chairman of the State Universal Education Board (SUBEB) Prince Felix Awofisayo said the government was working in collaboration with UBEC in Abuja and the local government education area officials.

    Awofisayo said the training would enhance pupils’ reading and writing skills from the foundation level.

    According to him, Grade 1 teachers were trained last year, adding: “The learning outcome has improved in our Grade One pupils, who are now in Grade 11.”

    The SUBEB chairman noted that for the trend to continue with the pupils now in Grade 11, their teachers need to be trained so that the Grade 1 teachers would handle new intakes in Grade 1.