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One year in office: President Tinubu scores low on education sector – Stakeholders

President Bola Tinubu,

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Stakeholders in the Education sector have stated that the reforms and policies in President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda in the sector, have not yet been fulfilled, with the status quo remaining the same, as various policies yet to materialize.

For instance, one year after President Tinubu resumed office, there’s still a high number of out-of-school children, frequent strike actions by labor unions in tertiary institutions, limited access and equity in education, and the government-industry-academic nexus and concern over the global competitiveness of the education system.

In a phone interview with Elvis Boniface, an education and Media Development Expert and founder of Edugist, he puts it that the president’s initial promises on education have not been fulfilled, leading to struggles across all levels of the education sector amidst economic challenges, with the student loan initiative now being closely watched for potential intervention.

He says, “I think if we want to score this president, maybe a five over 10 in educational performance.

“When INEC declared Tinubu winner, he laid a strong emphasis on education, stating that children will spend four years in the universities for a four-year course….but then May 29th came, and we reviewed his speech as a president. There was nothing about education.

“The subsidy removal brought the Nigerian economy to its knees, and it affected education in all areas.

“The one everyone is looking out for now among the 13 pillars of education is the student loan, whose portal just opened last Friday and we are looking at how the outcome is going to be. We think that the presidency should somehow intervene.

“In June, he dissolved the governing board of all Nigerian universities. It has taken him one year to constitute a board that ASUU has not agreed with, and so I think they have gone back to the drawing board to know what to do”.

Education reforms 

Since resuming office on May 29th, 2023, President Bola Tinubu approved various policies and made reforms to overhaul the education sector, to improve enrollment, learning, skill development and ensure academic security for Nigerian children.

This formed part of the administration’s “Renewed Hope Education Roadmap for Nigeria” which is to create a reformed education sector which provides access to quality education for all capable of producing a highly skilled and educated workforce.

The overall aim of the agenda is to reduce by a great percentage, the number of Out-of-School Children, integrate skills into the entire education system to address the learning crisis and reduce unemployment and build a reliable and authentic database for the sector.

In keeping with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, The Federal Ministry of Education led by Prof. Tahir Mamman  developed eight (8) focus areas.

Out of these focus areas, the approved policies are captured as DOTS, an acronym representing: Data Repository, Out-of-School Children Education, Teacher Training & Development, and Skill Development & Acquisition.

Based on the focus areas, here are the achievements of the administration in Education in the past year as outlined by Prof. Mamman at a citizen and stakeholders’ engagement:

The  establishment of a National Education Repository and Data Bank 

The aim of this is to collect, collate, and warehouse all education records from 1932 through a dedicated website.

The Federal Ministry of Education under Prof. Tahir Mamman had focused engagements with development partners on practical impactful projects in Nigeria.

The key focus was to ensure that Nigeria determines her needs and intervention areas based on situation analysis and gaps identified.

President Tinubu approved a comprehensive national census of schools, teachers, and students in Nigeria to address the lack of coordinated data critical for effective educational planning.

This initiative will provide detailed information on school infrastructure, teacher qualifications, and student demographics, supporting targeted educational interventions and teacher training. Data will be monitored in real-time via the portal.

In addition, the Ministry with the aim of preserving the country’s heritage, carried out a documentation of unexploited Nigerian heritage in Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo and Pidgin.

This includes an ongoing collection and documentation of all alphabets in mother languages and the establishment of 40 book clubs in secondary schools.

Conversion of academic manuscripts into books

In order to encourage the available textbooks with Nigerian contents and promote Nigerian values, the Ministry facilitated the conversion of academic manuscripts into books, resulting in the publication of 80 textbooks.

The Ministry also identified books with contents relevant to modern learning in different fields, to this end, up to 3,118,701 assorted books and 376,262 e-resources were acquired.

A National virtual library was created which can be accessed at www.virtuall.nln.gov.ng.

Reduction in out-of-school children through the intervention in non-formal levels of education 

The Ministry of Education intervened in some key areas in the non-formal level of education such as Almajiri and Tsangaya education which were required to help girls and boys who lost their first chance at school get a second chance.

To this effect, grants were released to 312 Integrated Qur’anic and Tsangaya Education (IQTE) Centers in 24 States and the FCT for the construction of 419 Classrooms, 66 Recitation halls, 25 Recitation shades, 140 Offices, 27 hostels and 225 VIP toilets.

A total of 2,000,000 Out-of-School Children (Almajiris) were enrolled in Basic schools and an Arabic literacy programme with vocational training.

Student Loan Bill

Ensuring a more enhanced, transparent and inclusive Federal Scholarship scheme 

According to the Mamman, so far 345 beneficiaries under the Bilateral agreements with Foreign Countries have left Nigeria for other countries in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe.

School renovations and purchase of equipment and furniture 

The Ministry renovated 73 classrooms, drilled 46 boreholes, supplied 55 double bunk beds, 559 lockers, 1,100 mats, 6,585 pupils and teachers’ furniture for the benefit of 62,161 Learners.

Provision of vocational skills acquisition training

The Ministry equally ensured the provision of Vocational Skills Acquisition Training for 420 participants in ICT, Shoemaking, leather work, catering, and other sundry.

This was done with a dual purpose. First to equip the beneficiaries with skill sets and secondly, to study the process and determine learning curves to be used in rolling out the process on a massive scale.

The Teacher Internship Award 

This is an innovation aimed at providing mentorship to young persons in the teaching profession which comes with some token grant to incentivize the process.

Challenges and gaps

Nigeria’s recent move to overhaul its approach to education reforms has potential challenges especially in long-term sustainability, especially as regards the student loan bill.

Also, worth noting is that the education budget failed to meet UNESCO’s benchmark, given President Tinubu’s allocation of only 5.98% of the 2024 budget of N24.08 trillion to the sector.

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