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Abuja School Honours Scholarship
~0.5 mins read
A 17-YEAR-OLD NNPC/SNEPCO scholar, Miss Ulan Sylvia Andrew, has been celebrated for scoring straight A1 in the 2020 West African Examinations Council (WAEC) Senior School Certificate Examination.
The management of an Abuja-based private secondary school, Premiere Academy, Lugbe, said Miss Ulan broke the academic record in the school with her outstanding performance.
Ulan was a deputy head girl of the Academy and one of the first set of 30 products of the Cradle To Career Scholarship programme sponsored by NNPC/SNEPCO, which started in 2014.
While Ulan obtained A1 grades in all the nine subjects offered, other members of the top 10 got between eight and six A1 with only B2 and B3 to complement.
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ASSU: Before The Brain Drain Again
~7.4 mins read
We all just need to freeze our fixation on other subjects of urgent national importance at this time to discuss the plight of teachers, notably university teachers at this time in Nigeria. Talking about the long strike and plight of university teachers may have become a stale subject to discuss at this time that even His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar decried the debilitating effects of unbridled banditry in the North. The Sultan of Sokoto is saying there is a time for everything. The very influential traditional and religious leader in the North disclosed last Thursday that the North has become the worst place to live in. He decried all the political talks that the North has been peaceful and that stuff. Doubtless, no one can ignore the spate of insecurity in the country at the moment. It is no longer a northern Nigeria affair. The bogeyman (insecurity) has a federal character trait at the moment. It is now like a telecom brand with a buzzword: ‘everywhere you go’: You can be abducted and even killed anywhere in Nigeria now. Armed robbers struck in my local government headquarters, Ode Irele, Ondo State last Thursday. They robbed and destroyed the strong rooms of the only bank, Union Bank in Ode Irele a day before Black Friday. That same day, a traditional ruler, Olufon of Ifon, Near Owo Area of Ondo State was killed while returning from a security meeting with the IGP in Akure, capital of Ondo State. #EndSARS protest aftermath is still with us even as the fear of Phase-2 of #EndSARS protest has become the beginning of knowledge for national security agencies. What of the remarkable transition politics in the United States where the power of strong institutions has been dealing a deadly blow to their leader who couldn’t believe that elections have consequences, after all? Even a curious conspiracy theory that CNN has been collaborating with some subversive elements under the aegis of #EndSARS to change the present regime in Nigeria is worth deconstructing this week. What of the passing away of one of the best newspaper columnists Nigeria has ever produced, Pastor Gbolabo Ogunsanwo? Here was a man (when men had chests) whose column alone was a unique selling point for the Sunday Times. He was one of our brightest and the best. These are worthy subjects to discuss this week.
MEANWHILE, I hope history will be fair to President Muhammadu Buhari who had in 2017 planned to declare an emergency on education with a view to paying attention to the sector meaningfully. Our leader is a great procrastinator! It will be recalled that on November 13, 2017, the Buhari administration organised a remarkable Retreat on education tagged “Federal Executive Council Retreat on Educationâ€, which was widely reported in this column as “Lesson Notes on Buhari’s Retreat on Education†(November 19, 2017). As I had reported then, the well-organised event reinforced faith in the capacity of the administration to get to the roots of lack of progress in all spheres and indeed mediocrity in all our ways.
In fact, the Education Minister, Malam Adamu Adamu in a well-delivered speech at the Retreat suggested that the president should declare a state of emergency on education at the end of the Retreat attended by the President and the Vice President. But in the end, among other action points, it was hinted that the declaration of emergency would be made in April 2018. Sadly, nothing till the present. I was fortunate to be at the Retreat at the State House Banquet Hall in Abuja when the president’s unwritten concluding remarks, which artfully endorsed Governor Nasir el-Rufai’s noisy policy on mediocre teachers in Kaduna state almost took the steam out of the significance of the one-day Retreat.
It was an unusual event as even the chief host, the Education Minister remained quiet in the presentation processes. The resource persons, notably professors Peter Okebukola, former LASU Vice-Chancellor and former Executive Secretary NUC and Emeritus Professor Michael Omolewa, former Nigeria’s envoy at the UNESCO who are quite significant in education management, were the visible experts throughout the event.
Remarkably, the resilient spirit of “implementation, implementation, and implementation†as Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, later reiterated was the silent bogeyman there. Incidentally, in one of his presentations on the strategic plan, Professor Okebukola called for, “generous political will†to implement the ministerial strategic plan. It hasn’t been implemented since 2017.
The president’s keynote was artfully used to kill two birds with a stone: One, he made his point remarkable to the extent that he identified what to do to invest in education. President Buhari hinted at a covenant with the people when he said: “…The significance of this summit is obvious. We cannot progress beyond the level and standard of our education. Today, it is those who acquire the most qualitative education, equipped with requisite skills and training and empowered with practical know-how that is leading the rest. We cannot afford to continue lagging behind. Education is our launch-pad to a more successful, more productive, and more prosperous future. This administration is committed to revitalising our education system and making it more responsive and globally competitive.â€
Before it is too late, our leaders at this time should note that a child’s right to education cannot be safeguarded in conflict zones without education itself being protected. Education can be a life-saver. Out-of-school children are easy targets of abuse, exploitation, and recruitment by armed forces and militant groups. Schools should provide a safe space where children can be protected from threats and crises. It is also a critical step to breaking the cycle of crisis and reducing the likelihood of future conflicts. We can’t achieve greatness, therefore, if we continue to treat teachers at all levels as worthless workers who should be the last to be paid and equipped in any pecking order. Therefore, there should be a national dialogue on how to treat teachers beyond extending their service years! We need to borrow a leaf from the Nordic countries in Northern Europe, notably Finland where teaching is the best-paid job – for national development.
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