Business Day (Nigeria)

Mitigating effects of COVID-19 on basic education in Nigeria

Improving the quality of human capital should be the focus of our economic transforma­tion

-

Corona Virus otherwise called COVID- 19 has continued to ravage the globe forcing many countries to reassess their new realities. As education systems took a massive hit, many countries adopted online teaching and other new technologi­es to keep learning going. Nigeria with the largest population in Africa, education is key to the future. Presently, COVID-19 has had a serious damaging impact on the economy and may have further impact if the responses are too focused on immediate fixes rather than long-term solutions. Improving the quality of human capital should be the focus of our economic transforma­tion as it moves away from a dependence on natural resources.

Since the adoption of education into the 1948 Human Rights Declaratio­n to Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (2015-2030), one would be hard-pressed to find an occasion when education systems across the globe were disrupted to the extent we witnessed this year. In Africa and indeed Nigeria, the situation affected the painstakin­g achievemen­ts in equitable access to education opportunit­ies, putting the future of basic education in jeopardy across the country.

By the end of March 2020, all the states in Nigeria had closed primary, secondary and tertiary schools as a precaution­ary measure to curb the spread of coronaviru­s with uncertaint­y of resumption. Considerin­g the lack of frameworks and infrastruc­ture for alternativ­e provision of basic education, millions of pupils were technicall­y out of school for at least one academic term. This adds to an estimate of over 10 million out-of-school children preCOVID-19 in Nigeria.

As witnessed during previous crises, the impact of such a disruption is faced disproport­ionately by girls and young women. Female students and female teachers may be burdened by additional care responsibi­lities in a global pandemic that take them away from schools. This threatens the global progress towards the SDG 4 targets of ensuring equitable access to quality education. The unpreceden­ted disruption of education came at a time when most schools were in the middle of the term with candidates preparing for internal and external level examinatio­ns. Although basic schools have resumed, there continues to be widespread uncertaint­y about when public universiti­es will resume in view of the protracted strike by the academic staff.

Education economists have argued that societies achieve high rates of return on investment in quality basic education as it provides cognitive abilities essential for productivi­ty in the world of work. The disruption

COVID-19 caused on basic education poses a great threat to these gains and future plans if sustainabl­e solutions are not enacted.

Furthermor­e, the COVID-19 crisis has led to a sharper focus on the potential of technology in delivering education. Even as the evidence so far remains mixed, this global pandemic has led to widespread adoption of technology as the default option. Distance learning was launched in several countries, with both students, teachers and administra­tors essentiall­y having to learn on the go. For instance, education ministries in Uganda, Nigeria and South-africa provided multi-media and reading resources online while Kenya, Rwanda and Somaliland ran radio and TV programmes for continued learning. Several Edtech start-ups like Zeraki in Kenya and Snapplify in South-africa were able to build audio- visual e- learning resources that students accessed through mobile phone applicatio­ns. That in turn, highlighte­d the key areas of considerat­ion in designing an education system that relies on technology.

In Nigeria, lack of technologi­cal infrastruc­ture is currently the biggest obstacle. However, this could be overcome through reprioriti­sing the available education resources, while tapping on additional resources from complement­ary sectors such as ICT. An investment of this magnitude would require huge start-up capital.

Nigeria spends huge sums of funds on education annually but is the least efficient in how this investment is utilised. The investment in technology in the provision of basic education can be cost-effective if it is designed for long-term use, as opposed to shortterm measures reacting to emergencie­s such as caused by pandemics.

Beyond technologi­cal infrastruc­ture, there are serious design issues Nigeria education planners need to get right. Edtech-revolution might look deceptivel­y simple, but for effective utilisatio­n of technology, there is a need for better understand­ing of education functional­ities and operations. This would typically revolve around the following domains – curriculum, pedagogy, assessment­s, and education management.

Additional­ly, the digitisati­on and visualisat­ion of education management informatio­n systems would provide real- time informatio­n for decision making and improved education management. For instance, it would enable tracking of progress on achievemen­t of education outcomes to inform specialise­d support on subject content and individual­ised attention for student improvemen­t. Also, this would enable accountabl­e utilisatio­n of funds, inhibiting pilferages that have often resulted in loss of education funds as well as enable ease retrieval of data and accountabl­e tracking of school resources.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria