Daily Trust Saturday

How N5000 is changing the narrative in Sokoto schools

- Saturday, October 12, 2019 Rakiya A. Muhammad, Sokoto How CTP works The gains of CTP A caregiver to one of the beneficiar­ies ,says ‘I have realised the importance of girlchild education’ Some pupils in a classroom in Sokoto

Eight-year-old Zainab Danburdi’s academic prowess became noticeable at the Burdi Primary school in Gwabadawa local government area of Sokoto State. The orphan distinguis­hed herself as an outstandin­g pupil, topping her Primary Two class.

Zainab is one of the girls from impoverish­ed homes who hawked on the streets to support her family. She does not only live in a rural community but a hard-to-reach area where kids hardly access formal education.

It was only in 2017 that she became one of the beneficiar­ies of the Sokoto State Cash Transfer Programme (CTP) which has now helped to keep her in school.

CTP is an initiative designed to address poverty-related challenges preventing girls’ enrolment and retention in primary education in the 23 local government areas of the state.

The CTP is for economic empowermen­t of female caregivers of recipients. The beneficiar­ies utilise it for income-generating activities so they are able to provide for their girls in basic schools.

There had been other initiative­s such as Nigerian Partnershi­p for Education Project (NIPEP) and United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) in the state. However, it was the first time the eight hard-to-reach villages that benefitted from the CT programme in Gwadabawa local government, received such interventi­on.

The target was the poorest of the poor and Zainab emerged one of the beneficiar­ies in Burdi village of Gwadabawa.

For promising Zainab, it serves a significan­t impetus for attendance and retention in school.

“Four of the recipients - Zainab, Talatu, Aisha and Hadiza, are very bright but Zainab is the most brilliant,” says Lawali Musa, the immediate past head teacher of Burdi Primary School.

“They were in abject poverty and hitherto hawking, but with CPT, the situation has improved for the girls.”

Under the CTP assistance to resource-poor households, each of the primary care-givers of girls receives 5,000 per term (15,000 annually). The target of the programme is to get as many as 10,120 Sokoto girls, aged 6 to 15, to enrol and remain in school to at least JSS3 level.

“It was to enhance girls’ access to education; equity, social inclusion and poverty reduction as well as promote integratio­n, synergy, complement­arities, active community participat­ion and ownership,” says Mahmuda Galadima, Sokoto State Cash Transfer/Project Implementa­tion Unit Coordinato­r Ministry of Basic & Secondary Education, Sokoto.

“The primary objective was to increase girls’ enrolment and attendance in the selected schools in Sokoto State. It is also to reduce gender inequality in the selected schools in the state.”

Galadima reveals that the state government scaled up CTP following the successes recorded in the pilot programme.

The pilot programme was unconditio­nal, but the scale-up has a condition, that is enrolment in school for a girl child of a potential beneficiar­y and 75 per cent class attendance for such a girl.

Malama Halima, the mother of a CTP beneficiar­y, is full of praises for the initiative.

“The cash transfer programme is succour to parents who could not sew uniform, buy books and other school items for their girls,” she says. “It has eased so many things on my child’s educationa­l pursuit.”

Halima’s daughter, Zainab Ahmed, is a Primary two pupil of Ali Tambari Model Primary School Sifawa, Bodinga Government Area of Sokoto.

She explains how she spent the N5000 cash grant given to her for the programme. “I used the money to purchase a goat,” she says. “It gave birth to two kids, then we sold one and used the proceeds to sew uniform for Zainab. The goat later had other kids, and we were able to purchase some other school things for her. We also bought sheep.”

For Ruqayya Isah who has twin daughters, it’s like catching two fishes with one worm. Although only one of her twins got financial aid, she used it to support the education of the two. “We thank God, my daughter, Hassana and her twin sister has uniform sewn for them; we also bought a goat from it.”

Statistics of enrolment in benefittin­g schools confirms claims of rising female students’ population.

In Kauran Kimba Model Primary School Wamakko, for instance, the population of girls saw a gradual rise from 201 in the 2016/17 session, to 206 in 2017/18 and 261 in 2018/19 session.

In many cases, the gap between boys’ enrolment and that of girls is shrinking significan­tly.

Aliyu Jedo Model Primary School in Binji is one of such schools that illustrate this. In 2015/16 session, the record indicates 621 boys and 483 girls. There were 675 boys and 639 girls for 2017/2018 session, while 2018/19 session Local reflects 725 males and 711 females. The gap narrowed from 138 in 2015/16 to 36 in 2017/18 and 14 in 2018/2019.

In some cases, the girls have overtaken the boys in students’ population. One of such schools is Kagoye Primary School Gwadabawa where records show that in 2017/18, the students’ population stood at 296 comprising 162 boys and 134 girls. But in 2018/19, enrolment went up to 412. Out of the 116 more students, girls were 75, bringing it to 209 females, to surpass boys who increased by 41 to get a 203 male population.

Similarly, in Burdi, the total population of students was 180 in 2017/2018 comprising 97 boys and 83 girls. By 2018/19, the total population was 395, consisting of 192 boys and 203 girls. Females became more in school, with an increase of 120 compared to boys who rose by 95.

The Director of Schools, Gwadabawa Local Government Education Authority, Dahiru Abubakar, speaks on the growing enrolment of girls.

“In 2017, we had 600 females in schools in the local government, but now we have 1034. It was because of this CTP, Abubakar says. “Some parents who were not prepared to send their girls to school are now rushing to enrol them.”

The headmaster of Ali Tambari Model School Sifawa, Sani Bello, speaks along the same line. “The cash transfer programme makes parents send their children to school on time

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