Daily Trust Saturday

Public institutio­ns to the rescue as parents dump private schools

Some go for less standards to save cost ‘I rented home close to where my kids study’ I take them in the morning and my neighbour brings them back’ Over 500 enrolments recorded in Taraba Parents are devising various ways to keep their children in school

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‘‘Some students are no longer coming to school because their parents cannot pay their school fees. They said things were difficult for them. They have to think about feeding them first before settling school fees,” he said. Daily Trust Saturday also observed a decline in the enrolment of pupils into private schools in the state capital. “I think this is a blessing in disguise,”

Ibrahim Musa Giginyu (Kano), Habibu Idris Gimba (Damaturu), Seun Adeuyi (Abuja), Victor Edozie (Port Harcourt), Magaji Isa Hunkuyi (Jalingo), Iniabasi Umo (Uyo) & Adenike Kaffi (Ibadan)

As most public and private schools reopen for new academic session, parents said they were in pain as they struggle to take their wards back to school, in addition to handling other basic necessitie­s of life.

It was observed that while some parents change the schools their children attend, others secure apartments closer to where their children attend classes, all in an effort to cut cost.

Some parents said they were compelled to move their wards to public schools even as they claimed that private schools were better.

Recall that President Bola

Tinubu announced total removal of fuel subsidy on May 29, a developmen­t that sparked a ripple effect on cost of everything.

Kano

Malam Bello Auwalu, a civil servant with Kano State Government, said he had made adjustment­s in the study pattern of his children.

“I have moved three of my four children to a public school, but my problem is the quality of education there. But do I have a choice?” he queried.

He said that before the latest developmen­t, his children attended different schools, costing him N45,000 every 20 days for their transporta­tion, apart from school fees.

He explained that with the economic hardship caused by the subsidy removal, the four kids now need N55,000 in 20 days as transport, which he said he could not afford.

“One of my children is in the state polytechni­c, two in secondary school and one in primary school, but due to the oil subsidy removal, I have calculated that I will now be paying N55,000 instead of the N45,000 I used to spend as their transport fare.”

Amina Musa, a widow and mother of three children, said she had concluded all necessary arrangemen­ts for transferri­ng her children to the nearest public school.

“I can no longer afford my children’s school expenses that range from transport fare to school fees under this situation. My children are going to be transferre­d to public school, may God help us,” she said.

‘We share burden with our neighbour’

In an interview with some parents in Damaturu, the capital of Yobe State, it was learnt that some parents are finding it difficult to pay school fees for their kids.

Ali Muhammad, a civil servant said, ‘‘I have 6 children; one in federal government college while five are in private schools. As we are struggling to cope, just recently the federal government increased the school fees for federal government college students to at least N100, 000, so things became very difficult for me.

‘‘My friends advised me to consider changing the school of my kids by looking for cheaper schools and I agreed. They are cheaper even though the standard is less,” he said.

Abubakar Yunusa, a former reporter with NTA, Damaturu told Daily Trust Saturday that, ‘‘I used to take my children to school daily, but following the removal of petrol subsidy, I set up a plan with my neighbour. While I take our children to school in the morning, he picks them after closing hours. With that arrangemen­t, we minimise our expenses.”

The secretary of the Al-Audah Collage of Qur’Anic Science, Mallam Musa S. Tasha, lamented that more than 40 per cent of pupils were yet to pay their school fees. He said most parents had outstandin­g bills from previous terms.

The financial secretary of Al-Qalam Memorial Academy, Damaturu, Malam Muhammad Garba Dapchi, said some of their students had stopped coming to school because their parents could not pay their tuition.

‘‘Some students are no longer coming to school because their parents cannot pay their school fees. They said things were difficult for them. They have to think about feeding them first before settling school fees,” he said.

Daily Trust Saturday also observed a decline in the enrolment of pupils into private schools in the state capital.

“I think this is a blessing in

disguise,” an official of Local Education Authority (LEA) in Gashua said.

“I am saying this because we, I mean all those who can afford it, have abandoned public schools in favour of private schools. This is basically why the system is rotten.

“However, with this developmen­t, I am sure our public primary, secondary and tertiary institutio­ns might likely have a new lease of life,” he said.

Taraba

Garba Adamu, a trader in Jalingo main market told Daily Trust Saturday that he withdrew his four children from a private school because he could not afford to pay the school fees.

He said although private schools offered good teaching compared to some public schools, he had no option than to withdraw his children and take them to Yamasala Primary School, which is a public school.

Mr Bulus Yakubu, a father of four children, said he enrolled his last child into a public school because he could not afford a private school, where he was asked to pay N42,000.

Daily Trust Saturday observed that this has led to an increase in enrolment at public schools, especially as the state government has announced free and compulsory primary and secondary school education.

Finding revealed that most government-owned primary schools in Jalingo, the state capital, recorded over 500 fresh enrolments this term.

At Yamasala Primary School, all classes were filled with pupils following high enrolment and transfer from private schools.

The headmaster of the school, Mallam Aliyu, told Daily Trust Saturday that more than 500 new pupils had been registered in the school.

Parents mull moving family out of Abuja

In Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory, some parents said they were weighing various options to see how they could secure the future of their families.

Ismail Yunusa, who works in a federal ministry, said he had perfected plans to move his family to Keffi.

“I live in Wuse 11 and was paying N130,000, N115,000 and N95, 000 for each of my three children who are in JSS 2, Primary 5 and Primary 2. Sadly, the proprietor of the private school has increased the fees by 50 per cent. They also doubled the cost of transporta­tion and this is practicall­y not sustainabl­e. I am moving them to Keffi in Nasarawa State,” he said.

Jeffery Simon, who works in a private company, said he had moved his family to Kaduna.

“I have no option but to take them back to Kaduna where my parents live. I can’t afford the hike in schools fees and rent.

“Sadly, I took this decision at a great cost because I would have to live alone now. May the Almighty touch the hearts of our leaders to do what is right,” he said.

A trader at Dutse market in Abuja, Paul Njoku, said the increase in fees came at a time his income was dwindling.

“They have increased fees and the cost of books, and everything about school has gone up,” he said.

Many of us cannot send our children to school again. Some parents are thinking of changing their children’s schools and take them to where school fees are less although the quality may not be too good.

“The number of school dropouts will increase and we hope that this does not lead to an increase in crime in the country,” he said.

Another parent in Kubwa, Yinka Adesoji, said he had resolved to change schools for his children because he could not afford the current fees announced by their current school.

“The fees are now out of my reach and I cannot kill myself. Where do they expect us to get the money? Do they want us to steal?

They don’t consider the common man in this country. Maybe they don’t want us to send our children to schools again so that only their children would be educated,” Adesoji said in Yoruba language.

Another parent, Mallam Ibrahim Idris, said the subsidy removal was a big blow and had put unnecessar­y tension and pressure on him.

“I was unable to pay the school fees of my children last term. The school management would have sent my children back home because of the removal of the fuel subsidy if not for the understand­ing I had with the proprietor.

“As I speak, I am planning to pull them from private school to public school, ditto other parents, to avoid unnecessar­y high blood pressure as a result of the removal of fuel subsidy,” he said.

Isah Mayaki, a father of three, called on the federal and state government­s to provide affordable and accessible education options to alleviate the overall economic burden on families.

The proprietre­ss of Prime Academy, Pipeline, Kubwa, Halimatu Oyedele, said there would likely be low turnout of students this term.

Checks by Daily Trust Saturday showed that almost all the private primary and secondary schools in the FCT have increased their fees.

The situation is more evident with schools that offer shuttle bus services and those operating boarding facilities.

Rivers

The same scenario seems to be playing out in Rivers State as many pupils and students have been withdrawn from their respective schools in the state by their parents as a result of the high cost of transporta­tion occasioned by the removal of fuel subsidies by the federal government.

Some of the parents who spoke with our correspond­ent said they decided to look for nearby schools for their children to save money from the high cost of transporta­tion.

A resident of Oyigbo, Peter

Umeh, said he had withdrawn four of his children from a school in Port Harcourt to Oyigbo where he resides.

Also, a resident of Eleme, Emeka Ndu, said he had moved his children back to Eleme from Port Harcourt where they were attending school.

“Before the removal of fuel subsidy, three of my children attended school in Port Harcourt. From Eleme to Port Harcourt is about 10 kilometres and we spent N600 everyday on each of them. But the increase in cost of transporta­tion moved the transport cost from N600 to 1,200, so I had no option than to bring them back to Eleme and register them in a nearby school that is a trekking distance,” he said.

Parents abandon school buses in Akwa Ibom

Some parents who spoke with our correspond­ent in Uyo said they had abandoned school buses for public transporta­tion.

Pastor Elijah Umoren said the Parents Teachers Associatio­n (PTA) of the school where his daughter attends consented to the increase in transport fare as the school wanted to stop the bus ride due to increased fuel price.

Umoren said the school increased both the school fees and bus fare due to the cost of fuel.

“After much deliberati­on with the school, we arrived at N28,000 per child per term instead of the N20,000 we used to pay.

“The school fees were also increased from N28,500 to N32,500 per term. The high cost of fuel is causing a strain on our finances,” he said.

Another parent, Etorobong Edet, said he changed the school of his children to one nearer home, saying his children’s school is now a walking distance.

“I have withdrawn my children from their old school to one nearer home. Doing school runs every day was not easy, especially with the high cost of fuel.

“My house-help just walks into the school to either drop or pick my children and take them back home,” he explained.

Oyo

Mr Yaqub Babashola, a resident of Oyo State, said he had to secure another rented apartment in Ologuneru from Eleyele in order to have his children closer to their school.

“I didn’t want to change their school as a result of the cost of transporta­tion from Eleyele to Ologuneru, so we decided to secure another apartment close to their school since our rent was almost due.

“Their mother will also start a business around the area. That means I am the only one who will be spending money on transporta­tion to my workshop at Eleyele,” Babashola, a roadside mechanic said.

A 45-year-old widow, Mrs Oyeleke, who lives in Amuloko, Ibadan, said the hike in fuel cost had made it difficult for her to drive her children to their public school in the Olorunsogo area.

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