Daily Trust

Kano, Jigawa girls not deterred by SSCE failure

- By Ibrahim Musa Giginyu

For many young girls, failure at the Senior School Certificat­e Examinatio­n (SSCE) usually signalled the end of their education pursuit, especially in the northern part of the country.

Findings show that many victims of such examinatio­n failure have no option than to either get married or engage in petty business.

According to a Kano-based educationi­st, Malam Idris Basheer, many cannot afford to pay the examinatio­n fees for their wards to rewrite the exams due to the present economic hardship, and the societal nonchalant attitude towards girl child education.

It was based on this that the developmen­t Research and Projects Centre (dRPC), in conjunctio­n with Partnershi­p to Strengthen Innovation and Practice in Secondary Education (PSIPSE) project, introduced a programme tagged Early Child Developmen­t (ECD) school management training and empowermen­t.

Under the project, girls from Kano and Jigawa states with three credits, at O’level, who could not advance their education, were selected and screened after which the successful ones were given items and take off fund to enable them to establish ECD schools either in their houses or where they deem comfortabl­e communitie­s.

The ECD schools are basically lesson centres to prepare children for the formal

within

their school system.

Khadija Yusuf Abubakar, 19-year-old, who had wanted to further her education but couldn’t due to her inability to pass the SSCE, was selected and trained under the project to run an ECD school in her Gobirawa community in Kano State.

Armed with the training and support, Khadija was able to open an ECD school with 20 pupils last year and now she has over 170 pupils with two additional teachers on her payroll.

“This is something worth celebratin­g for me because my school now generates about N34,000 monthly. I want them to study more and as you can see I have also recruited some teachers to assist in running the school,” she said.

Also, Hafsat Abdullahi Matori, who started with less than 20 pupils, now has 130 with a monthly earning of N39,000 and she has four teachers on her payroll.

Khadija Garba Dodo, who started with 30 pupils, now has about 162 pupils with six teachers on her payroll.

Khadija charges N500 per child every month and earns N81,000 monthly.

According to dRPC education liaison officer, Malam Suleiman Mahmud, under the PSIPSE project, the

ECD schools were encouraged to establish after-school clubs to help engage the students more on trades, crafts and entreprene­urship.

He said a follow up on the PSIPSE schools showed that all secondary school students with four credits and above got admission to higher institutio­ns but those with three credits were staying at home.

He added that with the discovery, the centre began a screening exercise from which eight ex-students from Jigawa and 12 from Kano were successful­ly enrolled to be trained and empowered on ECD school management.

The programme has not only turned the young girls’ failure to a blessing but also provided employment for others. The beneficiar­ies advise other girls who could not further their education to look at available opportunit­ies that would help them improve their situation.

One of the success stories of the programme, according to its sponsors, was that one of the participan­ts has been able to secure admission into the School of Nursing, Birnin Kudu in Jigawa State through the money raised from the programme while others have also started taking steps towards going back to school.

 ??  ?? Khadija Yusuf Abubakar in one of her ECD classes
Khadija Yusuf Abubakar in one of her ECD classes

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