Daily Trust

Compulsory vocational education will address Nigeria’s faulty curricular — Lawmaker, Bello

- By Balarabe Alkassim

Why the push for the passage of a bill to make vocational education compulsory in Nigerian secondary schools?

I had a premonitio­n and belief that the way out for Nigeria is to inject a more practical approach to learning. No country will develop if it does not utilise its manpower towards entreprene­urship in schools than the pursuit of certificat­es aimed only at getting white-collar jobs.

That was why I proposed the bill to provide an act that will make the teaching of vocational education a must be incorporat­ed into the syllabus of our secondary schools.

My concern is that the growing unemployme­nt among our population is alarming. The National Bureau of Statistics, as I stated while on the floor of the House had in the first quarter of 2020, said about 21.7 million Nigerians are unemployed out of which 13.9 million are youths. These figures are predicted to grow faster, especially with the current economic challenges brought about largely by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Do you see the bill as a move to transform the educationa­l orientatio­n in the country?

Yes, it is a good step. I believe, and many other people believe too, that the main reason for youths’ unemployme­nt in the country is the faulty educationa­l system from the lower levels which does not prepare the youths to be independen­t by learning vocational skills like woodwork, tailoring, catering, photograph­y and other subjects.

So, the essence is to mainstream the study of vocational subjects in agricultur­e, automobile technology, Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology (ICT), Electrical/Electronic into core the educationa­l system from junior secondary to senior secondary school levels.

This will change the structure of these schools to become better skills acquisitio­n centres which prepare our young people for self-employment.

Engineer Joseph Asuku Bello is the member representi­ng Adavi/Okehi Federal Constituen­cy of Kogi State. He recently sponsored a bill seeking to make vocational education compulsory in Nigerian secondary schools. In this interview, he spoke on the need for the bill among other issues.

There seems to be absence of the political will to transform the educationa­l sector, do you think this bill will make any difference?

Our aim as a legislatur­e is to provide Nigerians with a piece of legislatio­n that will transform substantia­lly our entire orientatio­n to embrace an educationa­l system that will make an individual more of a creative mind than having a person that has garbage in garbage out mentality.

We have been paying lip service to this for long. That was what obtained in the past.

Our Technical Secondary Schools were created to nurture the manpower skills from the lower levels. Unfortunat­ely, all these efforts have been brought to a halt as everything put in place for the purpose was abandoned and our orientatio­n changed.

That is the problem. So there is a need for a change of mind and orientatio­n to put our youths back on track for self-reliance.

How do you think the programme can

be implemente­d?

First, we want to make the teaching of Vocational Education compulsory in all private and public secondary schools in Nigeria.

We have proposed sanctions in sections 1 and 2 of the bill which will be meted out to defaulters. We also want to make it mandatory for all secondary schools’ graduates to obtain credit in at least one vocational subject as a condition to get admission into tertiary institutio­ns.

Do you see vocational education enjoying greater acceptabil­ity in the near future?

Yes, the main aim is to use the legislatio­n to have a robust system that will support government’s efforts to implement policies towards the National Vocational Education drive as well as training for manpower developmen­t.

As I said, this bill will make operators and other stakeholde­rs in our educationa­l system take vocational education more seriously and impart knowledge that will help Nigeria come out of the woods.

We need vocational education to move forward. This will ease the burden off agencies like the National Directorat­e of Employment (NDE) and Industrial Training Fund (ITF) because people already have skills from their formative education years, as against having adults with low skills who have to be trained by these agencies as adults who failed to get jobs.

We had many missteps in the past and that should not reoccur, especially with the present challenges facing us.

Insecurity is slowly crippling education, so there is a need to bring in reforms that will meet our challenges.

What made previous efforts to revamp the sector, especially the issue of vocational

education, fail?

We had many systems of education aimed at making educationa­l attainment better. The 6-3-3-4 system is the most popular which seeks to provide a linear, organised model that will equip Nigerians with a four-step education path from primary school to university.

However, in the course of implementi­ng the system, many important aspects were overlooked and vocational education was relegated to the background.

A perception was created regarding vocational education as it was seen as knowledge for people who have no means to pursue education to tertiary level, or a vocation left for people with no deep western education.

It was also destroyed deliberate­ly by killing our technical colleges as their workshops were vandalised and equipment stolen in many instances. This is the problem facing vocational education in the country.

We need to be useful to ourselves and the country by using our God-given talents. Education is not about a certificat­e; it is about how someone applies the knowledge to produce something tangible.

What about its applicabil­ity in tertiary institutio­ns?

Though we have not proposed the teaching of vocations in tertiary education, it is to be strengthen­ed. That will help us get engineers, ICT specialist­s, profession­al farmers and other graduates that will provide the profession­al workforce needed to drive our developmen­t drive.

The pathetic thing here is that, because of the lack of equipment in our universiti­es and other tertiary institutio­ns, most of the profession­al graduates do not have the practicals in what they were taught in those institutio­ns.

So, if we want to move forward, we must have institutes that will further teach practical demonstrat­ions of what is being taught in our universiti­es.

What is your hope for the future of vocational education if the bill is passed?

My wish is to see the passage of the bill and the implementa­tion of what it seeks to achieve. This needs our collective efforts. The first step is to have legal backing to the proposal which comes when the bill is passed into law. We have taken the steps and we will get to the destinatio­n.

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Asuku Bello

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