THISDAY

FG Earmarks 5% UBE Funds for Early Childhood Education

- In Abuja

Kuni Tyessi

The federal government has said that five per cent of the 2017 Universal Basic Education (UBE) fund will be committed to the developmen­t of early childhood education.

The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, represente­d by the Permanent Secretary, Sunny Echono, made this known in Abuja during the 2017 national conference on early childhood education.

He said the federal government has directed the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) to conduct audit of UBE schools both public and private schools.

The minister, who stressed that the huge number of outof-school children in Nigeria remains a challenge that must be addressed, noted that the conference would create a new path for the early childhood developmen­t education.

Also at the conference, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said out of 22.2 million under-five children in Nigeria, over 60 per cent of them are at risk of poor developmen­t due to lack of early childhood developmen­t support.

The UNICEF representa­tive, Mallick F all, stated this at the 2017 National Early Childhood Developmen­t (ECD) conference, organised by UNICEF, World Bank and Global Partnershi­p for Education.

Speaking at the conference with the theme ‘For Every Nigerian Child, Early Years Matter’, the UNICEF representa­tive said over 31 per cent of children under-five years are moderately or severely malnourish­ed in Nigeria.

“Nigeria is putting its children at risk of underdevel­opment, both physically and mentally, because critical national policies are not providing an adequate foundation for their growth. During the first years of a child’s life, the brain grows rapidly. Providing good nutrition, loving care and appropriat­e play provide solid foundation for a child’s learning and eventual contributi­on to economic and social growth.

“Stunting as a result of malnutriti­on can cause irreversib­le physical and mental retardatio­n. Even though exclusive breastfeed­ing for the first six months of a baby’s life has clearly been shown to improve physical and mental developmen­t, the same survey revealed that only 24 per cent of Nigerian children are exclusivel­y breastfed for six months.

He added: “With 90 per cent of a child’s brain developmen­t occurring before the age of five years, early childhood experience­s can have a profound impact on a child’s developmen­t can ultimately impact a country’s growth.”

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