Baroness Walker Canvasses Policy on Education for Nation-Building
Funmi Ogundare
President of the Royal Geographical Society , Baroness Lynda Walker of Wallassey, has called for a policy and structural reform that would improve people’s livelihoods in education and create jobs that will impact their socioeconomic wellbeing .
She said this can only be achieved by building good education across the country, especially for girls which spurs exponential positive effects on social and economic development for generations to come.
Walker who made this known, recently, in a lecture titled, ‘Africa in a Competitive World: Business and Investment’, during a programme organized by Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, in her honour, stressed the need for human capacity development through education and skilling.
According to her, “Increasing levels and quality of education will be essential to raising productivity across all sectors. This means increasing funding to education.”
She expressed concern about the poor budget allocation to education and the staggering figure of out- of-school children in the country saying, “The United Nations has specified that at least 26 per cent of a country’s budget should be devoted for education, without which no meaningful improvement will be seen. As it stands now, the fraction is less than 10 per cent.
“UNESCO’s Global Education Monitoring (GEM) says that Nigeria is still home of the world largest out-of -school children. Of the staggering 10.5 million out-of -school children in Nigeria today, the majority are girls. Girls education is good economics which is the best investment in a country’s national development. Educating girls enhances growth rates and reduces social disparities.”
The president said there is need to pair up computer literate youths who are proficient in ICT, with older people in business , adding that this is what is being deployed in other countries that will boost the socio-economic wellbeing of the people.
The Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Professor Olanrewaju Fagbohun in his remarks called for an investment in tertiary education if universities in the country is to champion the innovations and technology that will bring about an increase in global manufacture and ensure sustainable development.
“There is no denying the fact that tertiary education in our country today, leaves much to be desired. If we are to construct that functional linkage between higher education and industry, for us to produce the graduates that industry require, to build a knowledge-driven economy, investment in tertiary education is an urgent undertaking.