Daily Trust Sunday

How River Kaduna denies girls access to higher education

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“Finally, the state government approved a junior secondary school, but it is yet to build structures and deploy teachers to the school,” he said.

Without waiting for the government to make necessary learning facilities available, residents of Kurmin Kaduna commenced tutorials to get the students ready before the deployment of government-approved teachers.

Ismail and 9 other male graduates and Nigerian Certificat­e in Education (NCE) holders from the community now volunteer as teachers. They teach English, Mathematic­s, Home Economics, Arabic, Agricultur­al Science and Hausa Language.

The action of the people of Kurmin Kaduna is a show of community ideas and solidarity that can produce the needed results, according to Maikano Madaki, a professor of Sociology at Bayero University, Kano.

Professor Madaki said that for sustainabi­lity, the community needs an establishe­d system of community involvemen­t in managing the school and providing support services to the needy.

“There should be an establishe­d system of leadership, source of funding and supervisio­n.

“Different sectors and segments of the community should be involved in the execution of its activities. People in the community must be made to feel that they own community activities,” Madaki said.

Girl-child enrolment on the rise

Each year of secondary education may reduce the likelihood of girls marrying before the age of 18 by five per cent or more, according to the World Bank. The bank also states that girls who complete secondary education tend to be healthier, participat­e more in the formal labour market, earn more, marry later, have fewer children and provide better health care and education for the next generation.

By taking advantage of the new junior secondary school in Kurmin Kaduna, 14-year-old Hauwa Aminu may have been saved from becoming one of the world’s 12million child brides married off each year before the age of 18, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

Having completed her primary education in 2019 at the age of 12, Hauwa remained at home due to lack of a junior secondary school although she yearned to be in school.

“When the new school started, I told my father that I wanted to complete secondary education before marriage. I told him that I wanted to be a doctor and he agreed,” she said.

Even as they sit in two classrooms of the 48-year-old dilapidate­d primary school with volunteer teachers, the enrolment of girls is on the rise, said Dauda Ismail, the chairman of Kurmin Kaduna Youth Action and Awareness Forum.

“There are 108 students that have enrolled so far. Out of this number, we have 64 females and 44 males,” Ismail said.

Bilkisu Abdulrahma­n, 28, whose education was cut short after she married at 15, has also returned to school.

“Even if I don’t get employment in future, my children could benefit from the knowledge. I will be able to assist them with their homework. With time, I could reach out to other families and help other children also,” she said.

Prof. Madaki explained that such ambition displayed by Bilkisu was part of the ripple effects expected from the community’s action.

“It means that within the next few years, the community would have everyone educated—both males and females,” he said, adding that by enhancing education opportunit­ies for women and girls, the community will not only promote gender equality but encourage women and girls’ involvemen­t in community activities.

“They (women and girls) can contribute their own quota to the developmen­t of the community. There will also be provision of quality training and socialisat­ion to the children since more married women in the community will have or acquire education,” he said.

Prof Madaki added that school dropouts would reduce in the community as almost all the children would be in school and there would be a reduction in juvenile delinquenc­y and crime, and there would be improved security.

“Family institutio­ns would be much more peaceful, organised, and rational in decisionma­king. Women and girls would be elevated to a height where there would be an improved economic system, stability and enhanced community consciousn­ess,” he added.

According to the United Nations, rural women’s access to education and training has a major impact on their potential to access and benefit from income-generating opportunit­ies and improving their overall well-being. Although the right to education is a fundamenta­l human right, this does not apply in many developing countries such as Nigeria, where limited or no access to education for women is one of the major barriers that hinder overcoming hunger and providing a healthy life for children.

At Kurmin Kaduna, although the primary school where the housewives and other students take their classes is dilapidate­d, with only few habitable classrooms and some students sitting on bare floors, the poor learning condition has not deterred them.

“Every day, we see girls coming; and some of them are married and accompanie­d by their husbands. We also noticed that the women are very talented because their performanc­e is high. But we need better structures and qualified teachers to motivate more to come to school,” Ismail said.

Explaining the situation in the school, the desk officer for Upper Basic Education in Igabi LGA of Kaduna State, Salisu Turunku, said although the state government had approved a junior secondary school for Kurmin Kaduna, as a norm, the primary school would serve as a starting area. He said the state government planned to construct a junior secondary school within the primary school.

“This means that they will be using the classes in the primary school pending when the government builds structures for them. Soon, teachers will be deployed to the school,” he said.

Bridging the out-of-school children gap

The most recent Global Education Monitoring Report by the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (UNESCO) puts Nigeria’s current out-of-school children at 19.7million, with girls forming 60 per cent of the deficit.

The country’s large population of outof-school children are predominan­tly from the northern part of the country, according to the World Bank, which also factored the lack of access to secondary education as significan­tly higher in the northern part of the country where the ratio is up to 10 primary schools for every secondary school.

The UNICEF identified geography and poverty as important factors in the pattern of educationa­l marginalis­ation, with education deprivatio­n in northern Nigeria driven by various factors, including economic barriers and socio-cultural norms and practices that discourage attendance in formal education, especially for girls.

Like the case of Kurmin Kaduna, hardto-reach areas across Nigeria face education deprivatio­n with opportunit­ies for better secondary schools in most rural than urban areas.

Kaduna is one of the seven states benefiting from the Adolescent Girls Initiative for Learning and Empowermen­t (AGILE), a World Bank project with the goal to improve secondary education opportunit­ies among girls in targeted areas.

The Component Lead, Digital Literacy for AGILE in Kaduna, Sani Aliyu, explained that the lack of safe and accessible learning spaces within schools was one of the factors that affect girls’ education.

“Some schools do not have teachers while there are no schools in some communitie­s,” he said.

To address this demand-constraint, Aliyu explained that the project would in 2023 construct 155 schools, out of which 90 would be junior secondary schools and 65 senior secondary schools across the state.

“They, especially junior secondary schools, will be constructe­d within the premises of the existing schools,” he said.

After searching through records, Aliyu confirmed to Daily Trust Saturday that the school in Kurmin Kaduna, where 108 students, including Aisha Aliyu, Mardiyya Aminu and Bilkisu Abdulrahma­n have returned to fulfil their dreams, was not captured in the interventi­on.

“There are criteria for citing the schools; one of them is that the distance between an existing secondary school and a primary school should not be below four kilometres. So, where we have more than four kilometres, that is where we consider the new constructi­on,” he said.

Rafin Guza, where boys from Kurmin Kaduna have over the years benefitted from junior secondary education, is only three kilometres away but separated by River Kaduna, which remains an obstacle for the girls of Kurmin Kaduna. Without a bridge to link Kurmin Kaduna to Rafin Guza, the river puts girls at a disadvanta­ge.

Even as they sit in two of the most habitable classrooms in a dilapidate­d primary school that bears the brunt of age and poor maintenanc­e, Aisha and the other women are hopeful.

“I returned to school because I want to become a pharmacist someday. I want to own a chemist shop, and to do that, I need to know what drugs to sell and how to administer them,” she said.

This report was supported by the Africa Women Journalism Project (AWJP), in partnershi­p with the Internatio­nal Centre for Journalist­s (ICFJ) and the sponsorshi­p of the Ford Foundation.

When the new school started, I told my father that I wanted to complete secondary education before marriage. I told him that I wanted to be a doctor and he agreed

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