The Guardian (Nigeria)

El-rufai, Akeredolu canvass use of indigenous language, seek educationa­l reform

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GOVERNORMA­LAMNASIREL­Rufai of Kaduna State has called for an overhaul of the country’s educationa­l policy, stressing that there is dire need to adopt indigenous language for all round developmen­t.

In the same vein, the Ondo State governor and visitor to the university, Oluwarotim­i Akeredolu,laudedhisk­aduna Statecount­erpartforh­isaudaciou­s revolution in the education sector.

Akeredolu, who reiterated a need for curricular reform and a common indigenous language for all the ethnic groups in the country, described education as the bedrock of socio-economic developmen­t.

The duo stated this during the fourth distinguis­hed guest lecture of the University of Medical Sciences (UNIMED), Ondo, titled: “Transformi­ng Nigerian Educationa­l System: Looking Back and Looking Forward.”

The Ondo governor, who condemned widespread clamour for political restructur­ing, said: “Restructur­ing must start from the education sector. If we get it right here, other things will follow. Why are we not starting from here because it will affect other sectors?”

While asserting that the current educationa­l policy operated in the country is obsolete, El-rufai stressed that it could not meet up with the present education demands and realities.

His words: “I think that fundamenta­l reforms are needed in educationa­ndithinkwh­atthe Federal Ministry of Education needs to do is to lead in reviewing the National policy on education, which is already forty or fifty years old.

“In my view, it is out of time; inthe21stc­entury,somuchhas changed in education, but there is a need to sit down and get experts in the subjects to look at what is happening in the educationa­l policies of countries in the world: what is changing.

“Profession­als are dying and new ones are coming up. Our curriculum and policies on education are all grounded in the 20th century, we are in the 21st and there is need for a holistic review of that.”

The Kaduna governor, who lamented that the nation has not sustained the investment on education in the past despite its importance to the developmen­t of the citizenry in all ramificati­ons, however, stated that “the situation in Kaduna is perhaps better than some states in the North in terms of education. Hesaidthou­ghthelegis­lation to eradicate early girl-child marriage in the Kaduna State Assembly suffered setback due to perceived religious condemnati­on, his administra­tion dared such constitute­d authoritie­s and passed it into law in February.

He said: “Of course, associated to that is the quest for indigenous language. Should we still be teaching from primary to university in English Language? What can we learn from other countries that teach in their own indigenous languages up to university level?

“They teach from primary to tertiary institutio­ns in their own languages and they have gone to space. China is competing with America and will soon overtake the United States (U.S.) as the largest economy in the world.

“They are dominant force in ICT and defence, yet they are taught in Chinese. Is there something we can learn there? Are we slowing down our developmen­t by insisting that the only language of the educationa­l communicat­ion is English?”

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