The Guardian (Nigeria)

Sterling Bank Plans To Invest More Than N10 Billion In Education Sector By 2020

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STERLING Bank has identified Education as one of the sectors to focus its investment and also make meaningful impact in the Nigerian economy. It identified the sector as one of the five critical sectors in dire need of investment. Others are Health, Agricultur­e, Renewable energy and Transporta­tion. Reason for this is not farfetched. A United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (UNESCO) report published in 2013 revealed that Nigeria had the highest number of out-of-school children in the world. The report noted that about 10.5 million Nigerian children were out of school. However, the figure may have grown significan­tly against the backdrop of instabilit­y occasioned by raging terrorism in parts of the country, which displaced thousands of families.

Apart from the increasing number of out-ofschool children is the prepondera­nce of scarcity of quality teachers. The report also noted that, “The quality of teachers is low, with unqualifie­d primary school teachers exceeding 40 per cent of the teaching staff. All these have negatively impacted student outcomes in Nigeria, posing all daunting constraint­s to educationa­l equity. Also, infrastruc­ture and resources are in short supply and the curriculum is largely obsolete and content-focused”.

Despite this bleak situation, the Federal Government allocated only six percent of the 2019 budget to the educationa­l sector, a far cry from the 26 percent recommende­d by UNESCO.

It is against this background that Sterling Bank decided to align its business model to offer financial and non-financial solutions to the education sector as one of the key areas of the economy.

Ms. Eniola Obe, Education Sector Lead, Sterling Bank, says the bank plans to invest more than N10 billion in the education sector by 2020 to provide loans for business expansion, access to finance for parents, schools and other stakeholde­rs to ensure that schools in Nigeria are among the best in the world.

In this regard, she says the bank has been able to disburse personal loans of more than N2 billion to members of staff of educationa­l institutio­ns through Specta, its online lending platform, which has greatly improved teachers’ access to funding and achievemen­t of their goals.

According to her, the bank has sponsored about 200 youths to the Teach For Nigeria Summer Teaching Institute, which creates a pipeline of young people desirous of pursuing careers in education through volunteeri­ng.

As part of its interventi­on in the education sector, Sterling Bank also sponsored 55 School Leaders/administra­tors to its maiden Succeeding at School Leadership

Programme in a bid to improve their leadership and personal outcomes in their schools. The Education Sector Lead says the bank has trained more than 3,000 teachers nationwide on financial literacy as well as sponsored them on various Continuous Profession­al Developmen­t Programmes through its partner initiative­s.

She says the bank also sponsored 85 teachers for certificat­e courses at the Queensland University through the One Million Teachers initiative as well as trained over 1,000 teachers at its quarterly face-to-face trainings by The Teaching Network Foundation (TTNF). Apart from this, the bank deployed a stateof-the-art e-library at the College of

Education in Ikere-ekiti, Ekiti State and also financed the school expansion and growth of more than 200 primary and secondary schools to the tune of N2 billion.

She added that Sterling Bank financed hostel constructi­on projects in three tertiary institutio­ns and sponsored more than 300 teachers on various local and internatio­nal continuous developmen­t and capacity building programmes.

The bank has helped to improve financial literacy education in young people with the distributi­on of 10,000 copies of the bank’s financial literacy book (Me and my Money) nationwide.

The bank has also expressed its willingnes­s to partner with stakeholde­rs to raise standards in the education sector. In this regard, the bank partnered with Total School Support Seminar and Exhibition (TOSSE) and other stakeholde­rs to organise the 10th edition of the programme in Lagos recently. Obe explained that the One Education unit was set up four years ago by the bank to create a system that continuous­ly seeks out and executes ideas that will champion the advancemen­t of the education sector in Nigeria, adding that the unit, through strategic partnershi­ps, provides services that are relevant across the entire value chain in the educationa­l sector, including but not limited to students, parents, teachers/lecturers, vendors, school administra­tors and non-academic staff members.

Obe says: “We will continue to support operators in the education sector as we collective­ly address some of the issues in the sector. Ultimately, our goal is to improve the quality of graduates churned out by schools at all levels in Nigeria.”

 ??  ?? Abubakar Suleiman, MD of Sterling Bank
Abubakar Suleiman, MD of Sterling Bank

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