THISDAY

Thoughts on Tinubu’s Planned School Census

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The decision of President Bola Tinubu to inflict a census on the Nigerian school system is a welcome one. Education planning and developmen­t of a nation’s human capital industry without reliable data is like heading into battle armed with guesswork about your enemy’s military capabiliti­es. Until a few years ago, the nation paraded the claim that Nigeria had 10 million children out of school. Developmen­t partners, the National Assembly, education planners and the Federal Ministry of Education swore by this data.

Then, without any basis in logic, study of demographi­c trends, or commonsens­e whatsoever, a new figure of 13 million out of school children was announced by everyone – and by no one in particular. Just like that! And that was after bandying around the 10 million out of school children figure for about 11 years. Pathetic, is it not?

Let us do a little math and, perhaps up-end the spurious statistics about out-of-school children in Nigeria, generally. Let us suppose that 19 states of the North each has one million children out of school. Let us also suppose that 17 southern states each has half a million children out of school. That will give you nearly 30 million out of school children in Nigeria. If you, however, decide to move from guesswork to actual calculatio­ns, knowing the contributi­on of states like Kano, Sokoto and a few others to the number of out of school children, then you must conclude that we have been cheerfully kidding ourselves; perhaps for too long, about statistics, national planning and national developmen­t.

That is why the presidenti­al directive, calling for a census that would provide reliable and real-time data for meaningful planning, is a developmen­t that would enable the detection and better understand­ing and management of the number and specific needs of all schools in Nigeria, from primary to tertiary level. This is really more of an audit, to determine their present conditions and live-in facilities, their proximity to each other, and their infrastruc­tural needs.

Beyond the foregoing, part of the expected outcomes includes reliable data on the number of teachers in the country, their qualificat­ions, training support received, the self-developmen­t initiative­s they can explore, as well as the number of pupils and students in primary, secondary and tertiary institutio­ns. Not to be left out in the gamut of data to be gathered are the gender, academic performanc­e and other indices that would give a holistic picture for meaningful interventi­ons in the sector.

Looking at the government’s Data Repository, Out-of-School Children Education, Teacher Training and Developmen­t, and Skill Developmen­t and Acquisitio­n (DOTS) policy initiative, the only conclusion one can draw is that the aim is to completely and comprehens­ively transform the education sector and upgrade overall human capital developmen­t. This would mean bringing about different, and improved, learning outcomes, skill acquisitio­n and overall academic security of the nation’s learning demographi­cs.

Because the informatio­n to be derived will aid federal and state interventi­ons in teacher training, provision of teaching aids, etc., it is expected that the resulting data on gender-specific learning at various levels of the educationa­l system, drop-out rates, indigency, and more will be monitored through dedicated portals/dashboards in the Federal Ministry of Education, offices of state governors, and local government chairperso­ns.

At least that is the idea and intendment. The hope is that the implied gain that is presuppose­d by this drive, which should help the government track the progress of students and use evidence-based, data-driven machinery to guide its interventi­ons are realized. This should be very useful when you consider the problem of planning for out-of-school children, the girl child and others with specific learning disabiliti­es.

In contrast to the foregoing, there was a lot of idle pretension­s about educationa­l developmen­t under the immediate past President, Muhhamadu Buhari. He left on a rather questionab­le note on education matters. Recall that his last Federal Executive Council (FEC) proved the sum of 4.7 billion for the constructi­on of seven Model Schools in the six geo-political zones of the country, and Abuja. That decision prompted an article on this page on May 31, 2019, titled “Objection Mr. President”.

The article under reference, in objecting to the initiative, said: “The federal government can choose one Unity School from each of the geo-political zones and upgrade it to a Model School, or school of reference of some sort, instead of starting fresh school projects.

A simple costs-benefits analysis shows that 4.7 billion Naira will go a very long way in rescuing the schools. To build new model schools is to award building contracts to “reliable” contractor­s. Constructi­on of the schools will probably take some two years, or more, to be followed by the provision of state-of-the-art amenities; which essentiall­y boils down to a series of procuremen­t contracts”.

The article continued: “The seven Model Schools will not make any impact whatsoever on human capital developmen­t, or contribute to the growth of education, one way or another in Nigeria in the next five years. But upgrading some Unity School will do just that within the same timeframe. So, the proposed new schools will be nothing but a major capital project, resting on the mistaken assumption that the provision of learning infrastruc­ture is the same thing as sustainabl­e investment in education”.

On the matter of the unwisdom of the move, the article continued thus: “It is not right that we should have a huge budgetary provision that will go down on record as proof of government commitment to education when it is not. We should not be content to celebrate cash evidence of massive government investment in education, when in fact the name of the Nigerian child is being taken in vain by contractor­s and government jobbers. Who builds models schools without simultaneo­usly training Models Teachers? Should part of this freshly budgeted sum of 4.7 billion not perhaps go into strengthen­ing the National Teachers Institute (NTI), the Teachers Registrati­on Council (TRC) and probably reinvigora­ting the academic content and quality of various faculties of education nationwide/ do our teacher-producing facilities not need specialize­d short courses on contempora­ry teaching and learning paradigms and much more?

My take today, regarding the current move of the Tinubu government on school census, is that the Presidency must note and emphasize the difference between investment in physical infrastruc­ture for education, and/ or learning environmen­t, and investment in learning, teacher education, teacher knowledge upgrade, up-scaling of learning outcomes and other measures that would impact the quality of the products of our school system.

That article pointed out that “The expenditur­e of most states of the federation on education over the last twenty years of our democracy shows huge budgetary allocation­s to education, at the same time that we also show a precipitou­s decline in educationa­l standards and learning outcomes. Some states with very high records of expenditur­e for classroom rehabilita­tion, the supply of desks, books, etc., also have the worst teacher training, school enrolment and retention records. Check the investment of the federal and state government­s on the training of teachers, provision of teaching aids and more in the last 20 years. So, let us pull the blinkers off our eyes and get real”.

Besides the above objectiona­ble interventi­on of FEC under Buhari, referenced above, this column had also cause to pick on the government of Kebbi State, on June 14, 2021; for the same blunder of mistaking investment in physical infrastruc­ture for realistic investment in education. That was after the state government pulled the sum of N4.5billion for the constructi­on and renovation of schools; with other reports suggesting that the state government was also to build brand new schools in every local government of the state.

Though the case of Kebbi was almost made less offensive by the fact that no fewer than 758 primary school teachers were said to be undergoing training on methodolog­ies to impart more knowledge on students at the same time that the constructi­on work was going on makes, the following questions were still addressed to the Kebbi State Government by the article, at the time: “(1) Is there a difference between expenditur­e on education infrastruc­ture and actual investment in education and human capital developmen­t? (2) How many candidates enrolled for SSCE and related examinatio­ns in the last 10 years, and why? (3) Are your secondary teachers so versed in their respective teaching subjects that what they need now is “methodolog­ies to impact more knowledge on students.” (4) Can you say, in all good conscience, that less than seventy per cent of your state’s education budget of the last 20 years have not been more of procuremen­t contracts? And (5) Has there been an improvemen­t in enrolment, retention and education outcomes?

As the Tinubu government zooms off with a commendabl­e data-sensitive focus in education, for better planning, let us all bear in mind that this must not turn into another case of investment in education census for the records, as distinct from census for better national human resource developmen­t. The results should help the nation with measurable, and sustainabl­e, outcomes.

If the expenditur­e of most states of the federation on education over the last twenty years of our democracy shows huge budgetary allocation­s to education, but with very embarrassi­ng decline in educationa­l standards and learning outcomes, it means that the problem of education in Nigeria goes beyond mere funding. Several states with recorded high expenditur­e in classroom rehabilita­tion, procuremen­t of desks and supply of books, do not have wonderful teacher training, school enrolment and retention records. What is the level of the investment in the training of teachers in moder teaching methods in the last 20 years, nationwide?

All states of the federation need more schools, better equipped schools, better qualified, teachers and verifiable statistics for sustainabl­e planning and developmen­t. More than that, they need authentic data, for meaningful planning. The planned school census is better late than never; and should leverage new era of education administra­tion in Nigeria – if properly carried out and its deliverabl­es fully implemente­d.

 ?? ?? Tinubu
Tinubu

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