The Federal Government on Monday met with the 36 states Commissioners
for Education, including the F.C.T. Education Secretary where they all
agreed that schools should not be shut down for the coming general
elections.The Minister of Education, Mallam Ibrahim Shekarau, presided
over the meeting, which was held in his office in Abuja.Those in
attendance included stakeholders in the education sector drawn from the
National Universities Commission, the National Board for Technical
Education and the National Commission for Colleges of Education.The
government hinged the decision to keep the schools running on the
academic lapses that were occasioned by the Ebola Virus Disease that
broke out in West Africa and other western nations last year.Shekarau,
however, said state governments would be mobilised to provide adequate
security for boarding institutions marked as polling units for the
elections.He advised that “nobody should anticipate
violence or crisis during the elections as elections had been conducted
in the past while schools were in session.”The stakeholders meeting also
placed on hold mid-term breaks for both the public and private
institutions.Shekarau said, “The Federal Ministry of Education and
managements of NUC, NBTE, NCCE and all other stakeholders in education,
after due consultations and deliberations in respect of whether or not
schools and all institutions should be closed for the period of the
election, hereby resolved as follows:“That all schools and institutions
should remain in session while the elections take place over the
weekends as stipulated by the INEC timetable. It our belief that we have
had elections in the past when schools were in session and in view of
the fact that we are just almost halfway into the second term of the
school calendar, it is not right to close down the schools now.“Again,
we have suffered a lot in our schools during the last Ebola crisis and
many schools are battling to catch up with the lost period and there is
no reason before us that compels us to decide otherwise in closing the
schools.“We also agreed that all schools that are used to having
mid-term breaks that have not yet gone on that mid-term break should put
it on hold. All mid-term breaks in all schools should be suspended for
this term; those on mid-term break already should resume back to their
schools immediately and continue their lessons.“Also in schools where we
have polling stations, particularly boarding schools whose premises are
being used as polling stations, we have decided to call upon the state
governments and Ministries of Education to ensure the provision of
adequate security.”
No comments:
Post a Comment