Organisation Gives $100 million Grant to Schools in the North

Wed, Sep 7, 2016
By publisher
2 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Education

– 

GLOBAL Partnership for Education, an international organisation, is supporting 12, 179 schools in the North with a $100m (N420m) grant, Adamu Adamu, minister of Education, has disclosed. The beneficiaries of the grant are Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Jigawa and Sokoto states.

According to Adamu, the gesture is part of efforts to enhance quality and standard education in the North.

Speaking at the maiden meeting of the national steering committee of the Nigerian Partnership for Education Project in Abuja, on Tuesday, September 6, the minister stated that the NIPEP was targeted at promoting school effectiveness, ensuring improved learning outcomes, increasing access to basic education for children who were currently out of school particularly girls and strengthening the ability of the managers to plan and manage the system well.

Adamu said that the project was designed to benefit the girl-child at the basic level in public schools, integrated Islamiyya schools and female teachers in the five states in the area of professional teacher-development training.

He said about 96, 954 teacher-development initiatives were still in the pipeline to help improve the quality and standard of classroom instruction.

The minister said: “A total of 12,179 schools are expected to benefit from the school grants while teachers are expected to benefit from about 96,954 teacher-development programme initiatives across the NIPEP states to improve professional knowledge, quality of classroom instruction and teacher assessment skills.

“In addition, 18,421 female teachers are expected to receive scholarships and hopefully become more competent and go on to act as role models for the girl-child. The entire implementation of the project would be at the school level, while the federal ministry of Education will ensure effective coordination and monitoring to guarantee smooth and successful execution.”

Nevertheless, Adamu expressed concern over the unavailability of accurate and credible data saying, “no meaningful development can take place without this.”

—  Sep 7, 2016 @ 13:55 GMT

|

Tags: