FOR Three years, the roofs of two-storey blocks meant to take
twelve classrooms each at the Pin Margaret Secondary School in Calabar
South have been abandoned by the contractor.
All he could do with the millions of naira given to him was to erect
the structures and place some wood on the roof which have been
persistently battered by rain leaving as eyesore. Consequently, over
one thousand of the two thousand students of the school study in
makeshift structures erected around the collapsing perimetre fence
leaving them at the mercy of putrid elements.
That picture reflects what the state of schools in Cross River State
are as many of them particularly those in the urban centres have over
bloated population with as many as seventy students occupying a
classroom meant for thirty pupils.
Seven students share a desk meant for three while in the rural areas,
some primary schools are without desks with pupils making do with the
bare floor as their seating item.
When our correspondent sought the views of some head teachers and
principals in Calabar on the state of primary and secondary education
in the state , the reporter was referred to the
State Ministry of
Education, “where officials there have the permission to speak; they
will tell you all you want to know”.
At the Ministry of Education, Professor Offiong Offiong, the
Commissioner for Education in the state is full of praises for what he
calls the “Cross River State Standard of Education”.
According to him, since the inception of Senator the Liyel Imoke’s
administration in Cross River State in 2007, the educational sector
which was tottering at the precipice of near total collapse following
prolonged periods of utter neglect and abandonment has been revived
through consistent innovation and remodeling.
Conscious of the critical role education plays as a catalyst for
economic transformation and an instrument for socio –political
advancement in any society, focus and emphasis was immediately placed on
assumption of office towards repositioning the sector in the proper
pedestal to produce the right results in spite of its sordid state.
From the basic formative level which is the primary, through to the
secondary stages up to the tertiary levels, comprehensive, rather than
isolated transformation process was adopted through the institution of a
three prong approach to rejuvenate this all important sector.
The first stage towards addressing the deplorable state of affairs was
to assess the level of decay which subsequently proffered and adopted
strategies towards combating the identified problems.
An assessment process named Needs Assessment , was instituted and
seventy five percent of the schools across the state, primary, secondary
and tertiary were visited and monitored for six months to collate data
and information on the state of affairs and the required measures to
bring each school back to life.
When the report came out it was so depressing that When Governor Imoke
went through it, he was said to have taken ill because of the bad
state of things. Without apportioning blame to any single individual or
administration, he went straight to work since the bad state of
affairs had accumulated for several decades which traverse many
administrations.
After a careful analysis of the report, a three prong approach was
adopted in tackling the myriad of problems in the sector :
Infrastructural Development, Capacity Building and Discipline.
To leverage on the plethora of teething issues identified culminated
in the establishing of a standard peculiar to the state and this
became the Cross River State Standard in education where every primary
school must have modern edifice, well designed classroom s, each
with the capacity to seat at least thirty five pupils or students,
fully equipped with modern desks , resource room, library, assembly
hall for extracurricular activities, teachers room, and a laboratory
for basic sciences. In the same vein, at the secondary school level,
each school, apart from the modern edifices and standard classrooms,
must have a fully stocked library, equipped laboratory for ICT and
functional laboratory for each of the three major science subjects:
chemistry, biology and physics.
Conscientiously, the infrastructure in schools such as the buildings,
desks, instructional and learning facilities such as laboratories,
libraries which were near absent in most schools were rehabilitated or
installed While on capacity building, training and retraining was
adopted with every teacher in the state’s school system made to benefit
from one form of training or the other through workshops, seminars and
those without the prerequisite teaching qualifications mandated to
acquire same as the National Certificate in Education ( NCE) became the
minimum standard for teaching in primary schools while first degree
became the minimum for teaching in the secondary schools. On discipline,
several disciplinary measures were adopted beginning from the local
government level through zones up to the ministry.
Professor Offiong said the state has carried out comprehensive
renovation of sixty secondary and one hundred primary schools across the
state. The renovated schools are equipped with desks, libraries,
physics, biology, chemistry and ICT libraries.
The tertiary institutions in the state, The University of Calabar and
the Cross River State University of Technology, CRUTECH, which are now
closed to academic activities following the prolonged strike by
Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universities, ASUU, were only
“universities” in nomenclature as nothing or little took place there
that really lived to the status of university where knowledge is
impacted or acquired. A few years back, the University of Calabar was
sanctioned by the National Youth Service Corps for mobilising below
average graduates for national service; a hawker on campus was once
mobilized for the programme but detected when she could not speak or
write in the English Language in far away Sokoto where she was posted.
The classrooms are decrepit, the student number highly bloated, academic
performance by most students below average and “sorting” the order of
the day in most departments and faculties.
“I know you were here some years back but what we have in this school
now is a far cry from what it used to be. The classroom which fifty of
you occupied and were complaining now seats over a hundred and yet
nothing has been added in terms of desks or expansion of the space,” a
staff at the Registry in the University of Calabar told Vanguard
reporter.
According to her, basic facilities like desks, water, laboratory items
like burner and tripod are not available for teachers to conduct
experiments for the students. “Most of the students in the sciences are
not familiar with the items in their course work and most often the
teachers have to make do with substitutes or improvise and so when the
students graduate and get out there, they confront a lot of issues”.
Mr Eyo Eyo, the Information Officer in the University said the current
Vice Chancellor, Professor, James Epoke has done a lot in the past two
years to bring changes to the University to meet international
standards. “Many structures abandoned for many years have been completed
to address the accommodation problem that faced the school and this has
greatly assisted in improving the learning environment and the quality
of the graduate from here”.
The school, Eyo stated, is ahead of its contemporary in the standard of
teaching and average performance of the students. “Ekpoke has brought a
lot of sanity to the system and I can assure that the picture you have
of this school has changed significantly in the past two years”
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Monday, 23 December 2013
Education: Contractor Abandons Project In Cross River
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