Defiled by father and detained by police officers

By Florence Norah

Kuria West Sub-County police officers in Kenya, are on the spot for illegally holding a 12 year-old defilement victim for six days to shield a colleague suspected to have committed the crime.
 
The victim, name is withheld, narrated the ugly ordeal she experienced when she went to seek for school fees from her father who ended up defiling her. She said her father, a police officer who was until recently was a bodyguard to a senior politician in Migori County, committed  the heinous act on November 1  this year at 9am. The man who hails from Nyamosense – Komosoko ward is currently on suspension from Kenya Police Service because of disciplinary issues.
 
“I had been sent home for Sh13, 890 but since my parents separated, my grandmother with whom I stay with sent me to collect fees from him,” the victim narrated on Monday.
 
She was cleaning utensils before her father defiled her in the bedroom and later rushed to Nyabohanse Police post to report the incident where her nightmare started.
 
“I reported the incident to a female police officer who called my father and the area chief and tried to persuade me to forgive him,” she said.

At about 2pm she was transferred to Isebania Police Station where she was placed in a cell and two hours later she was taken to Nyayo Hospital where she was tested and given some medicine.
 
The minor stayed at the police custody for six days, sleeping on the cold floor with adults, as police officers at the station allowed her father to constantly visit and threaten her to drop the case. When we visited her on the same evening she was arrested, the officers declined to release her saying the national flag at the station had already been lowered and we were not allowed to see her,” said her grandmother.
 
The grandmother and her mother made several attempts to have her released during the six days she was in custody to no avail. They demanded to know why she was not getting charged or released but the officers kept on threatening and persuading them to drop the matter.
 
“We just need justice for our daughter, because we feel insulted when a victim is the one who was being held in the cells while the suspects walks scot free accessing the girl as we were denied any chance of
seeing her,” the grandmother said.
The victim is now staying with a guardian, only identified by one name to protect the her, where the press held the interviews,
 
The guardian and the grandmother claim the medical examination report, P3 form, police statements and medical reports were tampered with severally to bungle the case.
 
“They held the victim for six days to try and hide evidence and even police records and the occurrence book entries were incorrect,” said the guardian. 

On November 5, Martin Mwongera a Senior Prosecution Counsel wrote to the OCS Isebania saying “there is no sufficient evidence compiled thus far for us to charge the suspect with the proposed offence.” Nyamosense-Komosoko MCA Susan Mohabe however wants justice for the victim and the family “whose attempt to seek any justice have been met by constant threats from police officers”
 
Mohabe said Kuria West police officers are yet to arrest other suspects who gang-raped a 70 years old grandmother a week ago.
 
Senior police officers at Isebania said they were aware of the girls case but instead referred us to Kuria West OCPD Bernard Muriuki  and Migori County Commander Celestino Nyaga.
 
Mr. Muriuku said attempts to take the suspect to Kehancha Law Courts twice on November 5 and 19 failed after the ODPP said there was no evidence.

The police boss also he was not aware if the victim had been held at the Isebania Police Station for six days or even if the officers tampered with evidence.
 
“We want to duplicate all the files including evidence and statements back to ODPP for review for the minor to get justice,” Muriuki said.

Nyaga said they will carry out internal investigations over the matter and ensure the minor and the suspect are served with justice.

On Monday morning when the press was following the story, police arrested a 14 years old who allegedly defiled and killed a four years old girl.

School feeding: FG pays food suppliers in 33 states

By Okechukwu Nnodim, Abuja

The Federal Government on Sunday said it had paid suppliers of foodstuff and cooks in 33 participating states under the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme.

Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Farouq, said the payment, which was for January 2020, would ensure that the feeding of the 9.9 million pupils in the 33 states and the Federal Capital Territory starts immediately schools resume in two weeks time.

She explaining that the payment covered the cost of feeding the school pupils in the participating states, adding that the funds were released in December to give the suppliers and cooks adequate time to procure and stock foodstuff.

Farouq said, “We believe that paying these funds early is critical to the success of the programme. We do not want any hitches and we want to ensure that the school children are fed on time and without any excuses.”

The minister warned that the Federal Government would not accept any drop in the nutritional quality of the meals given to the children.

She said the Federal Government had gladly received reports of improved attendance in the schools and improved hygiene among the pupils.

These outcomes, according to Farouq, were some of the reasons for setting up the school feeding programme.

She noted that under the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme a total of 9,963,726 pupils were fed in 54,942 schools across the country and were served by 107,862 suppliers and cooks.

The programme is one of the components of the National Social Investment Programme of the Federal Government.

The NSIP, which was previously under the Presidency, was recently moved to the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development.

Prepare for Resumption

By Anthony Ororho

Schools will soon resume and those tender and loving souls will return to school. Now ask yourself:

Why am I a teacher?

Do I really love children?

Do I see these young ones as Leaders of Tomorrow?

Can I invest in the future of these little angels?

Yes children are like angels, if we treat them well, nurture them like yam tendrils, they will curl around that love and grow taller than us. Then they will feed us with giant tubers of yam when we are old and cannot go to the farm (classroom) anymore.

Every teacher is a farmer. A farmer’s greatest virtue is PATIENCE.

For example, a farmer will clear the bushland, burn the grass, plant the seed(s), wait for the rain to come and water his seeds. Over time, little shoots appear slightly above soil level.

But the grasses will try to choke them. The farmer returns to weed the farm, remove the weeds and burn them. He continues to pray for the rain to keep dropping to annoint his now tender crops.

Did you notice the metamorphorsis?

The seeds have turned to crops. When the crops mature and are ripe for harvesting, the farmer takes his family and any other hand(s) that he can get or hire, to the farm, to harvest his crops.

Picture the farmer grinning from ear to ear as he takes in his harvest of that SEASON.

So it takes a whole season for crops to be ready for harvesting?

How long then does it take for a child to be productive?

Teachers are Human Farmers!

Teachers are Nurses!!

Teachers are Parents!!!

I Love Teachers.

Prepare for Resumption

For Teachers Only

Schools will soon resume and those tender and loving souls will return to school. Now ask yourself:

Why am I a teacher?

Do I really love children?

Do I see these young ones as Leaders of Tomorrow?

Can I invest in the future of these little angels?

Yes children are like angels, if we treat them well, nurture them like yam tendrils, they will curl around that love and grow taller than us. Then they will feed us with giant tubers of yam when we are old and cannot go to the farm (classroom) anymore.

Every teacher is a farmer. A farmer’s greatest virtue is PATIENCE.

For example, a farmer will clear the bushland, burn the grass, plant the seed(s), wait for the rain to come and water his seeds. Over time, little shoots appear slightly above soil level.

But the grasses will try to choke them. The farmer returns to weed the farm, remove the weeds and burn them. He continues to pray for the rain to keep dropping to annoint his now tender crops.

Did you notice the metamorphorsis?

The seeds have turned to crops. When the crops mature and are ripe for harvesting, the farmer takes his family and any other hand(s) that he can get or hire, to the farm, to harvest his crops.

Picture the farmer grinning from ear to ear as he takes in his harvest of that SEASON.

So it takes a whole season for crops to be ready for harvesting?

How long then does it take for a child to be productive?

Teachers are Human Farmers!

Teachers are Nurses!!

Teachers are Parents!!!

I Love Teachers.

A Reminder to All Teachers

By Anthony Ororho

Schools will soon resume and those tender and loving souls will return to school. Now ask yourself:

Why am I a teacher?

Do I really love children?

Do I see these young ones as Leaders of Tomorrow?

Can I invest in the future of these little angels?

Yes children are like angels, if we treat them well, nurture them like yam tendrils, they will curl around that love and grow taller than us. Then they will feed us with giant tubers of yam when we are old and cannot go to the farm (classroom) anymore.

Every teacher is a farmer. A farmer’s greatest virtue is PATIENCE.

For example, a farmer will clear the bushland, burn the grass, plant the seed(s), wait for the rain to come and water his seeds. Over time, little shoots appear slightly above soil level.

But the grasses will try to choke them. The farmer returns to weed the farm, remove the weeds and burn them. He continues to pray for the rain to keep dropping to annoint his now tender crops.

Did you notice the metamorphorsis?

The seeds have turned to crops. When the crops mature and are ripe for harvesting, the farmer takes his family and any other hand(s) that he can get or hire, to the farm, to harvest his crops.

Picture the farmer grinning from ear to ear as he takes in his harvest of that SEASON.

So it takes a whole season for crops to be ready for harvesting?

How long then does it take for a child to be productive?

Teachers are Human Farmers!

Teachers are Nurses!!

Teachers are Parents!!!

I Love Teachers.

Bankers Body Want Education Development Bank

By Nike Popoola

*Nelson Olagundoye

The Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria has reiterated its call for the creation and full implementation of Education Development Bank to facilitate the achievement of 21 per cent budget ratio for education prescribed by United Nations Development Programme.

 The call was contained in a statement signed by the Head, Corporate Communications & External Relations, CIBN, Nelson Olagundoye.

The President, CIBN, Dr. Uche Olowu, who made the call during a stakeholders’ engagement with the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari, (retd.), said that the bank would manage all subsisting intervention funds set up toward ensuring education for all and enhancing its quality in the country.

He said the establishment of the bank would provide the platform for all the strategic stakeholders in the education sector to access short to long- term loans at a single digit interest.

The Institute expressed concerns on the erroneous public impression that banks were making huge profits at the expenses of the other sectors of the economy without any empirical evidence.

Olowu expressed concerns on the banking industry on multiplicity of taxes by various governments which had continued to hamper their business operations and provisions of Land Use Act, impacting negatively on their abilities to extend mortgage- backed facilities.

He appealed for the urgent harmonisation of the taxes to reduce the burden on the banks and review of the Land Use Act to state property and security rights, and address the bureaucratic process occasioned by governor’s consent.

While the CIBN president acknowledged Buhari’s political will and tenacity of purpose to rebuild the economy, and address the security challenges in the various parts of the country, he reaffirmed the commitment of the banking and finance industry towards ensuring a stable and secured financial system.

According to the statement, Buhari, who received the CIBN team told them that he was proud to note that Nigeria has the most vibrant , creative and innovative banking sector in Africa.

He commended the industry’s collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria,  which had been a key anchor to his government’s food security programme.

In the statement, Buhari said he was aware of the challenges that hindered the banks’ abilities to lend to the real sector, and explained that his government was also facing such challenges in the implementation of its various housing programmes.

Buhari urged the state governments to assist in addressing the issues by simplifying and rationalising land matters while he promised to look into other concerns of the industry.

He stated that he was proud to see the branches of Nigerian banks when he visited other African countries.

Free education that is not free

By Michael Omisore

Gradually, common sense appears to be prevailing as some parents are withdrawing their children from private schools to public schools due to the renewed effort by many state governments to offer free education at the basic and secondary school levels. This is bound to happen because of the economic situation of the country as families that can no longer cope with the fees charged by private schools are either enrolling their children in other private schools with less tuition or crossing totally to no-tuition public schools.

The move though gradual, from private to public schools, might be a cure to the rather ugly development of students being sent out of school as a result of their parents’ inability to pay their tuition, which is no longer an uncommon experience in private schools. As a parent, it breaks my heart to see students sent home from school because of tuition. And as an advocate of affordable education, I feel it is beyond the parents in question. The fault can actually be laid on the doorsteps of every adult.

Whether we realise it or not, the adult generation is failing the younger ones so far we still have a chunk of our children population not in school or a percentage of those in school being affected by tuition fees. Basic education is a constitutional right of every child. That right for every child, not just for one’s own children, ought to be upheld by every well-meaning adult citizen. There is a collective responsibility here, to ensure all children are educated to an appreciable level. It is what the adult generation, led by its government, owes the young ones.

It is good to know that state governments are rising to the challenge of providing free education at all cost, which may have started impacting on the number of students in their schools. But making education free, as commendable as that is, is not good enough. As a matter of fact, it can be a curse rather than a blessing if the other aspect mentioned here is not factored in. In an article published on this page titled, A case for standard and affordable education, I stressed that basic education should be defined by two parameters – being affordable as well as qualitative. In a situation where it is only affordable or free but of low quality standard, the result at the end may totally undo its essence and relevance.

Free education that is not qualitative is not really free. It is actually ‘expensive’ in the sense and manner one will say someone is cracking an expensive joke. Meaning, the joke may be funny but it is actually hurtful in some ways. So, free but low quality education may wreak more havoc than good at the end by its products, the gross number of ill-prepared students who would not have had adequate learning experiences enough to make them great professionals in their field. Regarding the future and overall outcome and effect on society, free but substandard education can really be a joke.

Consequently, parents that are now quick to withdraw their children to public schools must realise that their mates that are still somehow finding the means to pay the school fees demanded by private schools are doing so not necessarily because it is convenient financially but because they see qualitative education as a worthy investment and sacrifice they have to make for their children. It is not throwing money away if the value for the money is being delivered. Such parents must still be responsible enough to augment the basic training giving free to their children in public schools with unique learning exposures and hope the government really matches affordability with quality standard so their children will not be disadvantaged in future.

However, it is not only public schools that need attention regarding quality standard of education. Due to lapses in regulation, not all private schools can be said to be providing the optimum value in quality more so now that many see school-running as a good business venture and not necessarily an enterprise to deliver value before getting due returns, a development that is watering down delivery in the private school system.

The day of reckoning may have come for such bad examples in the private school system with the revitalising effort on public schools by state governments. The message should be clear to every private school owner: Deliver value to the tune of the fees you charge or lose students. If the competition by public schools, other low paying but value-adding private schools and school initiators with a model that is both affordable and of quality, continues and heightens the more in the next few years, some private schools will have to close shop completely.

Now, for private schools delivering value for the fees they charge, there is really no cause for alarm. Basic education is a very large market. And a good school situated in the right environment will always have a share of students that can keep it in business. Even back then in the 70s and 80s before the collapse of public schools, there were private schools though much fewer in number. And they had their relevance as parents that wanted the extra they gave preferred them to public schools. So, no cause for alarm if much value is being given. Any private school management that is concerned and worried now about pupils leaving its school for low or no-paying schools definitely needs to revisit its vision or mission statement to see whether there is added value in it that will make parents to prefer it, and if such values are really being delivered. And by value, I mean positive ones, not exposing students to criminality through cheating and exam malpractice!

Back to the public school system, which is the main focus here. If government as the owner of public schools is really serious with education, it must match affordability with quality. And government cannot afford to go solo on this, because there are several gaps to be filled to ensure quality, bearing in mind that there are over 10 million out-of-school children and a multiple of that figure already in school but need to get the best of education.

For instance, in another article published on this page a few years ago titled, The Role of Alumni in Resuscitating Education, I suggested a system or structure whereby schools older than 25 years can be largely supported by their old students. But that model will not work without a transparent private enterprise between government and alumni bodies ensuring the system is well-effected.

Public-private partnership is key to ensuring quality in school management, learning techniques and their implementation, teacher training and motivation, curriculum research and review, environmental friendliness, having proper ratios and metrics for good education, drilling essential cognitive and non-cognitive aspects of learning into students, handing unique learning opportunities, mass mobilisation for enrolment and support services for good learning outcomes.

All these the government cannot do alone. In retrospect, the 6-3-3-4 system, a workable system by all indices, has not really yielded its main gains in our country partly because an effective private-public partnership and collaboration was not put in place when it was introduced in the 80s. The reality is that things have gone so bad with our education, worse than how it was a few decades ago, that government must engage relevant private bodies for effective system running that will realise qualitative education. Neglecting such interventions and claiming to be on top of the education challenges facing today’s students is all a joke.

Omisore, an education consultant and author of the Smart and Brilliant Writing series.

How Using Social Media Affects Teenagers

EN ESPAÑOL

Experts say kids are growing up with more anxiety and less self-esteem.

By Rachel Ehmke

*Rachel Ehmke

Many parents worry about how exposure to technology might affect toddlers developmentally. We know our preschoolers are picking up new social and cognitive skills at a stunning pace, and we don’t want hours spent glued to an iPad to impede that. But adolescence is an equally important period of rapid development, and too few of us are paying attention to how our teenagers’ use of technology—much more intense and intimate than a 3-year-old playing with dad’s iPhone—is affecting them. In fact, experts worry that the social media and text messages that have become so integral to teenage life are promoting anxiety and lowering self-esteem.

Young people report that there might be good reason to worry. A survey conducted by the Royal Society for Public Health asked 14-24 year olds in the UK how social media platforms impacted their health and wellbeing. The survey results found that Snapchat, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram all led to increased feelings of depression, anxiety, poor body image and loneliness.

Indirect communication:

Teens are masters at keeping themselves occupied in the hours after school until way past bedtime. When they’re not doing their homework (and when they are) they’re online and on their phones, texting, sharing, trolling, scrolling, you name it. Of course before everyone had an Instagram account teens kept themselves busy, too, but they were more likely to do their chatting on the phone, or in person when hanging out at the mall. It may have looked like a lot of aimless hanging around, but what they were doing was experimenting, trying out skills, and succeeding and failing in tons of tiny real-time interactions that kids today are missing out on. For one thing, modern teens are learning to do most of their communication while looking at a screen, not another person.

“As a species we are very highly attuned to reading social cues,” says Dr. Catherine Steiner-Adair, a clinical psychologist and author of The Big Disconnect. “There’s no question kids are missing out on very critical social skills. In a way, texting and online communicating—it’s not like it creates a nonverbal learning disability, but it puts everybody in a nonverbal disabled context, where body language, facial expression, and even the smallest kinds of vocal reactions are rendered invisible.”

Lowering the risks:

Certainly speaking indirectly creates a barrier to clear communication, but that’s not all. Learning how to make friends is a major part of growing up, and friendship requires a certain amount of risk-taking. This is true for making a new friend, but it’s also true for maintaining friendships. When there are problems that need to be faced—big ones or small ones—it takes courage to be honest about your feelings and then hear what the other person has to say. Learning to effectively cross these bridges is part of what makes friendship fun and exciting, and also scary. “Part of healthy self-esteem is knowing how to say what you think and feel even when you’re in disagreement with other people or it feels emotionally risky,” notes Dr. Steiner-Adair.

But when friendship is conducted online and through texts, kids are doing this in a context stripped of many of the most personal—and sometimes intimidating—aspects of communication. It’s easier to keep your guard up when you’re texting, so less is at stake. You aren’t hearing or seeing the effect that your words are having on the other person. Because the conversation isn’t happening in real time, each party can take more time to consider a response. No wonder kids say calling someone on the phone is “too intense”—it requires more direct communication, and if you aren’t used to that it may well feel scary.

If kids aren’t getting enough practice relating to people and getting their needs met in person and in real time, many of them will grow up to be adults who are anxious about our species’ primary means of communication—talking. And of course social negotiations only get riskier as people get older and begin navigating romantic relationships and employment.

Cyberbullying and the imposter syndrome:

The other big danger that comes from kids communicating more indirectly is that it has gotten easier to be cruel. “Kids text all sorts of things that you would never in a million years contemplate saying to anyone’s face,” says Dr. Donna Wick, a clinical and developmental psychologist. She notes that this seems to be especially true of girls, who typically don’t like to disagree with each other in “real life.”

“You hope to teach them that they can disagree without jeopardizing the relationship, but what social media is teaching them to do is disagree in ways that are more extreme and do jeopardize the relationship. It’s exactly what you don’t want to have happen,” she says.

Dr. Steiner-Adair agrees that girls are particularly at risk. “Girls are socialized more to compare themselves to other people, girls in particular, to develop their identities, so it makes them more vulnerable to the downside of all this.” She warns that a lack of solid self-esteem is often to blame. “We forget that relational aggression comes from insecurity and feeling awful about yourself, and wanting to put other people down so you feel better.”

Peer acceptance is a big thing for adolescents, and many of them care about their image as much as a politician running for office, and to them it can feel as serious. Add to that the fact that kids today are getting actual polling data on how much people like them or their appearance via things like “likes.” It’s enough to turn anyone’s head. Who wouldn’t want to make herself look cooler if she can? So kids can spend hours pruning their online identities, trying to project an idealized image. Teenage girls sort through hundreds of photos, agonizing over which ones to post online. Boys compete for attention by trying to out-gross one other, pushing the envelope as much as they can in the already disinhibited atmosphere online. Kids gang up on each other.

Adolescents have always been doing this, but with the advent of social media they are faced with more opportunities—and more traps—than ever before. When kids scroll through their feeds and see how great everyone seems, it only adds to the pressure. We’re used to worrying about the impractical ideals that photoshopped magazine models give to our kids, but what happens with the kid next door is photoshopped, too? Even more confusing, what about when your own profile doesn’t really represent the person that you feel like you are on the inside?

“Adolescence and the early twenties in particular are the years in which you are acutely aware of the contrasts between who you appear to be and who you think you are,” says Dr. Wick. “It’s similar to the ‘imposter syndrome’ in psychology. As you get older and acquire more mastery, you begin to realize that you actually are good at some things, and then you feel that gap hopefully narrow. But imagine having your deepest darkest fear be that you aren’t as good as you look, and then imagine needing to look that good all the time! It’s exhausting.”

As Dr. Steiner-Adair explains, “Self-esteem comes from consolidating who you are.” The more identities you have, and the more time you spend pretending to be someone you aren’t, the harder it’s going to be to feel good about yourself.

Stalking (and being ignored):

Another big change that has come with new technology and especially smart phones is that we are never really alone. Kids update their status, share what they’re watching, listening to, and reading, and have apps that let their friends know their specific location on a map at all times. Even if a person isn’t trying to keep his friends updated, he’s still never out of reach of a text message. The result is that kids feel hyperconnected with each other. The conversation never needs to stop, and it feels like there’s always something new happening.

“Whatever we think of the ‘relationships’ maintained and in some cases initiated on social media, kids never get a break from them,” notes Dr. Wick. “And that, in and of itself, can produce anxiety. Everyone needs a respite from the demands of intimacy and connection; time alone to regroup, replenish and just chill out. When you don’t have that, it’s easy to become emotionally depleted, fertile ground for anxiety to breed.”

It’s also surprisingly easy to feel lonely in the middle of all that hyperconnection. For one thing, kids now know with depressing certainty when they’re being ignored. We all have phones and we all respond to things pretty quickly, so when you’re waiting for a response that doesn’t come, the silence can be deafening. The silent treatment might be a strategic insult or just the unfortunate side effect of an online adolescent relationship that starts out intensely but then fades away.

“In the old days when a boy was going to break up with you, he had to have a conversation with you. Or at least he had to call,” says Dr. Wick. “These days he might just disappear from your screen, and you never get to have the ‘What did I do?’ conversation.” Kids are often left imagining the worst about themselves.

But even when the conversation doesn’t end, being in a constant state of waiting can still provoke anxiety. We can feel ourselves being put on the back burner, we put others back there, and our very human need to communicate is effectively delegated there, too.

What should parents do?:

Both experts interviewed for this article agreed that the best thing parents can do to minimize the risks associated with technology is to curtail their own consumption first. It’s up to parents to set a good example of what healthy computer usage looks like. Most of us check our phones or our email too much, out of either real interest or nervous habit. Kids should be used to seeing our faces, not our heads bent over a screen. Establish technology-free zones in the house and technology-free hours when no one uses the phone, including mom and dad. “Don’t walk in the door after work in the middle of a conversation,” Dr. Steiner-Adair advises. “Don’t walk in the door after work, say ‘hi’ quickly, and then ‘just check your email.’ In the morning, get up a half hour earlier than your kids and check your email then. Give them your full attention until they’re out the door. And neither of you should be using phones in the car to or from school because that’s an important time to talk.”

Not only does limiting the amount of time you spend plugged in to computers provide a healthy counterpoint to the tech-obsessed world, it also strengthens the parent-child bond and makes kids feel more secure. Kids need to know that you are available to help them with their problems, talk about their day, or give them a reality check.

“It is the mini-moments of disconnection, when parents are too focused on their own devices and screens, that dilute the parent-child relationship,” Dr. Steiner-Adair warns. And when kids start turning to the Internet for help or to process whatever happened during the day, you might not like what happens. “Tech can give your children more information that you can, and it doesn’t have your values,” notes Dr. Steiner-Adair. “It won’t be sensitive to your child’s personality, and it won’t answer his question in a developmentally appropriate way.”

In addition Dr. Wick advises delaying the age of first use as much as possible. “I use the same advice here that I use when talking about kids and alcohol—try to get as far as you can without anything at all.” If your child is on Facebook, Dr. Wick says that you should be your child’s friend and monitor her page. But she advises against going through text messages unless there is cause for concern. “If you have a reason to be worried then okay, but it better be a good reason. I see parents who are just plain old spying on their kids. Parents should begin by trusting their children. To not even give your kid the benefit of the doubt is incredibly damaging to the relationship. You have to feel like your parents think you’re a good kid.”

Offline, the gold standard advice for helping kids build healthy self-esteem is to get them involved in something that they’re interested in. It could be sports or music or taking apart computers or volunteering—anything that sparks an interest and gives them confidence. When kids learn to feel good about what they can do instead of how they look and what they own, they’re happier and better prepared for success in real life. That most of these activities also involve spending time interacting with peers face-to-face is just the icing on the cake.

*Rachel Ehmke is a graduate from the University of Chicago and is the senior writer for the Childmind.org.

Sustain school feeding programme by all means – Ex-minister Adeniran

By Tobi Aworinde, Abuja 

*Beneficiaries of the school feeding programme

A former Minister of Education, Prof. Tunde Adeniran, has urged the Federal Government of Nigeria, to do whatever it will take to sustain the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme.

 The feeding programme in the North-East reportedly experienced setbacks with vendors complaining of “lack of money” from government to prepare and supply the meals to the schoolchildren. As a result, attendance in primary schools in the geopolitical zone was said to have declined.

Adeniran, in an interview with Punch correspondent, however, stated that the regime of the President, Major-General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), should ensure that the school feeding programme was not abolished.

 He said, “I believe the school feeding programme is a very laudable one which should be sustained. Once we have those policies, they should be sustained. I feel very strongly that whatever can be done must be done to keep those children in school because that is the key to the future.

“That is what will liberate them from poverty and ignorance, and that is what will also save the country’s future from insecurity. So, everything must be done to ensure that the programme is not ended.

“But it is a problem for children who are particularly of the basic prime age. They need to be given proper food and education. They need to be given livelihoods that will take them away from poverty and insecurity in the future.”

RESUSCITATING THE DWINDLING EDUCATION SECTOR IN NIGERIA

By Anthony Ororho

That the education sector in Nigeria needs doctoring is no more in doubt and many a concerned citizen has expressed his desire to see the situation reversed. Sad to say however, the situation has remained unchanged over the years. Only recently, the cut-off mark for the Unified Matriculation Examination (UTME), for University entrants was reduced to 180 marks and that for Polytechnics, pegged at 150. The question on many lips is “Will this cut in requirement really boost the standard of education and the ability of Nigerian students to perform better?

Be that as it may, this writer will want to proffer some solution to the problem as seen from the perspective of an educator.

First, let us look at the issue of Teacher Encouragement. The teacher as it were is in loco parentis, this simply means-in place of the parent. It is instructive to note that while the pupil is in school, the teacher is the parent of the schooling child. For a start, the teacher’s dignity must be restored and the only way to do this in a society that is hard core capitalist, the teacher must be seen by the schooling child as a respectable citizen-one who is not a beggar, a man or woman who can afford the basic necessities of life.

No child on this planet would respect a teacher who looks like poor imitation of his banker or oil company father or mother. That is to say, for the teacher to earn some respect, he has to look like a model worthy of emulation. A situation where a teacher looks like a domestic assistant to the child’s mother, will only make the child treat the teacher like a servant. Therefore, the teacher’s reward is right here on earth and, not in heaven. It should be the priority of the Ministry of Education to work closely with the Ministry of Labour to fix a reasonable salary for teachers nationwide.

Second, is the issue of professionalism. The role of the Teacher Registration Council of Nigeria (TRCN) as regulator should be seen as sacrosanct. The TRCN should not sit in one place and expect its rules to be obeyed by every school proprietor and prospective teacher. A teacher, like a doctor, should be qualified and completely equipped to do his job. This means that s/he would have passed through a teacher training institution of learning, should be a good classroom manager, should be equipped with at least a basic knowledge of psychology, the doctrines of great educators, sociology and methodology i.e. teaching methodology side-by-side the various learning styles of pupils.

Third, is the issue of regular training for the classroom teacher. The importance of this third factor cannot be overemphasized. This is so because, like a good footballer, a good teacher must be exposed to new methods of teaching, new innovations in teaching and learning, and, this will include a good knowledge of modern and digital instructional materials. It is disheartening to note that many a school teacher, even in some of our schools that pride themselves as international secondary schools, have never interacted with an electronic interactive board. The vast majority are not Information and Communications Technology (ICT) compliant.

While serving as principal in one of the “international” secondary schools in this country, this writer discovered that some 85 per cent of the teaching staff could not type their examination questions on computer, attach the document and send as email to the principal’s email box. In view of this discovery, the principal suggested that the proprietor arranged for him to organize free training for the teachers. That was two years ago and the teachers who remained in the school after the principal’s contract had run out, are still computer illiterate.

The above experience underscores the importance of regular training for teachers. This is one area that is as relevant as can be imagined. The TRCN must ensure and enforce compliance with its regulations and schools that fail to comply with TRCN regulations can be sanctioned. This, no doubt will restore some sanity and increase the quality of education in Nigeria.

Another factor is the attitude of Parents-yes parents! A parent who wants qualitative education for his/her child must ensure that s/he is faithful to the course. It is really appalling to note that some parents pay no attention to the up-bringing of their children. It is not wrong for parents to work hard to earn a living but when work takes both parents away from their children that neither parent spends time with the children, we find a situation where they gain the world and lose their children to the pleasures of life.

Imagine a situation where a father is a sailor and the mother, an air hostess. To find a smooth life style, they drop their children in the boarding house, only seeing them on school open days and perhaps once a while on holidays. To compensate these children, their parents send them to the United Kingdom or the United States on summer holidays; buy them state-of-the-art electronic gadgets. Their peers become spider man, avatar and all sorts of comic characters. And when they start to behave comically, the parents turn around and blame the school, claiming that they pay so much as school fees.

Sometimes when the children revolt against their parents, rather than take stock, such parents accuse the children of being ungrateful. “I work so hard to provide for your needs. Yet all you do is getting yourself in trouble.” Parents, your children need your loving attention! How much is a warm hug from a father/mother? When last did you tell her ‘I love you?’

Moreover, the government should build more teacher training institutions and grant incentives to owners of private teacher training institutions in the country. It is common knowledge that when Nigerian leaders fall sick, they seek treatment abroad. Truth is they have abandoned the health institutions in the country. This same scenario has played itself over and over again in the education industry. Every a Nigeria knows that our leaders do not allow their children attend school in the country because of the poor standard of education here. They send their children overseas to a place where the leaders have toiled to build over the centuries. They hope that that should their children return home, they will get the best jobs, live in the choicest part of Abuja, Ikoyi, Victoria Island, Lekki and wherever you can find the shakers and movers of society.

Is it any wonder then that the country is facing a bloody revolution today? How did Boko Haram come about? The army of this extremist Islamic organization is made up of products of the poorly organized education system of Nigeria, those who have come to question the usefulness of an education system that favours only a select few. Agreed there is trouble earth wide but let us stop and ask ourselves, how many British or American citizens are insurgents who are bombing, maiming and abducting innocent civilians in their home countries today? If therefore our Book has failed to produce good results, some may claim that Boko Haram-Book is Bad.

It stands to reason therefore that government and corporate organisations as well as concerned and empowered citizens should do the following to resuscitate the education sector in the country.

Our Ivory Towers or simply put, our universities should be upgraded to world standard. They should be equipped with high-tech laboratories with standard apparatuses and gadgets. Added to this, lecturers should be paid like expatriates because that is what they are. The President was a student; he passed through the tutelage of lecturers. Same applies to all the politicians in the country today. At the law schools, we have lecturers. If therefore, the teacher is truly in loco parentis, let us then treat them with dignity. A dignified man or woman is a pleasant personality any day but a dehumanized character is a threat to himself and all around him/her.

When we start paying teachers a reasonable salary, they will perform better. Stop and take a look at European soccer. From the coaches to the footballers, everybody is a millionaire by Nigerian standards. The result is a robust league that is the envy and eternal goal of every professional footballer on earth. Treat Nigeria’s education system likewise and see bountiful results.

In addition, the TRCN should be given more teeth so that it can bite and truly enforce its regulations. Those who are not qualified to teach should not be allowed to teach and those who are qualified to teach, should be registered by the TRCN only through the proper channel. This will ensure that quacks are removed from our schools. A quack doctor will kill patients and a quack teacher will kill students!

Moreover, school owners should be encouraged to provide regular training for their teaching staff. If possible, let some percentage of the Education Trust Fund be made available to registered and approved schools for the purpose of teacher training at least thrice every year.

Parents on the one hand, should be close to their children and show them love by physically interacting with them while on the other, they should monitor their childrens’ education by relating with the schools and teachers to find out where there are issues as well as striving to nip such in the bud as early as possible.