Letters

Boosting education through SBMC synergy

“The positive thinker sees the invisible, feels the intangible, and achieves the impossible.” These were the words of a British statesman, Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, who was a two-time prime minister of the United Kingdom.

Arguably, the capacity to combine the two ways of thinking: creative and critical thinking equips one to produce robust actions. Whilst creative thinking looks at problems or situations from a fresh perspective to conceive of something novel or unusual, the latter looks at ideas by discerning and deciding how realistic they actually are.

The pair, without any doubt, could be said to be yielding positive results in the education sector through the School-Based Management Committee (SBMC) template conceived and massively supported by UNICEF-Nigeria, in collaboration with the Federal Government and the Department for International Development (DFID), the official development agency of United Kingdom’s government managing aids for the poor, developing nations.

Supreme Court dismisses perjury suit against Buhari

Imperatively, SBMC is a unique template which brings communities, parents, non-parents, teachers, artisans, school children and governments under one umbrella for synergy towards addressing challenges in the basic education sector, particularly funding, infrastructure and service delivery rather than waiting solely on the government.

By this, communities automatically become stakeholders and actively participate in management of public schools in their environments in partnership with government for judicious and timely cogent actions.

Its exceptional feature is that the communities freely participate as stakeholders in managing, identifying projects of premium significance in schools in their neighbourhood and presenting budget to government for funding where their treasury is incapable of meeting the bills, unlike the preceding pattern where governments executeed projects uniformly without carrying the grassroots along, let alone considering impacts and peculiarities.

Thus, this ultimately gives powers back to the people; communities become part of the management of schools in their respective environments in partnership with government.

The remarkable results compellingly necessitated this ‘expo’ for other states, perhaps still reluctant to take the SBMC seriously. Evidently, few states that accorded the robust attention it deserves, particularly Kano, are making significant impacts.

For example, through the interventionist mechanism, a primary school presently owns a car-wash centre, flower-garden and other business ventures put in place by SBMC and prudently managed for revenue generation for projects in the school.

Through it, school uniforms are periodically acquired for pupils. It therefore implies that the era of collapsed classrooms or lack of necessities in schools is gone, unlike in the past when minor maintenance works like roof leakages were ignored until they deteriorated to complete collapse.

Apart from SBMC’s boost on infrastructure development in the schools, various groups in the communities that make up the SBMC, including artisans, mothers, make their respective valuable contributions accordingly.

Vocational skills like sewing, beads-making and others have been incorporated into the school curriculum which equips pupils for productivity. Visibly, essential projects including, boreholes, chairs, landscaping of school compound, were also impressively put in place by the SBMC scheme.

In a nutshell, SBMCs are established by governments as essential link between schools and communities as they serve in providing good governance and assist schools with basic needs and support for improvement of teaching and learning environment, rather than abandoning all responsibilities to the governments.

 Carl Umegboro

carlumegboro.com

David Olagunju

Recent Posts

UK-based NGO raises N30m for out-of-school children in Nigeria

"These efforts aim to remove financial barriers to education, particularly for marginalised groups such as…

3 minutes ago

Tinubu commissions agric mechanised centre, road projects in Katsina

"This isn't just about machines—it's about food security, economic empowerment, and the future of our…

6 minutes ago

Police arrest two burglars, recover 50 stolen sheep in Niger

“They gained entry through the window after damaging the burglar-proof and carted away a 35-inch…

15 minutes ago

Insecurity: We’ll reclaim ungoverned areas — Tinubu vows

“Security is a national issue. If we genuinely want investment in Nigeria, we must address…

22 minutes ago

Catholic Church tasks FG, govs on youth engagement

"When every government, at all levels, does what is right, there would be food security…

42 minutes ago

Defection: PDP has lost taste — Oghenesivbe

"The PDP power house is collapsing rapidly, and we do not want it to collapse…

56 minutes ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.