As part of efforts to reduce the menace of out-of-school children in the country, the Universal Basic Education Commission has established about 51 model junior secondary schools and vocational schools in the 17 beneficiary states of the World Bank-supported Better Education Service Delivery for All (BESDA) project in Nigeria.
The Executive Secretary of UBEC, Dr. Hamid Bobboyi, made this known on Wednesday during an inspection visit to one of the schools, UBEC JSS/Vocational School (Government Secondary School), Suleja, Niger State, where he expressed satisfaction with the work done by the contractor.
BESDA is an intervention programme funded by the World Bank with the purpose of providing equitable access for out-of-school children, improving literacy, and strengthening accountability for results at the basic education level.
The programme is currently being implemented in 17 states across the country, which includes the entire 13 states of the North West and North East geopolitical zones: Niger, Oyo, Ebonyi, and Rivers States.
The UBEC boss charged the school management and the community to make good use of the facility, which he said was designed to ensure that graduates from the junior secondary school have the necessary skills that would help them in their future lives.
Bobboyi said, “I’m highly impressed by what I have seen—the work that was contracted out. We have worked with the school community to ensure that this project is delivered according to specifications.
“We hope that it will be fully utilised by the school to ensure that our children have a conducive environment to learn and acquire some skills that will help them in their future lives, especially this school being a vocational junior secondary school.
“We have this in every senatorial zone in the 17 BESDA states. You remember that BESDA came to address a particular problem, the issue of out-of-school children. Out of the 17 BESDA states, you have one of these schools in every senatorial district, like the one you have here in Suleja.
He noted that UBEC is providing additional infrastructure that would help the state governments through the States Universal Basic Education Boards (SUBEBs) to ensure more children are enrolled in schools as well as the functionality that is required for effective teaching and learning.
He disclosed that each of the JSS/Vocational Schools is equipped with a computer lab, laboratories, an e-library, workshops, and well-furnished classrooms to give students a good learning experience.
Bobboyi, who noted that the school has been handed over to the Niger state government, added that UBEC would collaborate with the state government to ensure that routine maintenance is carried out regularly.
According to him, the Commission would ensure that the cost of maintenance is included in the action plan each state is bringing to UBEC to access their matching grant after payment of the counterpart fund.
He insisted that the delivery of functional basic education in Nigeria has to be a partnership, saying there was no way the Federal Government would sit in Abuja and address all issues in basic education.