Kwara State Governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed
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Dearth
of English Language teachers has hit public schools in Kwara State as
only one teacher is available for 122 pupils, while only one Mathematics
teacher handles 158 pupils.
This was contained in the Kwara State
Annual Education Sector Performance Report of 2012, carried out by the
State Ministry of Education and Human Capital Development.
Apart from these two most important
subjects, the report also added that teacher-pupil ratio for Civic
Education is one to 178; one to 130 in Geography; while a Computer
Studies teacher handles 158 pupils.
A copy of the report obtained by our
correspondent on Thursday also revealed a ratio of one Biology teacher
to 105 pupils and one Literature teacher to 117 pupils. This is a far
cry from an average of one teacher to 25 pupils recommended by UNESCO.
However, the state Education Commissioner, Alhaji Saka Onimago, said there was no scarcity of teachers in the state.
He, however, admitted that it needed more teachers in sciences and science-related subjects.
“I will not take it that the state is
lacking teachers. It is not peculiar to Kwara State. Kwara is a model
particularly with our education reform agenda. Some states are coming to
Kwara to see our reform agenda. We have quality assurance which other
states do not have,” he said.
But a further breakdown of the report
revealed that 48,352 Agricultural Science pupils were being taught by
554 teachers; 68,440 Biology Science pupils are being handled by 654
teachers; 341 teachers teach 22,798 Chemistry pupils, while 94 Civic
Education teachers handle 16,748.
Also, 773 pupils of Clothing and Textile
are being taught by 17 teacher; 963 pupils of French are being handled
by 21 teachers, 45,764 Geography pupils have 353 teachers; while 10
History teachers teach 575 pupils.
According to the report, 17, 101 pupils
of English Literature are being taught by146 teachers; 23,255 Physics
pupils by 250 teachers and 32, 369 pupils of Yoruba Language have 291
teachers.
The Sector Performance Report also
stated that 30,578 pupils of other subjects not listed above were being
taught by 1,759 teachers.
Onimago, however, said increased
enrolment brought about by the state government’s free education policy
was responsible for the trend. The commissioner revealed that the state
governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, had approved the recruitment of about
200 teachers for the basic education cadre.
He added that the governor was also considering recruitment of more teachers for senior secondary schools across the state.
Onimago also claimed that the teacher-student ratio in the state tallied with that at the federal level.
“The position of the state government in
terms of the teachers we have both at the basic education as well as
those who are in senior secondary is that if you look at the ratio on
ground, you will see that it tallies with the requirements even at the
federal level.
“But with the free tuition policy of the
state government, you will notice that the number of enrolment this
year has increased very highly. For instance, I was at Lade some time
ago, I discovered that the enrolment in JSS 1 was as high as 135. That
is a class that was not up to 35 pupils in a year in the past. With
this type of development, there is no doubt that we still need more
teachers. The governor has approved that about 200 teachers should be
recruited for the basic education,” he said.
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