Tag: education policy

  • Over 860,000 Students Benefit as NELFUND Disbursed Loans Reach ₦161 Billion

    Over 860,000 Students Benefit as NELFUND Disbursed Loans Reach ₦161 Billion

    Reporting by The Punch indicates that the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) has surpassed a major milestone, with total disbursements reaching ₦161.97 billion. This funding has directly benefited 864,798 students across various public tertiary institutions in the country. The program, a flagship initiative of the Tinubu administration, aims to reduce the dropout rate by providing interest-free loans for tuition and monthly upkeep.

    NELFUND officials stated that the application process has been further streamlined to ensure that students from underserved backgrounds are prioritized. The fund is currently working with the National Universities Commission (NUC) to integrate more vocational and technical colleges into the scheme, recognizing the need for skilled labor in the non-oil sector.

    Further reporting from Channels TV and Leadership validates the expansion of the scheme. Channels TV noted that ‘the fund has become a lifeline for families struggling with inflation,’ while Leadership quoted a student union leader who said, ‘NELFUND is the only reason many of us are still in school this semester.’

    Echotitbits take: NELFUND is perhaps the administration’s most successful ‘social contract’ project. However, the long-term sustainability depends on the repayment model, which is tied to post-graduation employment. If the economy doesn’t produce jobs for these 860,000 students, the government may eventually face a massive ‘student debt’ crisis of its own.
    Source: ChannelsTv – https://www.channelstv.com/2025/08/15/%E2%82%A686bn-disbursed-449000-students-beneficiaries-recorded-nelfund/ January 5, 2026

    Photo Credit: ChannelsTv

  • Niger State extends school shutdown in high-risk areas, sets new resumption date

    Niger State extends school shutdown in high-risk areas, sets new resumption date

    Reporting by The Nation indicates the Niger State government has kept schools in security-affected areas closed, directing only institutions in safer locations to resume based on official guidance.

    Officials warned that any private school resuming without clearance may face sanctions, as authorities try to manage learning continuity without compromising student safety.

    The decision underscores how insecurity is increasingly shaping education administration, with partial closures becoming a crisis-management tool in vulnerable zones.

    Echotitbits take: Education disruption is becoming a secondary crisis of insecurity. Watch for ward-by-ward safety classifications, how exam schedules are protected, and whether alternative learning options are funded for students in closed areas.

    Source: SaharaReporters — January 4, 2026 (https://saharareporters.com/2026/01/02/niger-government-warns-private-schools-shelve-resumption-threatens-sanctions)

    SaharaReporters January 4, 2026

    Photo Credit: SaharaReporters

  • Katsina, UNICEF move to count Almajiri and Islamiya pupils—planning bigger education reforms

    Katsina, UNICEF move to count Almajiri and Islamiya pupils—planning bigger education reforms

    Photo Credit: Independent
    2025-12-28 09:00:00

    Figures cited by PUNCH show Katsina State is partnering with UNICEF to conduct a census of Almajiri and Islamiya schools, aiming to establish accurate data for education planning and child-welfare support.

    Officials say the exercise will map enrolment patterns, school distribution, and gaps that have long complicated targeted interventions.

    The initiative is expected to feed into reforms on basic education delivery and social support for vulnerable pupils.

    The Guardian quoted the bureau describing the exercise as “the first step to building a better future.”

    Echotitbits take: Data is the doorway to smarter budgeting—especially for welfare-linked education. Watch whether census outputs become a live registry tied to school feeding, health checks, and conditional support for families.

    Source: Independent — June 27, 2025 (https://independent.ng/unicef-katsina-govt-set-to-count-almajiri-islamiya-schools/)

    Independent June 27, 2025

    UNICEF, Katsina  Govt Set  To Count Almajiri, Islamiya Schools

  • Nigeria to bar SS3 admissions and late transfers from 2026/27 to curb exam malpractice

    Nigeria to bar SS3 admissions and late transfers from 2026/27 to curb exam malpractice

    2025-12-15 08:00:00

    According to The Punch, the Federal Government announced a nationwide ban on admission and transfer of students into SS3 in both public and private secondary schools, effective from the 2026/2027 academic session.

    Punch reports the ministry said the move targets growing examination malpractice—especially last-minute movement of candidates to so-called ‘special centres’—and aims to improve academic monitoring and continuity.

    The report adds that schools have been directed to comply, with sanctions promised for violations under existing education regulations.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: Implementation will be the real test: states and private schools must align admission processes and enforcement. Watch for detailed guidelines, exceptions (if any), and how WAEC/NECO exam bodies and state ministries coordinate compliance.

    Source: Nigeria Education News — December 14, 2025

    Nigeria Education News https://thenigeriaeducationnews.com/2025/12/14/fg-bans-admission-transfer-into-ss3-to-curb-exam-malpractice/ December 14, 2025

  • Safe School Project plans more deployments as kidnapping risks persist

    Safe School Project plans more deployments as kidnapping risks persist

    Photo Credit: A school classroom session – Facebook/Nigerian Teachers
    2025-12-14

    According to The Punch, the National Safe Schools Response and Coordination Centre says more security personnel will be deployed to schools to strengthen protection and deter attacks amid kidnapping concerns.

    Officials say the approach blends intelligence-led operations with visible security measures to reduce school vulnerability in high-risk locations.

    On its official platform, the NSSRCC describes its work as enhancing security for schools through coordination with security agencies and rapid response mechanisms.

    The Guardian Nigeria has previously highlighted gaps in school protection and warned that many schools remain exposed despite funding announcements, keeping pressure on implementation.

    Analysis/Echotitbits take: School protection announcements are common—execution is the real test. Watch for state-by-state coverage, quick-response effectiveness, and whether community early-warning systems and safe transportation measures actually reduce abductions and attacks in the next quarter.

    Source: The Punch — 14 Dec 2025 (https://punchng.com/kidnapping-safe-school-project-to-deploy-more-security-personnel/)

     

  • Senate Demands Pause on Sudden WAEC SSCE Subject Changes

    The Senate summoned the Education Minister and WAEC leadership over sudden modifications to the 2025/2026 SSCE subject structure. Lawmakers warned the timing could destabilise SS3 candidates preparing for the May/June 2026 examinations.

    Senators urged that affected candidates be exempted and that major revisions be deferred to later cycles to allow schools and students adequate preparation.

    2025-12-10

    Punch Newspapers

    2025-12-10