| Jonathan lauds teachers’ contributions to nation building
Lawan Hamidu, Abuja
President Goodluck Jonathan has commended the Nigerian teachers for their contributions to nation building.
He gave the commendation in Abuja, the nation’s capital at the President’s Teachers and Schools Excellence Award ceremony, organised to commemorate this year’s World Teachers’ Day.
Gender equality
Jonathan stressed that the theme for this year’s World Teachers’ Day, ‘Teachers for Gender Equality’, was very important and apt in view of the prevailing gender-related issues affecting education in the country.
He however noted that the teaching profession had the distinct advantage of being one of the few professions that had accommodated more females than males in the country.
“In Nigeria today, as far as the teaching profession is concerned, there are more female than male teachers. So, there is no question of gender inequality against women but it is probably against men”, he noted.
The President, nonetheless, gave the assurance that his administration was gender-sensitive, saying that this was reflected by the appointment of several women into cabinet and advisory positions.
Girls Education Project
On the Girls Education Project, Jonathan said that the project had achieved some feats in girls’ enrolment and retention in schools, adding that the project was being scaled up to cover more states with high gender disparity.
He stressed that the project was also addressing issues relating to the inadequate number of female teachers in the schools of beneficiary states via the Female Teachers Scholarship Scheme (FTSS), which entails scholarship awards to young girls who were receiving training as teachers in the state colleges of education.
Teachers’ training
Jonathan expressed the willingness of the Federal Government to collaborate with state governments in designing innovative strategies for the training and deployment of female teachers to work as teachers, particularly in rural areas where teacher deployment was a challenge.
In her remark, the Minister of Education, Mrs Ruqayyatu Rufa’i, said that her ministry had embarked on the revitalisation of Science, Technical and Vocational Education to engender a more vibrant and responsive system for the production of competent teachers in the field of science and technology.
She called on state governments, the private sector and other stakeholders to contribute to the growth of education and teachers’ training so as to enhance the country’s socio-economic, political and technological development.
“The acceleration of our sustainable economic growth and development rests squarely on the empowerment of teachers and the enhancement of the teaching profession”, she said.
Rufa’i stressed that if there was no proportional increase in teacher training, career and welfare development, the development goals of the government could not be attained.
Teachers’ welfare
The President, who was represented by Vice President Namadi Sambo, stressed that the importance of the teaching profession in national development efforts could not be over-emphasised.
“Let me on behalf of our fellow citizens sincerely express our appreciation and limitless gratitude to our teachers for their immense contributions to nation building. The greatness of this nation does not depend on physical structures but on the minds which are moulded by teachers’’, he said.
He reiterated the commitment of the Federal Government to promoting the teachers’ welfare and urged the teachers to always strive to achieve excellence.
The National President of the NUT, Mr Michael Olukoya, called on all employers of teachers to implement the national minimum wage and the attendant teachers 27.5 per-cent allowance to avoid over-heating the industrial space of the country’s education sector.
“Teachers will stop at nothing and will do everything possible to ensure that the negotiated teachers’ enhanced allowance is preserved and protected at all times”, he said.
Shakira/Ekata |