President Goodluck
Jonathan has expressed
optimism that Nigerian universities will rank among the best in the world in
the next four years, as a result of the ongoing transformation of
the education system.
Jonathan said that education was a responsibility of both
states and the federal governments, adding that the present administration
gives support to the states through the Universal Basic Education
Commission (UBEC).
“We all
feel bad that no Nigerian university was ranked but we are working seriously to
change the trend. We have equipped most of our universities through the
Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund). We are talking about infrastructure
that has failed over the years but with the way we are going, in the next four
years our universities will compete with other universities across the world,”
he said.
Also speaking, Godson
Okoye, the presidential
candidate of United Democratic Party, decried the
situation where people who had benefited from free education turned education
to business.
“We must
re-engineer education right from nursery schools; teachers training colleges
must be revisited,’’ he said.
Oluremi
Sonaiya, the
presidential candidate of KOWA Party, said the whole focus should not be on
formal education but a broad-based education.
“Ignorance
is one of the ills; KOWA will address formal and informal education; curriculum
should be reviewed,” she said.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that five political parties- PDP,
NCP, UPP, KOWA and UDP participated in the second session of
the debate.
However, Major General Muhammadu Buhari, the presidential candidate for APC was not present at the debate.
source: Bellanaija
Photot credit: saharareporters
1 comment:
They sure will no doubt
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