Education
Lagos LCDA Chairman Gives Scholarship to 100 Indigent Students
Dr Ahmed Apatira, the Executive Chairman, Itire-Ikate Local Council Development Area(LCDA), on Thursday gave scholarship to 100 indigent students in Itire Ikate community in Lagos State.
Apatira, while screening the students at the council secretariat for the scholarship, said the gesture was to assist indigent students of the local government.
According to him, this will complement the state government’s declaration of a state- of- emergency on education.
“This programme was initiated as part of our commitment to support the aspirations of prospective tertiary education seekers.
“None of these young people are children of the elite and some of them are very brilliant.
“We chose to empower them to liberate their minds and make them better citizens who will resist the urge to engage in social vices.
“If we sponsor them through school, they will be matured to handle certain responsibilities which are the reasons behind this initiative,” he said.
The council chairman added he had decided to take the financial burden off their parents, adding that education would eradicate criminality and make the youths more responsible.
Mr Ajayi Taiwo, the National Coordinator of Yoruba Presidential Agenda 2023, in his remarks, said that the scholarship scheme was about improving lives of children and ensuring that education becomes inclusive in the country.
“It is about seeing children get better at what they do.
“It is a great fulfilment and joy to see a child wake up and have access to basic education without being left out due to certain limitations.
“I believe if we can touch the lives of these children, they will grow up to pass the baton of change.
“This implies that over the years, we will have more children in schools,” he said.
Taiwo said that all the students had been successfully screened with their credentials, including obtaining five credits in one or two sittings and being admitted to accredited schools.
Mr Hammed Idris, the Council Legislative Leader, in his advice to the students said the impact and success of the initiative would be seen in how the beneficiaries turned out to be.
Idris added that with the help of the dedicated team, the beneficiaries had been given a reason to dream right and not be defined by the environment.
The leader added that the programme was uniquely designed to be a beacon of hope for the teeming youths who understand the menace of illiteracy in the society.
According to him, the ripple effect of being uneducated which has led to prostitution, teenage pregnancy and cultism can be curtailed.
Idris assured them that the presemt administration was committed to contributing its quota to reducing illiteracy to the barest minimum.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the scholarship programme is in partnership with the 2023 Yoruba Presidential Agenda Team, to enhance the growth and development of the teeming youths.
The list of higher institutions involved are; Graceland Polytechnic Offa , College of Education Iseyin, Owu Tech, Owu Ogun State , SAF Polytechnic, Iseyin and Oke-Ogun School of Science and Management Studies, Iseyin.(NAN)
Education
JAMB Schedules May 11 Policy Meeting to Determine 2026 UTME Cut-Off Marks
The process for the 2026/2027 tertiary admissions cycle is set to begin in earnest as the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has fixed May 11 for its annual policy meeting, where minimum cut-off marks for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination will be decided.
The development, disclosed in a statement by JAMB’s spokesperson, Fabian Benjamin, signals the start of critical decisions that will shape admission processes across universities, polytechnics and colleges of education nationwide.
According to the statement, the meeting will take place at the Body of Benchers Auditorium, located within the Institute and Research District in Jabi, Abuja, and will bring together key stakeholders in Nigeria’s education sector.
It is expected that the Minister of Education, Maruf Alausa, will outline major policy directions guiding the upcoming admission exercise.
“The Board’s annual policy meeting on admissions is a crucial annual gathering where stakeholders decide minimum tolerable UTME marks, admission guidelines, and policies for tertiary institutions.
“Furthermore, the meeting is expected to, in particular, formally set the tone for the 2026/2027 admission exercise while impressing on attendees the need to adhere strictly to stipulated guidelines.
“Attendees at the 2026 meeting would include critical stakeholders such as vice-chancellors, rectors, provosts, registrars and their admission officers.
Others are regulatory bodies ranging from the National Universities Commission (NUC), National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE), to the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), among others.”
The gathering is also expected to attract goodwill messages from major agencies within the education ecosystem, including the Nigerian Education Loan Fund and the National Youth Service Corps, alongside other stakeholders.
In addition to policy deliberations, the event will feature the sixth edition of the National Tertiary Admissions Performance-Merit Awards (NATAP-M), aimed at encouraging strict compliance with admission regulations and improving standards across Nigeria’s tertiary education system.
With stakeholders set to converge, the outcome of the meeting is expected to provide clarity on admission benchmarks and reinforce guidelines that will govern placements into higher institutions for the 2026/2027 academic session.
Education
Jigawa, Kano, Katsina Top List of Out-of-school Children
Jigawa, Kano and Katsina, have been identified as states with the highest number of out-of-school children crisis as UNICEF stressed that urgent investment in early childhood education remained critical to turning the tide.
According to UNICEF, Nigeria currently accounts for about 18.
3 million out-of-school children, the highest number globally.An education consultant with UNICEF Kano Field Office, Aisha Abdullahi, disclosed this at a two-day dialogue for journalists from Jigawa, Kano and Katsina states.
She spoke while presenting a paper on foundation learning and skills development, noting that the states alone contribute nearly 30 per cent of the figure, driven by poverty, insecurity, cultural barriers, and poor school readiness.
Abdullahi stressed that Early Childhood Care, Development and Education (ECCDE) offers a strategic and long-term solution, capable of preventing children from falling out of the education system before they even begin.
She emphasised that tackling the crisis requires a shift from reactive interventions to preventive strategies, with early childhood education forming the bedrock of lifelong learning.
“Early childhood education is not just a preparatory stage but a strategic intervention to reduce the number of out-of-school children,” Abdullahi said.
According to her, ECCDE targets children from birth to age five, equipping them with essential cognitive, emotional and social skills needed to thrive in formal schooling.
She noted that children exposed to early learning are significantly more likely to enroll in school, stay longer and complete their education, while those who miss such opportunities are twice as likely to drop out.
Abdullahi cited research indicating that nearly 90 per cent of brain development occurs before the age of five, making early learning a critical window for intervention.
Despite policy provisions incorporating one year of pre-primary education into Nigeria’s Universal Basic Education framework, she observed that access to ECCDE remains limited, particularly in rural communities.
She added that areas with functional ECCDE centres record up to 40 per cent higher enrolment into Primary One, alongside improved retention rates.
The UNICEF expert also highlighted the role of early childhood education in advancing girls’ education, noting that early exposure helps delay societal pressures such as early marriage, while strengthening parental engagement, especially among mothers.
However, stakeholders at the dialogue expressed concern over the low involvement of fathers in early learning, revealing that less than 15 per cent actively participate across the region.
They noted that increasing male involvement could cut dropout rates by up to 50 per cent, given fathers’ influence in household decisions, and recommended community advocacy, mosque engagement and structured father-child programmes to bridge the gap.
Despite these efforts, participants called for urgent policy action, including expanding ECCDE across all primary schools, allocating at least five per cent of education budgets to early learning, training more teachers and integrating traditional and religious education systems.
They maintained that strengthening early childhood education through adequate investment and quality delivery remains the most effective pathway to tackling Nigeria’s out-of-school children crisis.
Education
JAMB Extends 2026 Direct Entry Registration to May 8
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has extended the sale of application forms for the 2026 Direct Entry (DE) admission exercise to May 8.
The board announced the extension in a statement issued by its spokesperson, Fabian Benjamin, on Wednesday in Abuja.
Benjamin said the decision was aimed at ensuring that no eligible candidate was denied access to tertiary education.
He said the extension replaces the earlier deadline for the exercise.
He also disclosed that five additional registration centres had been approved to ease pressure in high-demand locations.
The approved centres are the Centre for Open and Distance Learning (CODL), Mini Campus, University of Ilorin, Kwara; Bells University of Technology, and Olabisi Onabanjo University Centre 1, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun.
Others are the Prof. Usman E-Learning Centre, Federal College of Education (Special), Oyo State; and Human Development Initiatives (Grace House), No. 2 Iwaya, Sabo, opposite Onike Girls Junior High School, Onike, Lagos.
Benjamin urged prospective candidates to take advantage of the extension, noting that JAMB offices nationwide, including Professional Registration Centres (PRCs) and Professional Testing Centres (PTCs), remained open for registration.


