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Amaechi And His Educational Transformation: 2013Score-Card

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Highlights:

 

Issuance of letters of appointment and deployment 13, 201 teaching and    non-teaching   staff to public primary and secondary schools across  Rivers State

completion of 500 model primary and secondary schools

Introduction of School Based Management Committee (SBMC)

Port Harcourt Technical &Vocational Centre takes off with an agreement signed by          RSG and Zentstelle fur die Weiterbildung im Handwerk (Central Agency for           Continuing Education and Training in Skilled Craft of Germany

Extension of foreign scholarship award to indigent Rivers youth in rural communities

European Business Assembly declares Rivers State University of Science and        Technology (RSUST) best Regional University

Governor Amaechi bags Vanguard Personality of the Year Award because of his   outstanding performance especially in the education sector

Upon assumption of

office as the executive governor of Rivers State on October 26, 2007 Right Hon Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi made a solemn promise to the people of Rivers State. Amaechi’s promise is encapsulated in his famous mission statement which reads;

“Our mission is to serve our people with humility and render transparent and accountable stewardship anchored on integrity and good governance. We shall use our God given resources to improve the quality of life of our present and future generations, and harmonious society under God.”

Of all the efforts the Rotimi administration has made in the last six years to fulfill its promise to the people, one area stands out as the melting pot of his achievements. It is the educational sector especially primary education.

Although functional primary school education is recorgnised by all as the foundation of any viable education system, successive governments in Rivers State and the country at large failed to appreciate the flagrancy of the danger posed to society by its collapse. Even where some administrations did, they made feeble and ineffectual efforts at tackling the years of putrefaction at that level of the educational system.

At that time, salaries and allowances of teachers were irregular, school buildings were either totally collapsed or in danger of doing so. School children were left at the mercy of the elements coupled with physical insecurity. Kidnapping of pupils and their teachers became the order of the day. Not many schools in the rural communities could boast of up to five teachers. These resulted in the massive withdrawal of children from public schools by parents. Of course, one room private schools in uninhabitable environments mushroomed in all nooks and crannies.

The Rt. Hon Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi led administration took an unprecedented bold step by announcing the take-over of the payment of primary school teachers in the state. This followed an education summit that made startling revelations on the appalling state of primary school education in Rivers State. The government proposed to build 720 primary schools and some model secondary schools.   As at the end of 2013, over 500 of these schools have been completed.

The primary schools have football fields with synthetic tracks, larger capacity halls, sick bays with modern medical equipment, libraries and power generating sets, modern computer laboratories with projectors and internet facilities. The head teacher’s offices are also furnished and equipped with functional computers to make teaching and learning easier and faster for the pupils for whom Chibuike Amaechi had declared free and compulsory education. Every child of school age is provided with text books, school uniforms, and physical education (PE) wears, school bags, shoes, sandals and a pair of stockings.

At the secondary school level, it is also of interest that the dormitories are now constructed as rooms with two-bed spaces, wardrobe, reading tables and chairs with the floors completely tiled.

“How else could pupils and students of those model schools be comfortable?  It shows that Governor Chibuike Amaechi, means well for the people of Rivers State.” Philip Okpara, a pupil of Model Secondary School, Eleme has said.

Before now, some pupils and students in some schools sat on the floor because, there were no desks. Many of the pupils sat under trees to learn. There were not enough teachers to handle some key subjects’ areas in some schools.

Today, the story is different. The desks at the new model primary and secondary schools are of international standard. The present administration moved some teachers from where they were not contributing optimally to schools that lacked teachers and where they could be more productive.

Toward ensuring quality teaching, 13,201 teaching and non-teaching staff recruited by the government were issued with their letters of appointment and deployed to public primary and secondary schools across Rivers State while others including head teachers and principals were trained and retrained with the collaboration of the British Council.

Within the year, 40 teachers were trained in English Language skills by the government in collaboration with etisalat (a Telecommunication Firm) and the British Council in Nigeria.

According to the Commissioner for Eduction, Dame Alice Lawrence-Nemi, government is pursuing the upgrading of old public schools in Rivers State.

As part of programmes to restore academic excellence and cultivate good learning and discipline in schools, the state government continued to organize science quiz and debate competitions to improve pupils and students vocabulary from time to time including French holiday lessons and tours. Also, many Rivers indigenes have been granted scholarship to study overseas.

The Amaechi Government has upgraded the former Rivers State Collage of Education to a University of Education, while construction work at the new site of the Rivers State University of Science and Technology is gearing up at the Greater Port- Harcourt City.

According to government’s mission statement on the relocation, “the new University would be a leading centre of academic excellence in Africa and beyond; a world–class University with world-class facilities, which would be manned by a team of committed administrators, academics and researchers of high caliber, who share the founding vision of making the new university to rank among the best 1,000 universities in the world by 2020”

The government assured that by the time this objective is achieved, RSUST would be equal to none in Nigeria and in Africa.

On the education of children who are tucked away in remote areas and who usually migrate to different locations of fishing settlements with their parents, the state government has ensured that their education was enhanced under the migrant fishermen scheme. Boats and canoes have been handed over to the head teachers of the migrant schools to ease their transportation.

The year 2013 also witnessed the commencement of academic activities in some of the new model secondary schools.  The state government has already surrendered the management of the schools. The commissioner for Education , Dame Alice Lawrence –Nemi, explained that the managers are from a big consortium known as Educomps, who specialize in managing schools around  the world, (especially in England, India and the United States of America). The major criteria for admission of students into the schools, is merit, after undergoing series of examinations which would be supervised by the school managers. Also the recruitment of teachers was based on merit.

According to the permanent secretary, Ministry of Education Mr. Richard Ofuru, the recruitment covers all subjects taught in both primary and secondary schools while the non academic staff recruitment was for laboratory technicians and security personnel. The applicants were subjected to a screening examination.

In the words of the governor, “we are employing 10,000 teachers and Rivers State alone cannot give us 10,000 teachers. So it was open to everybody that was qualified and lives in the state”.

The education Commissioner, said the new model schools would be for both the rich and the poor. It should be interesting to us in River state that people come from others states to see and emulate this successful gesture by the present administration.

Some of the model secondary schools are

i. Model  Secondary School Ebubu, Eleme

ii. Model Secondary School Oyigbo

iii. Model Secondary School Omuma

iv .Model Secondary School Emohua

v. Model Secondary School Asari toru

vi. Model Secondary School  Andoni

vii. Model Secondary School Degema

viii. Model Secondary School  PHALGA

ix. Model Secondary School Isiokpo, Ikwerre

x. Model Secondary School Ubima, Ikwerre

xi. Model Secondary School Obio/Akpor

According to Mr. Rich Amos, a retired teacher, the decision of the Rivers State Government to include non- indigenes in the state recruitment exercise will contribute positively to the manpower development of the citizenry because those who are qualified would give what they have.

He said the gesture also indicate that the government is not biased. According to him, any non-indigene employed into the Rivers State civil service can earn a living and pay his rent and tax through the salaries he would receive.

Also expressing his views, a teacher in Port-Harcourt, Mr Joshua Idu, said “when you look at the environment of the new model schools, you would be convinced that the government of Rivers State is serious in its bid to revolutionise the education sector. A striking feature of the new model primary schools is the emphasis placed on Information and Communication Technology (ICT). The schools are equipped with ICT infrastructure and instructors are also employed to handle them and to couch the teachers and the pupils. A computer instructor at the Community Primary School, Olanada in Port-Harcourt, Mr. Victor Okon, explained that two  instructors are enough to handle computer education in one school.

Mr. Victor Okon, who is a staff of Link serve computers in charge of the training, stated that the use of projectors would make it easier to teach the pupils stressing that initially it was difficult because of the different backgrounds they come from.

“The pupils now know what computer is and some can operate it effectively and even create some graphic designs as well as log into various portals using the internet.” He stated.

Another teacher, Mrs Charity Emmanuel, explained that before now, the classes were overcrowded but in the new schools we have limited number of pupils about 30 per class. ‘Management of the classes has become much easier.’ She noted that the number of pupils in a class facilitates teaching and learning because there is a closer interaction between the teacher and the pupils.

The second head teacher of CPS Olanada, Mrs Edna Benjamin said government really needed to employ more hands especially because of the introduction of new studies such as computers, projectors and video.

Mrs. Benjamin advised that specialists in those areas should be employed to make the system real and effective adding that the additional subjects are a burden to the teachers since one teacher has to handle all the subjects.

Another teacher, Mrs Iwu said that time had come when teachers should teach according to their area of specialization at the primary school level as it is done at the secondary school level noting that it is better to build the children right from the primary stage. She suggested areas of study such as mathematics, English Language, French, and Computer appreciation should have separate specialist teachers.

In her view, a primary 6 pupil in Port-Harcourt, Miss Chinwendu Collins expressed appreciation to the governor of Rivers State, for building new model schools, donating of text books, bags, shoes and pairs of stockings to the pupils.

Another significant inroad towards the building of a virile education system that allows the nurturing of the intellectual capacity of the child from the earliest stage is the venture into kindergarten education. This aspect is being championed by the wife of the Governor Her Excellency Judith Amaechi under her Economic Support Initiative (ESI). ESI now holds an annual seminar to help build capacity and intensify research in the area. Many of such schools have sprung up across the state and have become a new educational attraction for both the poor and the rich.

The unprecedented investment by the Amaechi administration and the uncommon transformation that has taken place so far has not gone unnoticed.  The state has won several awards from several organisations across the globe. The climax of such recognitions came with the nomination of Port Harcourt as the world book capital for 2014.

Like the Italian-born emperor Frederick II (1194 – 1250) stated in the Foundation charter of Naples University, the Amaechi administration can claim and say, “We keep the students within view of their parents; we save them many toils and long journeys; we protect them from robbers. They used to be pillaged while traveling abroad; now, they may study at small cost and short wayfaring, thanks to our liberality.”

 

Desmond Osueke/Chris Oluoh

Governor  Chibuike Amaechi of Rivers State (left), with Director, Port Harcourt Book Festival, Mrs Koko Kalango (2nd left), at the opening  of Port Harcourt Book Festival in Port Harcourt, recently.

Governor Chibuike Amaechi of Rivers State (left), with Director, Port Harcourt Book Festival, Mrs Koko Kalango (2nd left), at the opening of Port Harcourt Book Festival in Port Harcourt, recently.

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FG, ASUU Set Date to Sign Agreement

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The Federal Government is set to formally sign an agreement with the Academic Staff Union of Universities following weeks of negotiations.
The development may be linked to the 40 per cent salary increase for academic staff proposed by the FG last month and accepted by the union.
A circular issued by the Ministry of Education invited Vice-Chancellors and Registrars of federal universities to witness the signing ceremony scheduled for Wednesday, January 14, 2026, at 11:00 a.m. at the Tertiary Education Trust Fund Conference Hall, Abuja.
The circular, dated January 5, 2026, and referenced FME/IS/UNI/ASUU/C.11/Vol.V/82, was signed by the Director of University Education, Rakiya Ilyasu, on behalf of the Minister of Education.
It was titled ‘Invitation to the Ceremony for the Signing of Agreement Between the Federal Government and the Academic Staff Union of Universities.’
The circular was sighted by our correspondent on Saturday and confirmed by the Ministry’s Director, Press and Public Relations, Boriowo Folasade.
 “This signing represents a critical milestone in promoting industrial harmony and improving teaching and learning in our universities.
“It also reaffirms the Federal Government’s commitment to the sustainable development of education in line with the Renewed
Attendance at the ceremony was declared mandatory for all invited university administrators, highlighting the importance attached to the agreement and its implementation.
Last month, the industrial crisis that had burdened Nigeria’s university system for 16 years following the 2009 Federal Government–ASUU Agreement saw the union accept the Federal Government’s proposed 40 per cent salary increase for academic staff.
It was reported that the deal, effective from January 1, 2026, would be reviewed after three years
  Why FG Shouldn’t Be Blamed for Non-Implementation of Council Autonomy
Under the new terms, professors will earn a pension equivalent to their final annual salary upon retirement at age 70. The agreement also provides for the establishment of a National Research Council to fund research with at least one per cent of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product.
Other provisions include improved funding for libraries, laboratories, equipment and staff development, greater university autonomy, and the election of academic leaders, with only professors eligible to serve as deans and provosts. The pact also guarantees that no staff member involved in past industrial actions will be victimised.
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DSS, Rector Warn Kogi Poly Students Against Vices,Rumours

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The Kogi State Directorate of the Department of State Services (DSS) has warned fresh students of Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja, that security on campus is a shared responsibility, stressing that carelessness, poor judgment and rumour-mongering pose and ostentatious living pose greater dangers than most real threats.
The Director of the Department in the state, gave the warning in his speech, titled,”MANAGING SECURITY AND RUMORS ON CAMPUS at the 33rd Matriculation Ceremony for the students of 2025/2026 academic session of the Polytechnic on Thursday in Lokoja.
The director, represented by A. S. MUSA, emphasised that while Lokoja remains largely peaceful, no campus is immune from security challenges.
He identified theft of phones, laptops and wallets, infiltration of hostels by unauthorised persons, risky late-night movements and online scams targeting fresh students as recurring threats, most of which, he noted, are preventable through vigilance and discipline.
The security agency cautioned students against behaviours that weaken personal safety, including lack of security consciousness, predictable routines, drug abuse, drunkenness, sexual recklessness, ostentatious living and the lure of secret cults.
According to the DSS director,cultism, often disguised as “protection,” ultimately places students under violent control systems with devastating consequences, while flamboyant lifestyles and careless displays of wealth attract criminal attention.
Our correspondent reports that a major focus of the lecture was the danger of rumours, which the DSS described as “more destructive than real threats.”
According to him,false alerts about kidnappers, armed attacks, school closures or emergency evacuations,often spread through WhatsApp messages and voice notes,have previously triggered panic, stampedes and academic disruption on campuses, sometimes putting lives at risk without any verified danger.School supplies
He, therefore, advised to verify information strictly through official Polytechnic channels such as management announcements, Student Affairs notices and campus security units. The DSS boss warned that forwarding unconfirmed messages makes students unwitting accomplices in spreading fear and destabilising the academic environment.
On personal safety, he also urged students to always carry their identity cards, avoid lonely and poorly lit areas at night, secure their hostel rooms, challenge suspicious strangers and promptly report unusual activities.
He cautioned students to remain calm, obedient to lawful instructions and refuse to act on hearsay, adding that these virtues are critical responses during emergencies.
The DSS director reminded the matriculating students that security goes beyond physical safety to include protection of reputation, mental stability and future prospects.
By rejecting rumours, cultism and reckless living, and by embracing responsibility and alertness, students can be rest assured that Kogi State Polytechnic can remain a safe, peaceful and conducive centre of learning for all.
Declaring event open, the Rector of the Polytechnic, Prof.Salisu Ogba Usman, matriculated 4,591 students into seven schools and 57 academic programmes of the Polytechnic.
“Of this number,2460 students (54 percent) are admitted into National Diploma Progrmes, while 2,131 students (46 percent)are admitted into Higher National Diploma 1 programmes”,Usman said.
He further reviewed that 19 out of the 57 Programmes currently run by the polytechnic were introduced under the present administration in the state.
Prof.Usmam expressed the continued commitment of the Polytechnic to uphold discipline, transparency,and zero tolerance for all forms of social Vices ,while promoting peaceful coexistence,responsible leadership and mutual respect.
“Our emphasis on security, moral discipline and academic integrity is non-, negotiable and central to our institutional philosophy,” the Rector stressed.
He urged the new students to take full advantage of the opportunities available in the Polytechnic and to conduct themselves in ways that will bring honour to their families ,the Polytechnic and the nation at large.
Usman said the polytechnic has pursued inclusive leadership by institutionalizing transparency, strengthening staff welfare engagement,and integrating student leadership into governance processes.
According to him the gender distribution is equally encouraging, with 52 percent, male and 48 percent female, representing steady progress in the gender balance of the Polytechnic.
He promised that the “shall continue to uphold discipline, transparency and zero tolerance for all forms of social vices,while promoting peaceful coexistence,responsible leadership and mutual respect.
The Rector stressed that the emphasis of the Polytechnic on security, moral discipline and academic integrity is non-negotiable and central to its institutional philosophy.
He urged the new students to take full advantage of the opportunities available in the polytechnic and conduct themselves in ways that will bring honour to their families,the polytechnic and the nation at large.
“Together we shall continue to reposition Kogi State Polytechnic as a reference point for excellence in polytechnic education in Nigeria,” he promised.
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FG Bans Disposable workbooks, introduces reusable textbooks in schools

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The Federal Government has rolled out a new education policy banning disposable workbooks and mandating the use of reusable, high-quality  textbooks in schools, in a move aimed at reducing the rising cost of education for parents, improving learning outcomes and promoting environmental sustainability.School supplies
The policy was unveiled by the Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, alongside the Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaba Sai’d, as part of sweeping reforms targeted at repositioning Nigeria’s education sector and easing the financial burden on families.
Under the new framework, schools are required to adopt standardised and durable textbooks designed to last between four and six years.
The policy expressly prohibits the practice of bundling disposable workbooks with textbooks, a practice the government says has inflated school expenses and contributed to unnecessary waste.
According to the ministers, the reusable  textbook initiative will enable siblings to share learning materials across academic sessions, significantly reduce recurring education costs for parents and limit waste generation within the school system, thereby advancing national sustainability goals.
As part of the broader reforms, the Federal Government has also introduced a uniform academic calendar to ensure consistency in teaching, learning and school planning across the country.
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