Opinion
I Want To Be A School Proprietor
A good friend of mine once said to me that If I wanted
to make it fast in life, I should open a
school or a church. But I quickly
reminded him that I neither had the anointing nor a call from God to establish
a church and perhaps pastor it. Initially, it did not make sense to me why he
added school to the list of fortune – spinning institutions.
But later the suggestion became clearer to me. I now
understand why my friend specifically mentioned church and school.
These are the two major institutions in this country which
proliferation is hardly regulated. Both institutions enjoy many things in
common. The difference is that one is spiritual, while the other is mundane.
Talk about church, it is found everywhere, even in the streets. So are schools,
particularly privately owned schools.
But if churches are established to usher us into a healthy
spiritual relationship with our maker and grant us good morals in return, what
is the unregulated accretion of schools designed to achieve in our society?
Cheap education quality? I think so.
This remains the albatross of the education sector in Rivers
State. There are too many illegal private schools in the State, many of which
simply offer illiteracy, not education. My pain is that the government does
very little or nothing about the unfortunate situation.
These sub-standard schools emerge on daily basis, while the
authorities (I mean the government) watch the trend helplessly. Because the
owners of the schools operate in unregulated environment, they site the
institutions at squalid or unsightly locations, which are unconducive to
learning. They often refer to those locations as temporary. But the truth is
that many of them spend longer time than necessary at such places. They
eventually convert them to permanent
sites.
Unfortunately, these so-called school sites are without
space and playground. Some of them are glorified one room accommodation. During
break time, the children have nowhere to exercise themselves. For this reason,
their teachers force them to remain in the class all the time.
Just imagine that kind of situation. Your child or ward goes
to school at 7am or 8am as the case may be. And he remains on his seat till
4pm, which is the time many of the private schools close after having what they
call lesson (another trick to extort money from parents).
Is that not the reason many of these children cry bitterly
each morning they are woken up and prepared for school? Yes, they cry hard
because they remember the several hours of confinement in the class. When they
recall how their teachers visit their frustration on them, especially in those
schools where caning holds sway, they
give their parents or guardians literal fight each day before they depart for
school.
Play is natural to children. I cannot imagine a school where
children lack sufficient space to play. It tantamounts to suffocating them.
But the question is who approves these schools? If they are
unapproved, why has the government failed to clamp-down on their owners? Or
even close down the schools outrightly? I think something must be wrong
somewhere. Somebody must be making a quick deal with the registration or
unregistration of schools in the State.
I don’t have to remind any one that Rivers State has clear
legal provisions on how private schools should emerge in the State.
Section 1, sub-section (1) of Education (Private Schools)
Law in the Laws of Rivers State of Nigeria 1999 is explicit on that. That
section reads thus:
“No person shall establish, carry on, conduct or keep a
private school or institution unless the school or institution has been duly
registered under this law”.
It, therefore, beats my imagination why a clear legal
provision on how privately owned schools should be established in the State is
ignored by both school proprietors and the approving authorities. Is this not a
sufficient ground for the State Education Ministry to descend on these illegal
school owners that dot every nook and cranny of the State?
Those who have discerning eyes don’t need to be told the
reason for the inaction of the supervisory authorities. Illegal schools don’t
thrive in the State without the conspiracy of some Ministry of Education
officials. I have no doubt that these officials are compromised by desperate
proprietors to overlook some of their lapses, particularly those which the law
prescribes as mandatory before registration. That is why illegally operated
private schools flourish.
I am sure if the State government is taken to task on how
many private schools that operate in the State, we may get the shocker of our
lives. The implication of this is that it is hard to determine the quality of
education they offer.
Owing to poor supervision by the government, some private
schools have already become centres for examination malpractices and are
commonly referred to as “miracle centres”. Parents are always willing to pay
any amount to these “centres” to ensure that their children obtain their
results at a sitting. Such is the level of decadence prevalent in some of these
schools.
Private schools in Rivers State are taking so much for
granted. This is because the State Education Ministry is weak and has failed to
live up to expectation. For instance, is it not the responsibility of the
Ministry to ensure that school calendar is harmonised. Why has it left these
schools to run the calendar the way they wish? Why has the ministry not done
anything about the poor remuneration private schools owners pay their staff,
particularly when it is understood that there is a nexus between remuneration
and output?
May be I should open a school as my friend advised and stop
agonising.
Arnold Alalibo
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