Thursday, March 28, 2024

80,000 Kano students make 9 credits in NECO examinations – Commissioner

Uba Group

The Kano State Government says that the state recorded 95 per cent success in the National Examination Council examinations in 2021 with over 80,000 students obtaining nine credits.

The Commissioner for Education in the state, Sanusi Sa’idu-Kiru, made the disclosure at a news conference on the achievements recorded by the ministry in 2021.

He said that the state had the highest number of candidates sitting for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examinations in the country.

“We have 89,000 candidates, who sat for NECO in 2021; out of this number, about 80,000 scored nine credits.”

According to the commissioner, the state government spent N235 million on payment of examination fees for some of the candidates.

He said that the 44 local government councils in the state, members of the state’s House of Assembly, the National Assembly, as well as philanthropists, spent about N500 million on payment of examination fees for candidates.

Sa’idu-Kiru disclosed that the state had more than 7,000 primary schools and 1,517 secondary schools across the 44 local government areas of the state.

This, he said, was why the state government increased its zonal directorates for senior secondary schools from 14 to 23, SUBEB from 10 to 15 and agency for mass education from 10 to 15.

“For private and voluntary institutions, seven were established, library board, science and technical schools got three. So, now we have 66 zonal offices across all the MDAs under the ministry.

“N100,000 has been approved for each zone as running cost for effective monitoring and supervision of the schools,” he said.

The commissioner said that the state government recalled 5,700 staff with education qualification from various Ministries, Departments and Agencies to classroom teaching, adding that additional 6,995 teachers, who were on government payroll but teaching in private and community schools, were also recalled to teaching in public schools in the state.

Sa’idu-Kiru said that the government spent millions of naira on purchase of one million textbooks, stressing that the administration in the state would continue to put in place structures and teaching materials in schools to improve teaching and learning.

By so doing, he said, many parents would be encouraged to send their children to public schools.

(NAN).

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