By Fatima Saka
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is advocating the need for more investment in teachers, both in time and financial resources, to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.
The UNICEF’s Education Manager, Mrs Manar Ahmed, said this during a presentation on: Scaling Foundational Literacy and Numeracy in Nigeria, in Kano on Friday.
The event, which was a two-day Media Dialogue on SDGs, was aimed at promoting, protecting, advocating and collaborating with stakeholders for the realisation of children rights in the country.
Speaking on, Ahmed said that tackling teachers’ training was not enough but also ensuring action plans for improving teaching and learning under the right environment.
She stated that Nigeria is not lacking the right policy but the country’s staggering learning crisis is one of the lowest globally.
“In sub Saharan Africa, 87 per cent of children are in learning poverty as they do not have basic literacy by age 10.
“Goal four of the SDGs is to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education that promote lifelong learning and all children by age 10 must know how to read and solve numeracy.
“It is not that Nigeria lacks the right policy but Nigeria is facing staggering crisis with learning outcomes being one of the lowest.
“So, 70 per cent of the children in school are not achieving basic foundational skills,” she said.
In addition, She said, the 27 per cent of teaching staff in Nigeria were unqualified as qualified teachers were in short supply.
She expressed that there was the need to learn to read in order to read to learn to achieve the SDGs by 2030.
“We need to do more in structural approach of learning, community engagement in ensuring accountability.
“Structural approach is best for training of teachers, so on-the-job training as well as creating the right environment is important,” she said.
She, therefore, commended the country for her role in making huge change since 2017 when the national assessment of learning outcomes was carried out.
She said more is needed to be done to achieve the 17 goals of the SDGs by 2030 as government allocation to education must be increased.
Also, Dr Uche Anunne, Editorial Training Coordinator, said that strong institutions were required to ensure the quality of teachers in the country.
Anunne said that most SDGs had impact on the child rights, saying that all hands must be on deck to get things right by 2030.