The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) had stated that Nigeria needed to invest in increasing teacher capacity to improve everyone’s access to high-quality education.
This was said by Christian Munduate, the UNICEF representative in Nigeria, during a media Q&A session on Wednesday in Bauchi.
She claimed that 75% of Nigerian children between the ages of seven and 14 lack the fundamental literacy and numeracy skills.
“How teachers perform while they are delivering education for children needs to be frequently assessed.
“There is a need to know how to distinguish between a lack of teaching better and a lack of performance.
“There are many reasons why at the end of the day, we have 75 per cent of children not really reading, writing or making basic arithmetic operations.
“The problems come from different reasons and these reasons need to be addressed,” she said.
According to Munduate, UNICEF is committed to a national assessment on capacities to determine what are the training needs of teachers in the country.
She said the UN agency would also conduct similar exercise to assess the performance of children, adding that the planned to mame the assessment exercise an annual event.
The UNICEF official said that such exercise was impreative to enable authorities at different levels to appraise their performances in terms of quality education in the country.
“The families and parents need to understand that education is important for the children and for theirs well-being .
“The more the child is educated, the more chances this child will have to get a job and to support his parents.
“But if a child doesn’t get this opportunity of education, the chances are very little and this increases the circle of poverty,” she said.
On immunisation, Munduate said that UNICEF would work with Nigerian government to enhance immunisation coverage in the next five years.
She said the organisation has been supporting Nigeria to vaccinate its children under the ”Zero dose or zero children with zero vaccines”.
“We are working with the health sector on what we call the strengthening of primary healthcare attention and this is already happening in Bauchi state.
“So, it is important for you as representatives of the media to find out how this is being done in different primary healthcare centres,” she said. (NAN)