By Suhaib Auwal
In a country where the foundational pillars of education have long been riddled with structural gaps, funding constraints, and policy inconsistencies, the recent leadership at the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) signals a renewed hope.
Since her appointment as the Executive Secretary of UBEC, Aisha Garba has embarked on a reformist mission that seeks not just to address the surface-level symptoms, but to cure the systemic ailments crippling Nigeria’s basic education sector.
At the core of her vision is a comprehensive, inclusive, and technology-driven approach to strengthening basic education delivery. Her leadership style is not only proactive, but it also reflects a deep understanding of Nigeria's complex educational terrain.
With over 17 million children currently out of school, Garba has made it unequivocally clear: this figure is unacceptable, and she intends to drastically reduce it within the shortest possible time.
A Three-Pronged Vision: Access, Quality, and Safe Learning
Aisha Garba’s vision rests on three cardinal pillars namely, increasing access, improving quality, and creating safe, conducive learning environments. These are not just buzzwords; they represent targeted policy directions backed by strategic actions.
1. Increasing Access through Targeted Interventions
One of Garba’s top priorities is to tackle the issue of out-of-school children head-on. Her administration is deploying targeted interventions in underserved and hard-to-reach communities, particularly in the northern regions where educational backwardness is most pronounced. Through community-based schooling models, flexible learning schedules, and mobile classrooms, UBEC under her leadership is closing the gap between intention and implementation.
2. Improving Quality with Technology and Teacher Training
Aisha Garba is keenly aware that access without quality is a hollow achievement. That is why her focus extends to teacher retraining, curriculum upgrade, and digital learning tools. The integration of technology into classrooms, especially in rural areas, is helping to bridge the digital divide. From interactive e-learning platforms to virtual teacher development workshops, the emphasis is now on building a modern, competitive learning environment.
3. Safe and Inclusive Learning Environments
Aisha Garba is also laying strong emphasis on creating safe spaces for children to learn. This includes investing in school infrastructure, classrooms, libraries, toilets, and water facilities, while also ensuring these spaces are inclusive. For children with special needs and the girl-child, who often face unique educational barriers, UBEC is deploying programs that ensure no one is left behind. Specialized learning aids, gender-sensitive policies, and awareness campaigns are already in motion across several states.
Strategic Partnerships and Stakeholder Engagement
Aisha Garba understands that the government alone cannot shoulder the burden of revamping basic education. Her administration has opened the door to multi-sectoral partnerships, working with NGOs, private sector players, donor agencies, and traditional institutions to align goals and pool resources. This collaborative framework is already yielding positive outcomes, especially in capacity-building initiatives and infrastructural development.
A Race Against Time and Statistics
The Executive Secretary has openly expressed deep concern about Nigeria’s ballooning number of out-of-school children, which remains one of the highest in the world. Her pledge to drastically cut this number is not just a rhetorical flourish. It is backed by a nationwide data-driven approach that identifies key hotspots, monitors school enrollment trends, and designs region-specific intervention models.
A Turning Point for Basic Education?
What makes Aisha Garba’s leadership remarkable is not just her ambition, but her strategic clarity and tireless commitment to making a difference. Her actions suggest that Nigeria may be approaching a turning point where basic education will no longer be a privilege, but a right truly accessible to all.
As she continues to steer UBEC toward a more responsive, equitable, and resilient system, one thing is clear, Aisha Garba is not just managing a government agency. She is redefining the future of education for millions of Nigerian children.
If Nigeria is to meet the Sustainable Development Goal of inclusive and equitable quality education by 2030, it will require the kind of visionary and results-driven leadership Aisha Garba is bringing to the table. Her work is far from done, but the foundation she is laying offers hope that the future of basic education in Nigeria may indeed be brighter than its past.
Suhaib is a journalist based in Kano, can be reached at suhaiburrumi74@gmail.com
Comments
Post a Comment