FG sets first class, second class upper degrees as benchmark for teaching

FG sets first class, second class upper degrees as benchmark for teaching

For quality teaching in the nations basic education, the Federal Government has revealed that starting from next year, 2021, only candidates with firs

Resign! Nigeria gasping for air, now on ventilator – PDP to Buhari
Appeal court affirms conviction of Atuche, ex-Bank PHB boss over N26bn fraud
Kylie Jenner tops the world’s 10 youngest billionaires

For quality teaching in the nations basic education, the Federal Government has revealed that starting from next year, 2021, only candidates with first class and second class upper will be considered for teaching employment. It said migrating teachers without foundation in education will be required to sit for conversion programmes in order to learn pedagogy and the other ways of communicating and managing students.

The Permanent Secretary to the Federal Ministry of Education, Sonny Echonu, also said better remuneration has been concluded towards upgrading the level of teachers. He added that already, a national implementation committee will be inaugurated next week to cover all the teachers registration and revitalisation plan and one of which is the issue of entry.

According to him: “With effect from next year we will not admit or engage people as teachers if they don’t meet a particular threshold. We are now limiting entry to only the best, you must have a first class or a 2/1 as minimum.
“If you have qualification in other subjects that is not in education, we arrange for a conversion programme to be administered by NTI, TRCN and any university that has faculties of education that has this programme because you have to learn pedagogy and the other ways of communicating and managing students.

“We are migrating teachers who are not qualified or do not have the requisite qualifications, competency or not licensed or registered to practice we are migrating them out of our classrooms to make way for qualified personnel because we want to achieve learning and teaching and learning occurs in our schools.

“The examination itself is going very smoothly, the feedback we get is very good. We will continue to do this and we encourage others to get in touch with NTI, TRCN. We are finalising the figures with national salaries and wages commission and in talks with unions, views of state government, private school owners so that we can all work together and decide on when implementation will take off.”

On his part, the Executive Secretary of TRCN, Prof. Ajiboye, while stressing the importance of the qualifying exams, said questions have been placed online for candidate’s in the diaspora who cannot have permits to teach without the the certificates.

He said the Council has begun registration for the next diet which is come up around February or March 2021 and the figures are rising as a result of knowledge about its importance.