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Stakeholders Urge Govt to Promote Reading Culture

Written by Akeem Alao

Stakeholders in Nigeria’s education sector have urged the governments and other partners to promote reading culture.

The stakeholders called for measures aimed at promoting reading and vocabulary skills development amongst children.

The stakeholders said this at a Vocabulary Bee competition and launch of the ‘Great Minds’ magazine in Abuja.

They said that such measures would entrench standards in the nation’s education sector.

Ms Olamibo Balogun, Creative Director, Great Minds Literacy Readers, said that the initiative was aimed at helping children improve their vocabulary skills and mastery of English Language at a young age.

“We discovered amongst pupils that some can spell but cannot read, the most challenging one is the one that knows everything relating to a word but cannot spell it.

Balogun, also the Founder, Eminent Minds Empowerment Initiative, said that the magazine would be published annually with information on literacy problems and how to solve them.

“Our yearnings to reach more people, raise who can read, write, spell and be fluent with the proper diction gave rise to the Vocabulary Bee competition and the launch of the magazine.

“And with the magazine, we will be able to reach out to alot of pupils to go further than learning how to spell a particular word but also learn everything related to the word,” she said.

Also, Edirin Oghenejode, Executive Director, Corporate Services, Total Security Insurance Brokers Ltd., urged government to monitor all funds, projects and initiatives on education.

Oghenejode, who commended the organisers, also called on Nigerians to contribute toward revamping the nation’s education sector, particularly in improving reading culture

“Education is the key and bedrock of any sustainable development, government at all levels should partner with such organisations to ensure reading habits of children are enhanced for the betterment of our country.

“There must be proper understanding and monitoring where these funds are channelled, to ensure that such funds are properly utilised on what they are budgetted for,” he said.

The Director, Britarch Schools, Abuja Mrs Chichi Philips-Orioha, said that it was imperative for stakeholders to support the government at all levels in improving the education system.

“We should contribute our own quota to make a change as much as we can, to see things get better.

“We still appeal to the government to emulate what other countries are doing with the education system.

“Nigeria has a lot of intelligent and hardworking people, we need to support the government to move the nation’s education sector forward,” Orioha said.

A parent, Mrs Kauthar Babansulaiman, commended the organisers for the initiative.

Babansulaiman added that the programmes were aimed at reviving reading culture, vocabulary and improving standard of education in the country.

The launch of the magazine was spiced with dance presentation and vocabulary bee competition by students from different schools, orphanages as well as distribution of gift items.

The Vocabulary Bee competition and launch of the magazine was jointly organised by Great Minds Literacy Readers, Eminent Minds Empowerment Initiative and some non-govermental organisations in Abuja.

(NAN)

About the author

Akeem Alao

Akeem Alao trained as a language teacher. He graduated from Adeniran Ogunsanya college of Education where he studied English/Yoruba Languages and Ekiti State University where he obtained a degree in English Education.

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