By Nnamdi Odumody

ONE of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals is the provision of quality education for everyone. The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization(UNESCO) set a benchmark of 26 percent of national or state budget to fund education. Sadly, in the developing world like Africa, this directive is not adhered to. And that  is why African states are lagging behind in Human Development Indices index. Quality  education is the key to the sustainable development of any nation or state. Singapore’s success as an Asian economic miracle without natural resources is due to the high emphasis its government places on education. This has made its educational system the best in Asia.

For Singapore, which has had a consistent educational policy sustained over decades, the first and main strategy was to invest heavily in the quality of its teaching force. The objective was to raise the prestige and status of teaching to attract the best graduates to teaching positions. Today, teachers are recruited from the top five percent of graduates in a highly centralized system. All teachers are trained at the National Institute of Education to ensure quality control.

In another vein, Finland which has the best school system in the world was able to come up with a strategy which ensures that Finnish kids have bright futures tailored to their strengths and interests, 93 percent of students graduate from either a vocational or academic high school.

At age 16, children choose between a vocational programme which prepares them for work in different fields or to go on to a polytechnic or an academic programme which prepares them for  teaching in the university. Whether they go on to university or polytechnic,  the study is paid for, by the government. No wonder they are a world leader in High Technology with success stories like Nokia.

As a nation, Nigeria needs to rethink her education  system so as to raise graduates who can compete with their peers across the globe in terms of practical knowledge and workplace skills.

As a region, the  South-East   is known for having a highly entrepreneurial populace but how are we preparing our young population for the future. Traditional education today does not take into cognizance the effect of technological revolution which is sweeping across the globe, disrupting various industries and creating exponential value.

This piece seeks to lay out some pointers to how the South East can redesign her education strategy to create globally competitive youths who will transform the region and make it a 21st Century global African success story.

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The five states in the South-East should declare a state of emergency in the educational sector in the region and allocate not less than 30 percent of their  annual budgets to education. Also, private organizations and philanthropists can also support by investing in transforming education in South-East. This is important if the South-East must lead the continent of Africa in the Human Capital Development indices  and experience socio-economic transformation.

Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics education is important for making the youths of the South-East relevant for the challenges of the 21st century. It should be made compulsory for every Igbo young child before the age of 10 to know how to write computer programmes and also  be exposed to liberal arts. This will give them sound analytical minds and make them come up with creative solutions to problems they face.

A pedagogical approach which emphasizes both knowledge and practical skills acquisition by exposing both the teaching staff and students to  the state-of-art information and communication technology. Tertiary institutions in the South East should invest more in training their staff and undergraduates to become 21st Century and Fourth Industrial Revolution skilled workers who will be employable and able to solve problems in the workplace as intrapreneurs or create ventures as entrepreneurs.

The classrooms of the future are smart and connected offering personalized learning and generating real time analytics on learning outcomes which will predict the likelihood of academic performance of students in the classroom. Public schools can be adopted by organizations and wealthy philanthropists in the South-East and retrofitted with latest technology tools to make them smart schools that will train the young ones to become digitally relevant.

A smart learning platform should be developed to train all public and private school students in the South-East with the latest courses and subjects which will make them have in demand skills and prepare them for a digital future in English and Igbo so that they don’t lose their identity. Gamification can also be used to transform education in public and private schools in the East as game-based learning provides a fun experience which can make the kids learn faster.

Using virtual reality can make public schools offer quality accessible education as the technology can aggregate lots of students at the same time learning courses and subjects from a remote tutor who might be based abroad. Augmented reality is being used in medical schools abroad to train medical students.This will aid in the production of knowledgeable and skilled graduates, thinkers, researchers, scholars and leaders of tomorrow.

    Digital Skills Acquisition centers should be established in all the local government areas to train the youths in 3D printing, artificial intelligence, robotics, embedded electronics, blockchain, data analytics. These skills will make them to solve their everyday problems with technology, transform their communities  and  get employ by  reputable foreign organisations.

Odumody writes from Lagos.