
The Nasarawa State chapter of
National Parents’ Teachers’ Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN) has urged the state
government to ban child begging and enforce its free and compulsory education
policy.
Umaru Ebenya, the state Chairman
of NAPTAN, made the appeal in his address to the Commissioner of Education,
Alhaji Aliyu Tijjani, on Wednesday.
According to him, the ban on child
begging has become necessary to ensure that every child goes to school in
keeping with the education policy in the state.
He decried the presence of child
beggars in the state, stressing the need for relevant stakeholders to tackle
the menace.
The chairman also expressed
concern over the falling standard of education, saying that most graduates of
secondary schools in the state could hardly make a good sentence.
Ebenya said: “Most Primary six
pupils and graduates of secondary schools in the state cannot speak English
fluently hence a call for serious concern.”
Ebenya said that the government
should collaborate with the traditional rulers in ensuring effective
supervision of schools as it was the practice in their respective domains in
the past.
He, therefore, said that
traditional rulers’ involvement would ease the problems in public schools as
they would report to the government regularly for its immediate and necessary
action.
Responding, the commissioner
expressed gratitude to the association for its contributions to educational
development in the state.
He assured the association that
the government would look into their various suggestions and implement them.




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