The Minister of State for Education, Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba, says private school owners are entitled to charge fees for the third term as schools start resuming for exit classes.
Mr Nwajiuba said
this at the media briefing of the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on the
Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic on Monday in Abuja.
He was reacting to a
question on if it was proper for private schools to charge the third term fee
since the period the exiting students would spend in school is short.
The minister said
that private school owners were running a business venture and not a charity
organisation.
He added that “for
public institutions, we can’t tell you that we charge school fees, as most of
our schools are free. Public schools are free and vary from state to state.
“But when you go
into a contractual relationship with a school owner, a school owner is a
passionate person, but is also a business person. He or she is not running a
charity organisation, they may be charitable in their approach, but it’s not
charity.
“So, it’s important
that you appreciate that a private school is entitled to charge fees for the
work they do. The person that runs a school may be passionate about education
but will still charge fees.”
Mr Nwajiuba said
that “once the WAEC examination starts on August 17, it will run till the
middle of September and NABTEB will start immediately and run till October.”
He said “NECO
examination will start on October 10, about a week to the end of NABTEB and run
through to November.
“We expect that
throughout the period, students are working and learning.
“We don’t just want
them to be in school and be playing, this is exit class, it says a lot about
the six years spent in secondary school.
“Right now, we are
lifting the registration for NABTEB and NECO, continuously running, even while
we are about to begin WAEC.
‘”All examinations
are a test of outcomes. We will want our teachers to continuously engage the
students,” he said.
Mr Nwajiuba
emphasised that schools resumption was for exit classes at the moment, adding
that some schools had even opened on Monday, August 3.
He said, “I
monitored developments in Lagos State, where some schools opened and cleaned
the classes and the environment, while some other states will open as the week
proceeds.”
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