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| Pupils returning to school after the yuletide holidays yesterday. PHOTO: ISAAC TAIWO |
• FG targets more Zebra crossings, road signs around FCT schools
The streets of Lagos yesterday got some stomping as pupils from kindergarten, nursery, primary and secondary schools in both private and public schools resumed from the three-week yuletide holidays and began a new term.
At one of the public schools complex in Agege, consisting Darocha,
Ajegunle and Christ Apostolic Primary schools, pupils in their
well-ironed uniforms marched excitedly to their classes happy to be
reunited with their classmates.
Efforts to make one of the heads of the school comment on the
resumption proved abortive, as he demanded a letter from the state
government before he could speak with the press. However, some private
schools visited held no inhibition to speak as they revealed their
agenda for the new term.
A teacher at El-Peniel School, Ogba, Mr. ‘Shola Oyeleye, said he was
enthusiastic about the resumption of the pupils. Oyeleye said the
school’s focus to prepare the children for the future remains
sacrosanct.
“Our ideal is entrenched in our plan to move the children forward
this term. One of our first considerations is to continue to enhance our
environment and make it conducive for learning while we remain
undeterred in focusing attention on key subjects like English,
Phonetics, Mathematics and the sciences to improve the spoken English of
our children.
“We also want to see them riding high in academic performance while
our goal to prepare a total child include nurturing them spiritually and
morally not to fall prey to moral decadence that pervades the society
today.”
The headmistress of Clevelend Nursery and Primary School, Ipaja, Mrs.
Mayowa Adewale, said she also happy to have their children back from
holidays and they remain committed to the mission of the school to move
the children forward to attain greater heights in the future .
Master Philip Oluwafemi Isaac, an SS1 student of Benji Private
Secondary School, said he enjoyed his holidays and was happy to resume a
new term. His focus to be an engineer remains unchanged and he would
study very hard this term to ensure he makes every subject that are
necessary for his course of study.
Miss Deborah Ifeoluwa Adebayo, SS2 student of Keke Senior High
School, said she spent part of her holidays outside Lagos and also
attended her church’s retreat and congress programmes.
Some head of schools expressed their displeasure over the low turn
out in the numbers of students, as some are wont to delay their
resumption till the second week. The principal of Ewutuntun Senior
Grammar School, Oshodi, Ayodeji Folayan, noted that late resumption may
affect students’ performance as the school usually begin the term with a
welcome test that is most likely to add up to the students’ Continuous
Assessment.
However, some students who spoke to The Guardian said academic work
don’t usually start fully in the first week of resumption. “We will be
used to clean up the school premises and cut grasses, which the Lagos
State government has banned. The government frowns at students cutting
grasses but our teachers will still insist.”
Meanwhile, determined to reduce the daily occurrence of accidents in
the nation’s capital, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory
(FCT), Muhammad Musa Bello, has directed the transportation and
education secretaries to immediately put in place more zebra crossings
and road signs across all schools in Abuja for safer roads for the
children and other road users .
Speaking yesterday when he received the Kwapda’as Road Safety Demand
(KRSD) Trust Fund group in Abuja, Bello stated that the administration
was working to strengthen measures that would promote safety on the
roads round schools in the FCT, to reduce road casualties and make the
city a model for road safety in the country.
Bello appealed to stakeholders in the FCT, including Non-Governmental
Organizations, individuals, government officials and institutions, to
join the government in ensuring safety on the roads even as he called on
road users to ensure that road traffic regulations are obeyed.
Earlier, a Justice of the Court of Appeal and president of Kwapda’s
Road Safety Demand Trust Fund, Justice Monica Dongban, said she was
motivated to spearhead the advocacy for road safety after her son lost
his life after been struck by a hit-and-run driver.
Donggam promised she would do all she could to prevent similar
accident to any other child stressing, ‘’it is an agony I would not want
any parent to go through.’’








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