The Nigeria Union of Teachers has said it is strongly
opposed to the current admission policy which pegged Joint Admission
Matriculation Board cut-off marks for students seeking admission into
universities at 180 and above while those for Polytechnics and Colleges of
Education was put at 150 and above.
The union described the policy as highly discriminatory and
“calculated at demeaning and lowering the professional status of teachers with
its concomitant negative effect on the attainment of quality education in the
country.”
A statement by the NUT Secretary-General, Obong Obong on
Tuesday in Abuja, said the policy is a great disservice to the education sector
as it placed the best brains and students of distinction in other courses while
those with lower grades were pushed into teaching.
The association called for an immediate reversal of the
policy, stressing that the government must henceforth ensure that only
brilliant students are admitted for training as teachers in all educational
institutions in the county.
It said, “This is the practice in most advanced and
developed countries, where it is considered that a teacher’s ability to
disseminate knowledge to students is dependent on his sound intellectual
capability.
“This is how government deliberately source for people with
lower educational content to become teachers only to turn around and blame them
for poor delivery. If this is allowed to stand, government should take full
responsibility for the resultant shortcomings that may be observed in our
educational institutions in future from those teachers.”
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