Federal government has launched a new teacher development programme, Teacher Internship Scheme (TIS), designed to support states in the emergence of a new generation of teachers with the skills and knowledge to excel in the digital age and help in the implementation of smart education in Nigeria.
The scheme was introduced by the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) to address the dearth of teachers in the field of smart education being championed by the commission in Nigeria, with the establishment of 37 smart schools across the country.
The minister of education, Professor Tahir Mamman, flagged off the teacher Internship scheme yesterday at the UBEC Digital Resource Centre, located at Kado, Abuja, where he also inspected the facility established to serve as a hub for creating and distributing resources to schools as well as training the school personnel.
He expressed the commitment of the federal government towards the provision of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) infrastructure for enhanced teaching and learning in the country.
According to him, ICT has dominated every spectrum of life and Nigeria must make a paradigm shift from the traditional method of teaching children using blackboard and chalk.
He commended the executive secretary of UBEC, Dr Hamid Bobboyi and his management team for the initiative, noting that one could not be talking about the quality of education without teachers with the right skills and knowledge to drive the process.
Earlier, the executive secretary of UBEC, Bobboyi said participants of the TIS, are graduates of education selected based on merit from all the states of the federation and are expected to go through intensive training for two years.
“It is envisaged that at the end of the two-year programme, the Interns would emerge as a new breed of teachers, equipped with the skills and knowledge to harness the power of technology and transform the learning experience.
“They would not just be teachers; they will be smart teachers who would be innovators, catalysts for change, and architects of a brighter future for the Nigerian child,” he said.
He said this was a significant step forward in the ongoing quest to transform Basic Education in Nigeria, adding that the world is changing at an unprecedented pace, with technology impacting every aspect of our lives, including education.
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