Thursday, January 2, 2025 -Tunji Alausa, Nigeria’s minister of education, has announced that President Bola Tinubu has reaffirmed the government’s commitment to reintroducing history as a core subject in the country’s basic school curriculum.
History was removed from Nigeria’s basic school curriculum in 2007, a
decision that drew widespread criticism for years. Since then, historical
topics were only briefly addressed as part of social studies, leaving students
with limited knowledge of the country’s past.
In 2018, the federal government ordered the reinstatement of history as
a standalone subject in primary and junior secondary schools. Adamu Adamu, then
minister of education, explained that the Nigerian Education Research and
Development Council (NERDC) would first need to extract history from the social
studies curriculum.
Adamu said the reintroduced subject would feature a curriculum designed
to help students understand history as a tool for national integration and
nation-building. At the time, 3,700 history teachers were selected for the
initial phase of training to enhance the teaching of the subject.
Education ministries across several states, including Lagos and Taraba,
have since begun implementing the federal policy.
Speaking on a Channels TV program, Tunji Alausa emphasized the
importance of reconnecting Nigeria’s youth with their history. “Let me go to
basic education, the curriculum is good. What has been missing in the past is
Nigerian history. We now have people of 30 years disconnected from our history.
It doesn’t happen in any part of the world,” Alausa stated.
He added, “President Bola Tinubu has mandated that we put that back in
our curriculum and that is back. From 2025 our students in primary and
secondary schools will have that as part of their studies.”
Former education minister Adamu Adamu previously validated the policy,
stating that the absence of history in the curriculum had contributed to
declining morals, the erosion of civic values, and a disconnection of Nigerians
from their heritage.
With the reintroduction of history, stakeholders
hope to bridge this gap and foster a deeper understanding of Nigeria’s past
among the younger generation.
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