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WASSCE: Why Students Should Be Allowed To Write Exams – Bolaji Abdullahi Reveals

According to the one time Kwara State Commissioner for Education, nobody knows when the pandemic will end, hence, the federal government can still within the pandemic find creative means that will allow for the exams while still keeping in mind the safety of the students and the country as well.

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The Federal Government of Nigeria has been advised by former minister of youth and sports development, Bolaji Abdullahi, to provide alternatives for secondary school students to seat for the 2020 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

According to the one time Kwara State Commissioner for Education, nobody knows when the pandemic will end, hence, the federal government can still within the pandemic find creative means that will allow for the exams while still keeping in mind the safety of the students and the country as well.

Abdullahi again challenged states and private schools to take necessary measures to avoid denying students of about 104 schools across the country from not participating in the yearly examination because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“creative ways to manoeuvre around the coronavirus pandemic so that Nigerian students can write their exams,” Naija News quoted Abdullahi saying.

He added, “The best we can do is to find ways to keep life going even in the midst of the pandemic and continue to find creative ways to manoeuvre around it. It is what we are doing with the airlines. It is what we are doing with the markets. It is what we are doing with sundry other sectors that we have allowed to resume even as the pandemic rages still,”

Abdullahi again reiterated that “the decision not to participate in the exams will affect 1.5 million students this year, and this can get complicated if the pandemic continues into next year, meaning the number of affected students will double.”

“The Federal Government is understandably afraid of what could happen, God forbid if it allows people’s children to gather to write the SSCE examination in the midst of the raging pandemic of COVID-19. When it comes to COVID-19, there is no easy answer, and there will always be trade-off. Federal Government is, therefore, choosing to err on the side of caution by asking children not to write the examinations.”

According to him, no one can tell exactly when the pandemic will end in the country, noting that things will get worst should the pandemic exceed this year and hence the need to consider safe options amid the pandemic.

“However, the easier or safer options are not necessarily the best. The relative net consequences of all available options have to be considered and weighed against one another. When we consider that this safe option will mean that about 1.5 million children will be left hanging for one year and by next year, this number will double, along with all the implications, then we must force ourselves to think more deeply and begin to consider even more difficult options. No one knows if this pandemic will end next year, or even in the next five years. God forbid, but what happens if it actually gets worse next year and the year after?”

Again he insisted that the government and as well the Nigerian lawmakers could still consider in arriving at a satisfying verdict as regards the examination while it is still feasible.

“Can we get the exact number of students eligible to write WASC examination this year? Can we study their spread across the country? What logistics challenge does each location present in terms of COVID-19 safety measures? How long does it normally take to write the examination? Do we need to stretch it out longer to allow fewer number of candidates into the examination hall at one time? Can we set up minimum safety requirements that each centre must meet if it must serve as an examination centre? Do we need to request for a postponement for another month or so to enable us put all these measures in place?” Abdullahi asked.

“Even the south-west states would value the lives of the children more than they value education. Same with other countries in the WAEC arrangement. Why then, are they insisting on proceeding with the examinations? Are there things we can learn from them in rolling out a nationwide plan? The decision not to write the examination is an option. But we need to consider other options as well and chose what is best for the children rather than what we consider most convenient for everyone.”

Meanwhile, Naija News had reported earlier that the Six South-West States have asked intending applicants to be rest assured they are ready to conduct 2020 West African School Certificate Examinations for students in the region.

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