Govt makes teaching Igbo compulsory in all Imo schools | EduCeleb
Chukwudi Chukwudubem
29th October 2019
The Imo State Government has announced the compulsory teaching and learning of Igbo Language in all pri­mary, post-primary schools as well as tertiary institutions in the state.
State Commissioner for Education, Viola Onwuliri announced this at the 4th matriculation ceremony of the Imo State College of Nursing and Mid­wifery, Orlu on Tuesday.
A sum of 55 students were formally admitted into the institu­tion for the 2018/2019 academic session.
Onwuliri, who directed the provost of the school, Ngozi Duru, to make Igbo language a compulsory course in the institution, also charged parents and guardians to teach their children how to speak and write Igbo language to spare their mother tongue from possibly going into extinction.
Represented by the Director of Tertiary Education, Dr Basil Iwu, the Commissioner said that her ministry, in partnership with the state Secondary Education Management Board, had already organized workshop for teachers and principals of post-primary schools in the state to enhance their capacity, adding that a seminar for all Igbo Language teachers had equally taken place in the state.
Onwuliri expressed delight that students of the state origin have continued to excel in national and international examinations and gave an assurance that her ministry would continue to give the institution all the necessary support it re­quired to enable it to emerge as one of the best colleges of nursing and midwifery in the country.
Duru, in an address earlier, disclosed that the management had installed all necessary measures, strategies, structures, procedures and mechanisms that would reposition the college as the first among equals in nursing education in the country.
She said that the college, in pursuance of its vision of enforcing academic excellence, promotion of godliness, competence, moral values and good character would continue to maintain a zero tolerance for all anti-social behaviours such as cultism, examination malpractices, drug abuse, hooliganism and prostitution.