Millions of pounds of UK government aid to Nigerian schools has failed to produce any major improvement in pupil learning, an independent watchdog says.
The Independent Commission for Aid Impact said the aid scheme was being undermined by a shortage of effective teachers and a lack of local support.
So far £102m has been spent in 10 Nigerian states, with a further £126m committed to 2019.
The UK government said the report had a limited focus but would be reviewed.
The Department for International Development's (Dfid) education programme is operating "in a very challenging environment, with too few effective teachers, poor infrastructure and unpredictable state funding all contributing to poor learning outcomes for pupils in basic education", the ICAI said in its critical report.
"Our review indicates no major improvement in pupil learning."
'Recent progress'
Using a traffic light rating system, the ICAI rated the scheme as amber-red - the second-lowest - which indicates "significant improvements" were required.
It found that around a third of the eligible children - an estimated 3.7 million - were still not in school, while those that were received little by way of education.
"We are concerned by the very high numbers of out-of-school children and the very poor learning outcomes in nine of the 10 Nigerian states supported by Dfid," it said.
It said that, as a result of British aid, a seven-year-old Nigerian girl could be learning in a new school where the teacher had been trained with UK funding, but she still might leave education not knowing how to read or write.
The UK aid goes to 10 of Nigeria's 36 states, but a Dfid spokesman responded: "This was a limited inquiry in that the team only visited 1% of schools, most of which were in only one state in Nigeria, and they did not take into account the most recent evidence of the project's progress.
"However, we will carefully review the report's recommendations and respond in due course."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
Driver on bail over fraudulent land transaction
3 minutes -
Keynote speakers arrive in Paris for Women of Valour
3 hours -
It’s time to reset Ghana and private sector must lead the way – Ishmael Yamson
4 hours -
Prosecutors demand Luis Rubiales World Cup kiss retrial
5 hours -
Ghana won’t sink any further, investors must stay – Ishmael Yamson
5 hours -
Dr. Louisa Satekla pays courtesy call on Haruna Iddrisu to promote oral health education
5 hours -
Coastal Civil Society Forum engages tidal wave victims, calls for urgent gov’t action
5 hours -
ECB apologises for Pope Francis Ashes post joke
5 hours -
Denmark postal service to stop delivering letters
6 hours -
Photos: Mahama visits victims of tidal waves destruction in Volta region
6 hours -
Teen armed with gun overpowered by passengers onboard plane
6 hours -
Ghana Month: From war airbase to global gateway – KIA’s evolution and Ghana’s airline struggle
6 hours -
Rosetta Quaicoe: Preventing future Cholera outbreaks in Takoradi: A public health imperative
6 hours -
Edward Bawa assumes office as Acting Group CEO & MD of GOIL PLC
6 hours -
Ghana’s economy to face greater external stability in 2025; reserves to hit $8.8bn in 2025
6 hours