US open reading centre in BUK

The government of the United States of America has inaugurated a reading and research development centre at Ado Bayero University, Kano.

Done in collaboration with Agency for International Development (USAID), it is to ensure teachers are equipped with techniques to improve reading outcomes across the country for years and generations to come.

Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, USAID Deputy Education Office

Director, Elice Elegbe said “Everyone here has a passion for education and high hopes for its future in Nigeria.  In that spirit, the new Center for Reading Research and Development will play a critical role in ensuring the next generation of Nigerian children is equipped with strong reading skills as the basis for a lifetime of learning.”

It  was conceived and designed under a $1 million USAID grant that established a partnership between BUK and Florida State University (FSU).  To ensure that it is staffed by scholars equipped with the latest ideas in educational development, the grant supported sending six Bayero faculty fellows to participate in residencies at Florida State’s Center for Reading Research.

FSU is also training additional BUK faculty to deliver courses on early grade reading instruction and learning to pre-service primary grade teachers.  Faculty fellows will also undertake collaborative research on early grade reading and develop postgraduate diploma and master’s degree programs for Nigerian educators.

One concept it will embrace is to develop reading curricula in local languages before starting to teach in English.  Research shows that a child who starts to read in a language he or she understands will be better equipped to take on learning a foreign language in later grades, and ultimately get more out of his or her education.

Over the past three years, USAID has embraced this concept, distributing more than three million books and teacher’s guides for early grade reading in Hausa and English in northern Nigeria.  Similar materials are being developed in Igbo and Yoruba to be deployed later this year.

“Education matters,” Elegbe said. “Today’s children are the future of Nigeria, and education is the future of Nigeria’s children.”

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