Oyo state is the only State in the South to benefit from the N793 million vote to restart the Integrated Almajiri, Qur’anic and non-formal schools into formal education in ten states.
The government said that the existing Almajiri/Tsangaya schools lack vocational skills. The pilot test will take off in nine states, eight of them in the north and only Oyo State in the south.
According to report, the new pilot project is expected to take no fewer than 10 million out-of-school children who are mostly Almajiris off the streets to acquire education and skills.
The other states are Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Niger, Adamawa, Bauchi, Yobe and Jigawa.
The new project will be implemented by the Federal Ministry of Education through the Universal Basic Education Commission in collaboration with states Ministries of Education, State Universal Basic Education Boards (SUBEBs) and the National Board for Arabic and Islamic Studies.
The government has voted N416 million for the project in 2019, N329.3 million in 2020, N36 million in 2021 and N11.7 million by 2022.
The government stated these in the Short and Medium Term Blueprint/Work Plan on the implementation of Education for Change: A Ministerial Strategic Plan (MSP) document obtained by The Nation in Abuja.
The government noted that by 2021, all Almajiri children would be fully integrated into formal school system.
According to the government, the previous 157 Almajiri/Tsangaya schools built by the federal ministry of education and handed over to states as provided for by law were abandoned.
The government blamed this on lack of sensitisation of religious community leaders and other stakeholders on the programme.
To avoid a repeat, the government said that it would hold series of meetings in four geo-political zones with the highest concentration of Almajiri children while a campaign on the new project would be held in the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, to get a buy-in for the new project.