Sunday, October 19, 2025
29.2 C
Lagos

Business

Troyka Holdings Chair, Biodun Shobanjo, Inducted into Loeries Hall of Fame

Nigeria’s foremost advertising leader and Chairman of Troyka Holdings,...

Zenith Bank, NEM, Seplat, AIICO, Dangote Cement, First HoldCo Recognised as Nigeria’s High-Performing Companies

L-R:    Michael Ani, Manager, Investor Relations, Dangote Cement; Oluseyi...

Finance Min, Wale Edun, to Keynote FiBOP Annual Confab Oct 18

The Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of...

Niteon Unveils First African Manufacturers Bank to Unlock $200bn Digital Export Market

Niteon, one of Nigeria's largest digital export marketplaces, has...

FG Boosts MSME Financing with NCGC Initiative

In a bid to boost economic growth and development,...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

SEC DG: Commission Considering Gradual Implementation of ISSB Standards

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

ISSB-Aligned Disclosures Will Lower Capital Costs, Attract Global Investors — SEC

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has unveiled plans...

SEC DG to Cadets:  Invest Early, Long Term to Create Wealth

Graduating Cadets of the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) have...

SEC DG: Accountability, Transparency will Boost Investor Confidence in Capital Market

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

SEC DG: Digital Assets Represent $10tn Opportunity by 2030

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

Insurance

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Leadway Assurance: Insurance Company of the Year at 2025 BAFI Awards

L-R: Managing Director, Leadway Assurance, Gboyega Lesi; Publisher, BuisnessDay...

Heirs Insurance Group Announces Inaugural Travel Festival: A Call for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

Heirs Insurance Group (HIG), Nigeria’s fastest-growing insurance group, has...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Celebrates 2025 Customer Service Week

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has been actively involved in...

Leadway: 55 Years of Innovation, Expanding Financial Access, Inclusion Across West Africa

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services and...

Business

Troyka Holdings Chair, Biodun Shobanjo, Inducted into Loeries Hall of Fame

Nigeria’s foremost advertising leader and Chairman of Troyka Holdings,...

Zenith Bank, NEM, Seplat, AIICO, Dangote Cement, First HoldCo Recognised as Nigeria’s High-Performing Companies

L-R:    Michael Ani, Manager, Investor Relations, Dangote Cement; Oluseyi...

Finance Min, Wale Edun, to Keynote FiBOP Annual Confab Oct 18

The Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of...

Niteon Unveils First African Manufacturers Bank to Unlock $200bn Digital Export Market

Niteon, one of Nigeria's largest digital export marketplaces, has...

FG Boosts MSME Financing with NCGC Initiative

In a bid to boost economic growth and development,...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

SEC DG: Commission Considering Gradual Implementation of ISSB Standards

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

ISSB-Aligned Disclosures Will Lower Capital Costs, Attract Global Investors — SEC

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has unveiled plans...

SEC DG to Cadets:  Invest Early, Long Term to Create Wealth

Graduating Cadets of the Nigerian Defence Academy (NDA) have...

SEC DG: Accountability, Transparency will Boost Investor Confidence in Capital Market

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

SEC DG: Digital Assets Represent $10tn Opportunity by 2030

The Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission...

Insurance

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Leadway Assurance: Insurance Company of the Year at 2025 BAFI Awards

L-R: Managing Director, Leadway Assurance, Gboyega Lesi; Publisher, BuisnessDay...

Heirs Insurance Group Announces Inaugural Travel Festival: A Call for Inclusive Travel Ecosystem for Africans

Heirs Insurance Group (HIG), Nigeria’s fastest-growing insurance group, has...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Celebrates 2025 Customer Service Week

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has been actively involved in...

Leadway: 55 Years of Innovation, Expanding Financial Access, Inclusion Across West Africa

Leadway, one of Nigeria’s foremost non-banking financial services and...

SSCE/NECO 18 Years Limit: No, Prof Mamman, No!

By Elvis Eromosele

Professor Tahir Mamman, Nigeria’s Minister of Education, recently announced a policy setting the minimum age for writing the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examinations (SSCE) at 18 years, starting from 2025.

This decision has sparked widespread criticism from education stakeholders, who view it as a regressive step that fails to consider the realities of modern education. The new age limit rather than enhancing educational outcomes, risks stifling student progress and diminishing the quality of education in Nigeria.

Setting the minimum age for SSCE at 18 years is out of step with the global trend toward encouraging early academic achievement. Nigeria’s 6-3-3-4 educational system, which anticipates students finishing secondary school by age 18, does not account for the diverse academic paths students might take. Many students, particularly those who are gifted or started school early, complete secondary education well before turning 18. Imposing an age limit would unfairly penalize these students, forcing them to wait unnecessarily, which is both a waste of time and an impediment to their academic and professional growth.

Maintaining the minimum age for SSCE at 16 years, as has been the practice, is a more balanced and sustainable approach. It allows academically ready students to progress to tertiary education without delay while ensuring those who need more time can take it without undue pressure.

Many 16-year-olds are mature enough to handle the demands of higher education, and the current policy of allowing SSCE at 16 has produced generations of successful graduates who have excelled in various fields. There is no evidence raising the age limit would lead to better outcomes; on the contrary, it could increase student frustration and dropout rates.

The policy is particularly problematic for gifted children, who often progress through school at an accelerated pace. Forcing them to wait until 18 years to take the SSCE disregards their unique needs and potential, stifling their intellectual growth. Professor Mamman’s dismissal of gifted children as a minority is troubling. Gifted children are a vital part of the nation’s future, and their needs should not be ignored.

Moreover, the policy raises concerns about what students will do during the two years they must wait before writing the SSCE. The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) rightly warns that “the devil finds work for idle hands.” Forcing students to remain idle for two years is not only wasteful but potentially dangerous, increasing the likelihood of disengagement from education and negative behaviours.

A significant issue with the policy is the lack of consultation with key stakeholders in the education sector. A major decision like this should not be made unilaterally. The minister’s failure to engage with bodies like the National Council on Education (NCE), the NUT, and other relevant organisations is a serious oversight. Education policy should reflect the input and concerns of those directly involved in educating Nigerian students.

Professor Mamman’s justification for the policy—that students are not mature enough for tertiary education until they are 18—is flawed. The Minister appears too keen on fixing what is not broken. How is age an issue at this time when millions of school-age children are out of school? While 18 is the legal age of adulthood, maturity is not solely determined by age. Many students can handle the challenges of higher education at 16, especially in today’s fast-paced, information-rich world. Maturity is a function of age and experience, and students who have been well-prepared through secondary education are more likely to succeed in higher education, regardless of whether they are 16 or 18.

Instead of implementing a blanket age limit, the government should focus on creating a more flexible and inclusive education system that caters to the diverse needs of Nigerian students. Several options are available:

Number one, the government should allow students to take the SSCE when they are academically ready, rather than at a specific age, ensuring evaluations are based on academic readiness, not chronological age.

Two, we would need to establish and expand programs for gifted students, allowing them to progress at their own pace rather than being held back by arbitrary age limits.

In addition, the country must be ready to provide students with better career guidance and counselling to help them make informed decisions about their educational and career paths, regardless of age.

Furthermore, greater parental involvement in the education process should be encouraged to ensure students are neither pressured into exams prematurely nor held back unnecessarily.

Education is the cornerstone of national development. The policies governing it should be based on evidence, not assumptions. Setting the minimum age for the SSCE at 18 years is a regressive step that could do more harm than good. By maintaining the current age limit of 16 years and implementing sustainable solutions, the government can ensure Nigerian students have the best chance to succeed in their academic and professional lives.

If left unchallenged, Professor Mamman’s policy will stifle the potential of Nigerian students and set the education system back by decades. It is imperative that stakeholders—including the National Assembly, parents, educators, and civil society—resist this policy and advocate for a more flexible, inclusive and forward-looking approach to education in Nigeria.

The future of the nation’s youth, and indeed the future of Nigeria itself, depends on it.

 

Eromosele, a corporate communication professional, writes via: elviseroms@gmail.com

 

Hot this week

13-year-old Rhema-Love Abraham Emerges Winner of 2025 Heirs Insurance Essay Championship

L:R- Funmi Olotu, National Coordinator, National Social Safety-Nets Coordinating...

Stanbic IBTC Bank, LOXEA BYD forge alliance for Electric Vehicle Financing

In a strategic move to advance Nigeria’s shift toward...

CBN, Bank of Angola Sign MoU on Technical Co-operation at IMF/World Bank Meeting

In an effort to enhance bilateral cooperation and technical...

NBS: Nigeria’s Inflation Falls to 18.02% in September, Lowest Level in Three Years

Nigeria’s headline inflation rate fell for the sixth consecutive...

NUPEMCO Marks 2025 CSW with Nationwide Pension Awareness Activities, Huawei-Supported National Essay competition

The Nigerian University Pension Management Company (NUPEMCO) celebrated the...

Topics

Former MTN CEO, Ahmad Farroukh, in 6-Year Unrelenting Quest for Justice

Telecommunications giant, MTN is currently embroiled in a protracted...

The N200bn ICT Bank, Strategies to Rescue Nigerian Telecom Sector 

By Elvis Eromosele The Nigerian telecommunications sector must have nine...

MainOne Attains West Africa’s 1st SAP HANA Certification

MainOne, the premier connectivity and data center Solutions Company,...

AfDB Urges US to Support Agriculture in Africa

The President of the African Development Bank, Dr. Akinwumi...

XLR8 wins International Breweries PR Account

International Breweries Plc, the Nigerian subsidiary of AB InBev,...

IATA, FIATA Unveil New Air Cargo Program

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) and the International...

Polaris Bank, Partners Present School Essentials to Gbaja Girls Secondary Schools, Lagos

L-R: Divisional Head, Surulere Business, Dr. Bimbo Akorede; Principal...

PNC 2024 Ends as NCDMB Commits to Deeper Community, Industry Engagements

The Executive Secretary, Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board...
Exit mobile version