Osun State government has announced guidelines for the partial reopening of schools to students in exit classes.
The action is in line with the unanimous decision reached at a virtual consultative meeting held on Monday between the Federal Ministry of Education, Commissioners for Education of the 36 states, the Nigerian Union of Teachers, NUT, the Proprietors of Private Schools and Chief Executives of examination bodies.
In a statement by the Commissioner for Information and Civic Orientation, Mrs. Funke Egbemode, after the virtual State Executive Council meeting, teachers in Osun are to resume on Tuesday, August 4, while students are to resume on Thursday, August 6.
The West Africa School Certificate Examinations are expected to commence on August 17.
Egbemode, while outlining the details of the partial reopening, in a statement, said a total of 188 schools consisting 13,177 students, would reopen under the arrangement.
Highlighting the protocols expected for a successful management of the process, Egbemode said: “Parents are expected to provide face masks/nose covers for their children or wards, while Principals and Proprietors of Schools are expected to ensure a tidy environment with desks arranged at least two metres apart. This social distancing shall be ensured by Class Wardens.
“The Ministry of Education shall provide buckets, soap, hand sanitizers, thermometer and also fumigate all schools. The Ministry of Health shall also provide Vitamin C tablets for students. NCDC or the Ministry of Health should be alerted in case of any sign of infection in any of the schools,” she stated.
Part of the decision was to afford students a two-week preparatory period for the West African Examination Council (WAEC), which commences August 17, 2020.
Speaking further on the scope of the reopening, Egbemode said that the reopening would not include schools that had opted to take the National Examination Council, NECO.
Egbemode said Council also resolved that “School owners and invigilators with suspended sentences of examination malpractice, are at risk of summary dismissal in the event of any new infractions during this year’s examinations.”