"OUR TERTIARY EDUCATION IS BETTER NOW, FEWER NIGERIANS ARE GOING ABROAD TO STUDY" - EDUCATION MINISTER, TUNJI ALAUSA
Nigeria’s Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, has said there has been a significant decline in the number of Nigerian students travelling abroad for studies, attributing it to improvements in the country’s tertiary education system.
Speaking during an interview on Channels Television, the minister stated that academic stability and increased investment in education have boosted confidence in Nigerian universities.
“There’s a precipitous drop in the number of students going to study outside Nigeria. Our tertiary education is better now; we have academic session continuity, and we are investing so much,” he said.
According to him, more Nigerian students are choosing to remain in the country because the quality of education has improved.
“Kids are staying here, the quality of education is now better. Within 2024/2025, the number of Nigerians going out has significantly dropped,” he added.
Reacting to concerns that some Nigerian students sent abroad on scholarship had been abandoned, Alausa denied the claim, insisting that the beneficiaries were not neglected.
The minister also revealed that one of the first files presented to him after assuming office was a request to approve ₦650 million for the sponsorship of 60 Nigerian students to study in Morocco. He said he declined the request because many of the proposed courses were already available in Nigerian institutions.
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