Kano State Govt. Begins Training Of 2,625 Teachers On ‘Jolly Phonics’ Teaching Methodology –SUBEB

Kano State Government has organised a 3-day training on literacy teaching practices called ‘Jolly Phonics’ for 2,625 primary school teachers.

Balarabe Jazuli, the Assistant Director, Public Relations and Communication, Kano State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) disclosed this in a statement issued to newsmen on Wednesday, in Kano.

He said  the training was organised by the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) in partnership with the Board and Universal Learning Solutions.

ALSO SEE: Zamfara Assembly Confirms 3 Commissioner Nominees

Jazuli quoted the SUBEB Executive Chairman, Dr Danlami Hayyo, as saying that the training was aimed at equipping  teachers and dedicated officials of the board, with skills on teaching of literacy in public Primary schools.

Represented by the board’s Secretary Alhaji Baffa Saleh, Hayyo said  they would continue to partner with relevant organisations to train teachers to improve  their capacity for effective service delivery.

Bauchi Among States Governments That Poorly Interacted With Citizens Via Emails During COVID-19 Pandemic, Despite ICT Advancement

- Advertisements -
NNPC Mega Filling Station

He said the state government gave  top priority to the Education sector, through the construction of new classrooms, provision of instructional materials, and teacher training, while sustaining teachers welfare, among others.

He added  that, “a total of 2,625 primary school teachers as well as 50 officials were selected from  44 Local Governments Areas of the state for the 3-day training.”

Commending the state government for supporting the board, Hayyo charged the participants to make good use of the training, by replicating the skills they would  acquire to the pupils.

SUBEB’s desk officer,  Malam Nura Ibrahim, said  Jolly Phonics is a fun and interactive teaching tool that used the synthetic phonics literacy teaching methodology.

He added that synthetic phonics was mandated or recommended by governments all over the world because its methodology quickly provided children with the skills needed to read and write. (NAN)

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here


This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Latest stories

Most Read

Signup To WikkiTimes Newsletter