Many parents in Lagos State have started
withdrawing their children from private to public schools, due to the
current economic recession.
Fidelis Chidi blog learnt that many of the parents took the decision when they discovered that their income could no longer meet their needs.
Some proprietors of private schools, who spoke with us, said they were expecting such situation.
The Deputy President, National
Association of Proprietors of Private Schools, Mr. Abayomi Otubela, told
one of our correspondents that one of his members in Mushin, Lagos
State, had formally complained that parents were withdrawing their
children in droves, from her school to the public schools in the area.
A mother of three, Mrs. Favour Ukpong, whose child attends a private school at the Fagba area of Lagos, told us that she had withdrawn her daughter from the school and moved her to a public school.
Ukpong said, “I just realised that I
can’t afford the fees any longer. More so, the proprietors have
increased the fees from N18,000 to N25,000.
“How much do I make from the second-hand
clothes I sell? I don’t make much. Paying N18,000 had even been a
challenge for me. I took my time to search for a good public school in
my area. I am happy with my choice.”
Another parent, Mrs. Wemimo Abiodun said
her child’s tuition had increased by N10, 000, which spurred her
decision to withdraw her daughter from a private school at the
Ojodu-Berger area of Lagos.
She said, “There are good public schools
that have sound teachers. Many parents get carried away with the hype
that comes with having a child in a private school.
“I had wanted to withdraw my daughter
long time ago. The tuition was N40,000 and has now increased to N50,000.
My husband can’t afford that.”
Also, a banker, Mr. Steve Aliyu, who
said he was a victim of a mass purge in his organisation recently, said
he had withdrawn his four year-old daughter from a private to a public
school.
He said, “I took the decision because I
was affected by the recent retrenchment exercise in one of the new
generation banks, and things have not been easy for me and my family.”
A small scale industrialist, Mr. John
Adaeze, also said he decided to take his two children to a public school
in his area when he considered the tuition fees and transportation fare
to their former private school.
He said, “Business is down and my wife
is not working yet. We were paying about N500,000 per term in the former
school of our two children. As a matter of fact, I signed an
undertaking to pay their fees before they were allowed to write their
examinations last term.”
Similarly, a widow, who is a mother of
four, in the Ketu area of Lagos, who identified herself as Mrs. Davies,
said she decided to withdraw her children from a private school because
she could no longer shoulder the responsibility of paying their tuition
fees in their former private school alone.
Also, a businessman, Mr. Adebola Ola,
said he withdrew his three children to a less expensive private school
due to funds paucity.
He said, “I have three children in an
international school, but with the current recession in the country, my
wife and I agreed and we have moved them to a less expensive private
school.”
A school proprietress/principal, Mrs.
Uzor Oluwaluyi, said, “I envisaged that due to the harsh economic
recession in the country, the possibility of parents moving their kids
from private schools to public schools as a new school year beckons is
50/50.”
Another school proprietress, Mrs.
Abimbola Oni, expressed fears that rather than taking their kids to
public schools, some parents might decide to keep them at home.
She said “You would be amazed that some
parents will keep their wards at home, rather than take them to public
schools. Recently, three parents with children in my school approached
me and told me that they’d be withdrawing their children from our school
when school resumes due to lack of funds.”
The Proprietress, Children International
School, Lekki, Lagos State, Mrs. Joke Chukwuma, explained that private
school operators were aware of the hard times most parents are going
through and had decided to make payment of fees, conducive for them.
She said, “We can’t reduce school fees
because we don’t want to lower our quality or standard. What we can do
is give parents softer payment terms. So, instead of them paying a year
in advance, they pay per term. Some can even pay on monthly basis.”
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