Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna  State  has revealed  that about 40 per cent of thevteachersv public school  in the state do not  have the requisite qualification to teach, a situation  , which he said has affected the standard of education in the state.

The governor , who noted that it has affected the academic performance of pupils and students in primary and secondary schools across the state said  that over one million children attend these schools.

He  announced  plans to train teachers in public school, ongoing renovation of public and secondary school and introduction of free feeding during school hours, among other measures

Over 5, 000 illegal private schools are operating in Kaduna, a state known as the Centre of Learning.

Many of them operate in makeshift structures such as residential homes and religious institutions.

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Majority of these institutions are neighbourhood ‘nursery-primary’ schools operated illegally by sole proprietors with little or no regulation from the State Ministry of Education.

Governor El-Rufai, who spoke  while receiving a $21 million education grant from the World Bank recently, said that the state of infrastructure and manpower in public schools are in total disrepair.

The government will provide substantial school development plan for teachers to access high quality professional development.

It is expected that as public schools improve, there will undoubtedly be a measure of school shifting.