Effective Service Delivery of Nigeria's Public Primary Education: The Role of Non-State Actors

Author:

George Tayo O.,Olayiwola W. K.,Adewole M. A.,Osabuohien Evans S.1

Affiliation:

1. George (corresponding author), Department of Sociology, Covenant University; email: tayo.george@covenantuniversity.edu.ng; Olayiwola, Adewole and Osabuohien are all in the Department of Economics & Development Studies, Covenant University, Ota; Ogun State, Nigeria.

Abstract

Abstract The study examines and analyses the role of Non-State Actors (NSAs) in public provision of primary education in Nigeria using descriptive and econometric techniques. The analysis demonstrates that the major source of funding of public primary education in Nigeria flows from the Federal Government to the State government and finally to the Local Government Education Authority (LGEA). The study shows that NSAs' activities are mainly the provision of school inputs with little or no role monitoring and management of public primary schools. It was found that the presence of private school inspectors has significant positive effect on pupils’ performance. Parents occupation and household qualities especially type of building were found to have positive impact on the pupils ‘performance. Based on these findings, the study recommends the need for adequate involvement of NSAs in the management of public primary schools and improved inspection of schools as ways of improving the quality of primary education in Nigeria.

Publisher

The Pennsylvania State University Press

Reference26 articles.

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3. Awoniyi, S. (2007), “Millennium Development Goals on Education and the Future of the Nigerian Child”, Nigerian Journal of Gender and Development 7 (1), 31-39.

4. Babalola, J. B. and Adedeji, S.O. (2009), “Deregulation of Provision of Education in Nigeria: Truth, Torture and Tactics from American Experience”, in: O. M. Afolayan, ed., Multiculturalism in the Age of Mosaic; Essays in Honour of Rudolph G. Wilson (New York: Nova Science Publishers, Inc), 159-170.

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