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00:00Nigeria's education system might be getting another major shift.
00:05The federal government is looking to scrap the 9-3-4 model and replace it with a 12-4 system,
00:11as proposed by the Minister of Education Tunji Elausa.
00:15But what does this really mean?
00:18If approved, the structure of junior and senior secondary schools will be phased out
00:23and instead every Nigerian child will go through 12 uninterrupted years of basic education
00:29before deciding on higher studies or vocational training.
00:34But how did we get here?
00:37Nigeria's education system has seen several transformations over the years.
00:42Before 1983, the country used a 6-5-4 system,
00:466 years of primary school, 5 years of secondary and 4 years in university.
00:53In 1983, the government introduced the 6-3-3-4 system,
00:58which split secondary school into 3 years of junior and 3 years of senior secondary education.
01:052006, this changed again to 9-3-4,
01:10making the first 9 years of education primary plus junior secondary compulsory under Universal Basic Education, UBE.
01:19Now in 2025, we might be shifting to 12-4,
01:24making secondary school an extension of basic education.
01:28What's the goal?
01:30This change aims to standardize learning,
01:33improve vocational training,
01:35and reduce dropout rates,
01:37especially since Nigeria currently has 12 million out-of-school children.
01:41By making education compulsory for 12 years,
01:44the government hopes to ensure that students stay in school long enough
01:48to gain essential skills before choosing a career path.
01:52If implemented, this will also mean major reforms in curriculum,
01:57infrastructure, teacher training, and overall education policy.
02:02But the big question is,
02:04will this shift truly solve Nigeria's education challenges?
02:08Or is it just another policy on paper?
02:11Let's wait and see.
02:12What do you think?
02:13Is Nigeria ready for this 12-4 system?
02:15Tell us in the comments.
02:22For more UN videos visit www.un.org