Education ministry website suspended amid ASUU strike
The website of the Federal Ministry of Education, www.fme.gov.ng,
is down. Although it could not be ascertained how long it has been
down, our correspondent, who visited the website on Monday, had stumbled
on the message, “This account has been suspended.’’
No information was placed on the site to
tell visitors that it has moved to another domain and no link was
provided to redirect those in search of information about the
educational system to a new one.
Besides, another website attributed to the ministry online, fmegovng.org, is also “ailing’’ as the message on the site read, “This domain name will be on Godaddy Auctions soon.”
Visitors to any of the two portals in
search of reports related to the ongoing industrial action by university
teachers may be disappointed as the ministry literally has no official
website to inform interested members of the public.
A check on some education parastatals
in the country shows that some of them are fast taking a cue from the
supervisory ministry that is saddled with the responsibility for
defining and shaping the structure of the education system in Nigeria.
For instance, a visit to the website of the National Commission for Colleges of Education, www.ncceonline.org,
showed that the information on the site was far from being rich. The
“About Us’’ is the only section that the website has, while the welcome
page contains two articles which only informed visitors on how to go
about securing loan to study in higher institutions of learning abroad.
No mention was made of its activities,
pertaining to the regulation of colleges of education in the country, as
well as the issuance of the National Certificate of Education – the
minimum certificate that qualifies one to teach in the country.
The National Educational Research and Development Council’s website, www.nerdc.gov.ng, which prides itself as the “think-tank of Nigerian education’’ is only a little better than that of the NCCE.
The first information that caught the
attention of the correspondent on the welcome page of the website on
Monday was the date on it. The date on the site simply read Thursday,
September 05, 2013.
A click on the “Achievement’’ section
of the site, which was expected to give the track record of the council
from 2005 to 2012, showed it was empty. The message on it read, “This
page is awaiting update.” A similarly information was posted on the
“Press Release” section.
Besides, the website managers did not
deem it fit to input the contact person and phone number of the
designatedofficial at its area office on 8, Orlu Street, Garki, Abuja as
they simply left the spaces meant for it blank.
While NERDC made an appreciable effort
to make its digital engagement social with its presence on Facebook, it
was observed that its account on the social service was also largely
neglected. In the course of this year, the handlers of the Facebook page
had only managed to post messages on it four times.
The National Library of Nigeria, created
to serve as the nation’s “intellectual store house and databank,” has a
rather poor outlook online. It was observed that information
pertaining to its services, such as bibliography control, cataloguing in
publication, training and skills development, were not available on its
website, www.nln.gov.ng.
Besides, all the links to all its
social media pages, with the exception of its Facebook page were broken
and did not connect to the social accounts they were supposed to.
But while it appears that the NCCE and
NERDC may have taken after the Federal Ministry of Education in terms of
managing its digital presence, some of the parastatals under it are
putting in efforts to have functional online tracks.
The National Mathematical Centre has a functional and updated website. The website, nmcabuja.org,
does not only appear to fall into the good books of its managers, but
it also carry visitors along with its upcoming events. Checks on the
website offered information about conferences, workshops and seminars
lined up.
However, the NMC may need to take
advantage of one or a number of social networks to engage its audience
with a view to giving adequate publicity to its activities.
Essentially, the Federal Ministry may
need to learn a lesson or two from the Ghanaian Ministry of Education
that has a regularly updated and fully functional portal for sundry
issues bordering on education in the West African nation.
Apart from being up-to-date, the portal, www.moe.gov.gh,
contains requisite statistics and other resources that could help local
stakeholders, as well as international organisations deliver on key
educational indicators in the country’s various educational sectors.
Education ministry website suspended amid ASUU strike
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