NCCE reviews curriculum, standards in education colleges

The National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE)

The National Commission for Colleges of Education (NCCE) has begun a comprehensive review of the NCE minimum standards and curriculum to strengthen teacher education.

The Executive Secretary of NCCE, Prof. Paulinus Okwelle, disclosed this at the commencement of the review.
Okwelle said the review would address identified gaps, align teacher preparation with national priorities, global education trends, and practical realities facing colleges of education.

He explained that the exercise brought together teacher educators, policymakers, practitioners, and development partners to enrich the review outcomes through shared expertise.

According to him, the revised curriculum will integrate Artificial Intelligence (AI) and digital competencies to prepare teachers for technology-driven classrooms and the future of work.

“This forward-looking approach will position Nigerian teachers to operate confidently in technology-rich classrooms and align their preparation with international best practices and national development aspirations,” he said.

Okwelle said the new standards would promote AI awareness, ethical use of technology, data literacy, and adaptive digital pedagogy among future teachers.
He noted that the reforms would ensure that Nigerian teachers became effective facilitators of AI-enabled learning, in line with international best practices.

The NCCE boss recalled that the National Policy on Education recognised the NCE as the minimum qualification for basic education teachers in Nigeria.
He stressed that ensuring the relevance, quality, and effectiveness of the NCE minimum standards remained a matter of national importance.

“The goal of the NCCE is to produce minimum standards that are academically robust, practically implementable, globally relevant, and responsive to the needs of contemporary classrooms.

“Over the last few years, the NCCE has pursued a deliberate and far-reaching reform agenda aimed at strengthening teacher education and repositioning colleges of education for relevance, quality, and sustainability,” Okwelle stated.

He added that central to this effort was the successful implementation of major policy reforms, most notably the operationalisation of the dual-mode mandate.
Okwelle said the reform would expand access, improve enrolment, strengthen autonomy, and restore public confidence in colleges of education.

He commended Governor Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa State for supporting teacher education and attending the inaugural event.

He urged stakeholders to engage constructively, noting that quality teachers were central to improving foundational education and securing Nigeria’s future.

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