Kila launches campaign to reverse new policy on mathematics 

Renowned jurist and political economist, Prof. Anthony Kila, has faulted the recent policy by the Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, to remove mathematics as a compulsory subject for arts students seeking admission into tertiary institutions, describing the policy as a miscalculation with grave national consequences.
 
Kila, yesterday, announced the launch of a civic advocacy initiative called #LetOurChildrenCount, aimed at urging the Ministry of Education to reverse what he described as “an educational error that subtracts from the nation’s intellectual strength.”
 
Speaking at a virtual briefing hosted by the Commonwealth Institute of Advanced and Professional Studies (CIAPS), Kila delivered a speech titled, “We must not subtract sense from schooling,” in which he argued that Mathematics is not merely a subject but “a discipline of the mind essential to reasoning, structure, and fairness in thought.” 
 
The don explained that to say that arts students no longer need mathematics is to say that poets should not count and philosophers should not reason.

“A society that abolishes Mathematics is not promoting inclusion; it is endorsing confusion. We must not subtract sense from schooling,” he said. 
 
Kila urged the minister of education to “reform, not remove” mathematics from the national admission framework, proposing instead a “Mathematics for the Humanities” curriculum that would teach logic, statistics, and reasoning relevant to the arts and social sciences.
 
The #LetOurChildrenCount campaign, according to Kila, will include public petitions to the National Council on Education, the Federal Ministry of Education, parliamentarians and the Council of State, stakeholder dialogues involving teachers, parents, and students, and a youth-led digital campaign across social media platforms to promote numeracy and logic as essential life skills.
 
He added that partners and supporters of the #LetOurChildrenCount campaign would also host an Education Roundtable to present evidence-based arguments against the policy, drawing participation from educators, researchers, and civic leaders across Nigeria and the diaspora.
 
The education minister announced on Tuesday, October 14, that Mathematics would no longer be a compulsory subject for prospective university students in the Arts, sparking widespread debate among educators and parents.

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