The Federal Government has aid that final year secondary school students may have to sit for the General Certificate of Education (GCE) in November if there is no shift in the timetable of the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).
Mr Chukwuemeka Nwajiuba, the Minister of State, Education, said this while speaking at the 52nd joint national briefing of the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19 in Abuja.
The Minister said that the Federal Government would meet with stakeholders again on July 30, to review the guidelines, provisions and preparations for the safe reopening of schools.
Sitting for the GCE, according to him, may become the only option for Nigerian students if the country cannot convince WAEC to shift its examinations as earlier requested by the Federal Government.
Nwajiuba said:
Should Nigeria be able to meet up with the WAEC timetable, there is already a negotiated timeline to move local language subjects such as Ibo, Yoruba and Hausa behind to allow all participating countries the needed time to write the general subjects at the same time.
WAEC, unfortunately, is unable to wholesomely move the examination but we have also worked out a negotiated timeline with WAEC on what we call peculiar Nigerian subjects which in the language of WAEC are subjects that are only held in Nigeria such as Ibo, Hausa and Yoruba.
The Ghanaians will take examinations peculiar to them. But they are all in the first part of the time table. So, we will work out a domestication module that will take our peculiar subjects behind after we have done general subjects.
Asked to make comments on the cancellation of the third term in the academic calendar by the Oyo State Government, the minister said:
Education is on the concurrent list and while the states are expected to work together on common front, especially on the COVID-19 crisis, they are at liberty to evolve some measures on their own.
Recall that the Federal Government had announced plans to reopen schools and allow students across the country to sit for the exam. The government, however, made a U-turn following an increase in the cases of COVID-19 in Nigeria.