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Historical
Perspective:
There were three
fundamentally
distinct education
systems in Nigeria
in 1990: the
indigenous system,
Quranic schools, and
formal
European-style
education
institutions. In the
rural areas where
the majority lived,
children learned the
skills of farming
and other work, as
well as the duties
of adulthood, from
participation in the
community. This
process was often
supplemented by
age-based schools in
which groups of
young boys were
instructed in
community
responsibilities by
mature men.
Apprentice systems
were widespread
throughout all
occupations; the
trainee provided
service to the
teacher over a
period of years and
eventually struck
out on his own.
Truck driving,
building trades, and
all indigenous
crafts and services
from leather work to
medicine were passed
down in families and
acquired through
apprenticeship
training as well. In
1990 this indigenous
system included more
than 50 percent of
the school-age
population and
operated almost
entirely in the
private sector;
there was virtually
no regulation by the
government unless
training included
the need for a
license. By the
1970s, education
experts were asking
how the system could
be integrated into
the more formal
schooling of the
young, but the
question remained
unresolved by 1990.
Islamic
education was part
of religious duty.
Children learned up
to one or two
chapters of the
Quran by rote from a
local mallam, or
religious teacher,
before they were
five or six years
old. Religious
learning included
the Arabic alphabet
and the ability to
read and copy texts
in the language,
along with those
texts required for
daily prayers. |
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Any Islamic community
provided such
instruction in a
mallam's house, under a
tree on a thoroughfare,
or in a local mosque.
This primary level was
the most widespread. A
smaller number of those
young Muslims who
wished, or who came from
wealthier or more
educated homes, went on
to examine the meanings
of the Arabic texts.
Later, grammar, syntax,
arithmetic, algebra,
logic, rhetoric,
jurisprudence, and
theology were added;
these subjects required
specialist teachers at
the advanced level.
After this level,
students traditionally
went on to one of the
famous Islamic centers
of learning.
For the vast majority,
Muslim education was
delivered informally
under the
tutelage of mallams or
ulama, scholars who
specialized in religious
learning and teaching.
Throughout the colonial
period, a series of
formal Muslim schools
were set up and run on
European lines. These
schools were established
in almost all major
Nigerian cities but were
notable in Kano, where
Islamic brotherhoods
developed an impressive
number of schools.
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