In this 21st century which culminates with the wealth of Lagos
State, nobody would have thought there is a high school where pupils
lack chairs in classrooms and standard building structures.
Some students of Eric Moore receiving teachings on the barefloor
As
Lagos State, Nigeria's economic capital and one of the country’s
richest states, marks its creation with months-long series of
activities, students of a secondary school in the heart of the
metropolis are in dire need of basic amenities that could make learning
conducive.
Students of Eric Moore Junior High School, Surulere, located near the residence of the former governor of the State and now minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, receive lessons under makeshift classrooms, with some of them sitting on the floor.
Founded
in 2003, the school has a total of 761 students, according to its
profile on www.lagosschoolsonline.com. But that number could not be
independently verified.
"You will pity the students whenever it rains," a staff told The Guardian on Tuesday, pleading anonymity. "It is always difficult to teach them in such condition. Hopefully, the government can do something urgently about the school," the staff added.
When a reporter contacted the public relations officer of the State's Ministry of Education, Mr Adesegun Ogundare, he said the government was constantly renovating schools that were in bad shape.
But he could not state whether Eric Moore Junior High School was pencilled down for renovation any time soon.