close
Friday, September 23, 2022

Katsina girls performed better than boys in 2021 WASSCE 

The commissioner for education in Katsina says female students outperformed their male counterparts in the 2021 WASSCE.

• September 23, 2022
Katsina girls
Katsina school girls [Photo Credit: NNN]

Badamasi Lawal, the commissioner for education in Katsina, says female students performed better than their male counterparts in the 2021 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

Mr Lawal disclosed this at the official closing ceremony of the Girl Education Project (GEP-III) on Thursday in Katsina. He noted that this was recorded as a result of the commitment of the government to empower girls in the state through various educational programmes.

According to him, in 2021, 18,321 students took the WASSCE, and the Katsina government paid the examination fee for all the candidates.

“Out of which 10,441 were male, while the female students were 7,880. But wonderfully, the results indicated that 4,627 of the female students scored credit in the English Language, which is 58.7 per cent,” Mr Lawal explained. “From the 10,441 male students, only 5,632 scored credit in the English Language, which is 54 per cent. This means the girls scored higher than the boys in the English Language.”

In Mathematics, the commissioner revealed that the girls also outperformed the boys “because 5,678 of them scored credits, while only 4,726 of the boys scored credits” and that “because the number of the girls that sat for the examination was lower than that of the boys, the boys scored 58 per cent while the girls scored 53 per cent, which is also higher.”

Mr Lawal added, “Five credits, including Mathematics and English Language, out of the total number mentioned above, 4,247 among the girls scored credit, that is 56 per cent, as against the males who scored only 48 per cent.”

According to him, the project aims to increase access to education among girls and improve teacher capacity and competency.

He noted that all the activities mentioned had been achieved in Katsina through the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) support.

“No doubt the intervention has improved the girl child education in Katsina State. I want to showcase the evidence of this improvement by making a presentation of the 2021 WASSCE results,” the commissioner stated. “It will show you that the presence of UNICEF in the state has done very well in improving girl child education.”

(NAN)

We have recently deactivated our website's comment provider in favour of other channels of distribution and commentary. We encourage you to join the conversation on our stories via our Facebook, Twitter and other social media pages.

More from Peoples Gazette

AGIP

States

Agip says gas leak in Bayelsa under control

Production data obtained from Agip showed that the leak might cut its gas export by five million standard cubic meters per day (MMSCM/d).

Dengue Mosquitoes

Health

Dengue fever ravages Pakistan with over 1,000 new cases

The Pakistani government had inaugurated an anti-dengue campaign, raising public awareness in response to the alarmingly high cases.

Chinese alphabet

Africa

China intensifies efforts to make more Ghanaians speak Chinese

China and Ghana pledged to enhance their cooperation in Chinese language education to help more Ghanaians speak the lingo.

Timipre Sylva (Credit: @NNPCGroup)

Economy

PIA will boost oil, gas investments in Nigeria: Sylva

The Minister of State Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, says the desire to surmount the challenges bedevilling the oil and gas sector led to enacting the PIA.

Aisha

Africa

UNGA77: Aisha Buhari wants peace education included in school curriculum

“I made a case for the mandatory inclusion of ‘peace education’ as an essential subject in the curriculum of basic education of schools in Africa.”

Oil Field

World

UK confirms support for new oil, gas licensing round

The UK government formally lifted a ban on fracking for shale gas in England and has confirmed support for a new oil and gas licensing round.