
A total of 81 female pupils in various primary schools across the country have been awarded scholarships to study science and engineering to University levels by the Association of Professional Women Engineers of Nigeria (APWEN) between 2018 and 2019.
The immediate past president of APWEN Engr. Dr Felicia Nnena Agubata who disclosed this to newsmen in an interview on the activities of APWEN under her leadership said, out of the seven ultra modern science laboratories earmarked for construction, two have been completed and equipped while work was in progress in five.
Agubata, the 15th president of APWEN said, the partnership with NNPC, APWEN had led to award of scholarships to the down trodden in the society including orphans in its “invent it, build it” Programme describing her two years of leadership as eventful
She noted that they were a lot of less privileged ones in the society
seeking help and expressed displeasure that in some communities in some states the people were not ready to provide land for the construction for science and technology laboratory.
Engr. Agubata disclosed that during her tenure, the girl child was inspired towards taking up Sciences, Technology, Engineering and
Mathematics (Stem) subjects
According to Agubata, the programme had been replicated in seven states of Bauchi, Edo, Ogun, Kano, Anambra, Kogi and Borno in the six geopolitical zones of the country.
The former APWEN boss said she was able to attract a UK Royal Academy
Engineering Grant of 80,000 pounds to train mathematics and engineering teachers in schools.
“We want to ensure that STEM teachers teach with the correct
methodology and that they have the required skills to impart on these
children because these children are the leaders of tomorrow, the grant
recipient is yours sincerely Dr. Felicia Nnenna Agubata. This grant will run for 12 months and we started since October, we are doing the flag off ceremony on the 22nd of January at the DBI Bridge Institute on of our sponsors for the programme.”
“We intend to flag off because our UK partners is the University of
West of Scotland, they are coming to Nigeria to train us on teaching
methodology and how STEM teachers can acquire skills with some STEM
kits, we are going to do what we call train the trainer training and that will start on the 31st of March to 2nd of April at DBI everything
we are doing on this project will take at DBI.”
According to Agubata, under the train the trainers programme, 50 teachers would be trained to further spread the training to the rural communities adding that a minimum of 200 teachers in science and mathematics would be trained across the federation while over 500 female pupils would be mentored.
“We are going to train 60 female engineers and those 60 female
engineers will now train the STEM teachers, they will be able to go to
our rural communities so that we will be able to cover the 6 geo-political zones because the UK partners might not be able to go to all these communities, so we prefer to use us who are the locals to go, so we do the train the trainers in Lagos and go the 6 geo-political zones, the minimum the numbers of teachers we are going
to train is 200 across the federation but remember we have 34 chapters
in Nigeria which means that if we have 5,5 people from each states who
are coming for this training by the time we go to each localities we will cover more.”