The Kogi State government has approved a curriculum for the teaching and learning of Igala and Ebira languages.
This is as the state hosted the 45th yearly convention of Yoruba language teachers in the basic, secondary and tertiary institutions across the country.
Rosemary Osikoya, the state Commissioner for Education, who lauded the initiative, charged participants to marry language and culture for the development of the society.
Speaking, while receiving the report of the committee on the incorporation of Igala and Ebira indigenous languages into the curriculum, she noted that the essence of education is for the transformation of the society.
Osikoya stressed that the national policy on education, which was first convened in 1977 as a result of some grievances for the mode of the colonial master’s education system for the country came out with resolutions for states to use indigenous languages as means of transmitting instructions to children at the basic education level.
The Commissioner for Education explained that the promotion of indigenous languages and culture is to bring about the total development of the characters and personality of the child.
She said to this end, the state government had constituted a committee to draft a curriculum for Igala and Ebira languages, adding that Okun had already been captured under a wider Yoruba language within an already established curriculum.
Osikoya commended the committee for a painstaking assignment, saying it was able to accomplish the task within a record time due to their passion for mother tongue.
She assured that the government would forward the report to the Nigeria Education Research and Development Council for ratification while calling on the committee to make the needed textbooks on the subject matter available.