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Egba Comprehensive High School

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Egba Comprehensive High School
Context
Egba Comprehensive High School is a secondary school in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria. Commonly called "Egba High School," it provides both junior and senior secondary education. The school is a key part of the local community, contributing to the academic development of young people in the region.
Overall impact
Children no longer see these skills as abstract. Students have learnt and acquired skills mainly problem solving. Through classroom activities they have learnt and built their teamwork skills.
Keep it simple
When students demonstrate good use of essential skills the class will give this students a round of applause such as a ‘superhero clap’. Sometimes we give physical rewards where we can.
Start early, keep going
The program was integrated into the curriculum for both junior and senior secondary students. The junior classes focused on foundational skills through collaborative group activities and problem-solving games. As students progressed to the senior level, the skills were applied to more complex, real-world projects and academic subjects, ensuring a continuous and progressive development from one grade to the next.
Measure it
We assessed essential skills through a combination of observations and project-based assignments. Teachers used a simple rubric to track student progress in areas like teamwork and problem-solving during classroom activities. This data helped us identify which students needed more support in specific skills and allowed us to tailor our lesson plans to provide targeted practice and feedback.
Focus tightly
Linked skills into lessons such as teamwork, problem solving and creativity into maths lessons.
Keep practising
Essential skills are highlighted in mathematics lessons, mention the skills during the starters and link this to real life scenarios. We do this by asking the students questions about real life scenarios what would they do and link this to essential skills that are needed in these scenarios or they may even work in groups as students to collaborate on problems together. We highlight this in our scheme of work and lesson plans.
Bring it to life
STEM projects linked to essential skills, students learning through project based learning. Such as recycling and repairing project to address electricity failure in local community, so students work on a project to generate clean energy, by using waste in the local community in the tech hub to create solar power torches and fans. They have learnt faster and better through this method and link these skills to real world problems and community challenges such as… Not just seeing education as only useful in the classroom, they understand they require these skills to solve real world problems, preparing them to become a global citizen.
What's next
Our skills leader is leaving the school. This presents an opportunity to find a new teacher to take over the role and continue to champion the development of essential skills. The new skills leader will build upon the foundations already established, ensuring the program's continuity and exploring new ways to further embed the skills throughout the school community.
Nigeria