From Fred Ezeh, Abuja
The Federal Government has announced plans to connect schools across Nigeria to reliable internet services as part of a major initiative to strengthen digital learning, expand access to modern educational tools, and harness technology, including Artificial Intelligence (AI), to improve the nation’s education system.
It emphasized that expanding connectivity across Nigeria’s education system will equip students with the digital skills required to thrive in a technology-driven global economy, while ensuring that every Nigerian child has access to quality education comparable to global standards.
This was contained in a statement released in Abuja, on Wednesday, by Folasade Boriowo, Director of Press and Public Relations, Federal Ministry of Education.
The statement noted that the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, and Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Dr. Bosun Tijani, have been directed by the President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, to successfully undertake the task.
Speaking at a high-level meeting in Abuja with key stakeholders to strengthen coordination between both ministries in connecting schools across the country, Minister of Education explained that the initiative builds on earlier connectivity efforts through the Nigerian Research and Education Network (NgREN), which previously supported broadband connectivity for tertiary institutions under a World Bank-funded project.
The Minister noted that, although, the programme recorded significant progress in connecting universities and other tertiary institutions, the momentum slowed after the initial funding cycle ended, thus creating the need for a renewed and expanded strategy.
He said the current effort seeks to revive and strengthen the programme while extending connectivity across all levels of the education sector. “Connectivity is not limited to broadband fibre alone. It also involve telecommunications towers, satellite systems and other digital infrastructure required to provide reliable internet access across the country,” the Minister said.
Dr. Alausa noted that the Federal Government is implementing major connectivity projects, including the deployment of approximately 90,000 kilometres of fibre optic broadband infrastructure, the installation of about 3,700 telecommunication towers, particularly in rural and underserved communities, and the expansion of satellite capacity to strengthen nationwide coverage.
“The objective is to ensure that as broadband cables are deployed and towers installed across the country, schools at every level are deliberately connected to the network. We are planning proactively so that as broadband cables are laid and towers deployed across the country, they are strategically connected to our schools from primary and junior secondary schools to senior secondary schools and all tertiary institutions,” he said.
Dr. Alausa confirmed that the meeting produced several concrete steps aimed at accelerating connectivity within the education sector. “As part of the outcomes, the governing council of NgREN will be expanded to include representatives responsible for foundational and secondary education, thereby strengthening coordination across the education system.
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“In addition, two technical working groups have been established to drive implementation. One will focus on connectivity for tertiary institutions, while the other will focus on foundational and secondary schools. The teams will coordinate planning, develop implementation strategies and ensure schools benefit from ongoing national connectivity projects.”
Dr. Alausa expressed optimism that the first phase of the initiative would begin to produce visible improvements within the next three months. “Improved connectivity will enable students and teachers to access digital learning platforms, global knowledge resources and emerging technologies, including AI tools that are increasingly shaping modern education systems.
“It will further support ongoing reforms aimed at strengthening examination integrity through the gradual transition to Computer-Based Testing (CBT) for major national examinations. The digital learning centres will also function as CBT centres for national assessments.
“Our plan is that within the next two to three years, major examinations such as WAEC and NECO will transition fully to CBT similar to what is currently being implemented by JAMB,” he said.
Also speaking, Dr. Tijani emphasized that technology-driven education cannot thrive without reliable connectivity.
He noted that although Nigeria hosts about eight international submarine internet cables the highest number in Africa, but the key challenge lies in distributing that capacity inland through extensive fibre networks capable of reaching communities nationwide.
“Most of the internet capacity enters Nigeria through submarine cables landing in Lagos, but without sufficient inland fibre infrastructure, that capacity cannot effectively reach schools and communities across the country,” he said.
He said the ongoing 90,000km national fibre expansion project is designed to address the challenge and ensure broadband connectivity reaches all local government areas. Similarly, the deployment of 3,700 rural telecommunications towers will further extend connectivity to underserved communities, with many located close to schools to ensure educational institutions benefit directly from the infrastructure.
Both ministers reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to sustained collaboration between the education and communications sectors to ensure that digital infrastructure investments translate into improved learning outcomes.
The Federal Government emphasized that expanding connectivity across Nigeria’s education system will equip students with the digital skills required to thrive in a technology-driven global economy while ensuring that every Nigerian child has access to quality education comparable to global standards.

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