海角大神

Labor of love: This couple is tackling Nigeria鈥檚 dire education crisis

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Kate Okorie
Primary students work with a teacher at Talent Mine Academy, a free school catering to kids from low-income families, in Ota, Nigeria. 鈥淚 wanted to create a safe and supportive space,鈥 the school鈥檚 founder says.

The road to Talent Mine Academy in southwestern Nigeria is a long, sunbaked path of bumpy red earth. Nothing on the road suggests the happiness happening inside the school鈥檚 yellow and blue walls.

As soon as a visitor steps through any classroom door, the high-pitched voices of young learners break into a cheerful 鈥淕ood morning!鈥 They stretch out the singsongy greeting, having decided that this moment in their tuition-free school deserves to be celebrated.聽

鈥淚 wanted to create a safe and supportive space where the kids can feel empowered,鈥 says school founder Aramide Kayode, who along with her husband, Oluwaseun Kayode, is working to ease Nigeria鈥檚 education crisis. 鈥淥ur goal is to turn [students] into solution providers and create a path out of poverty.鈥

Why We Wrote This

In Nigeria, schools are crumbling, teaching quality is often poor, and teacher-student ratios are high. One couple has been looking for solutions, hoping to improve teacher training and create a path out of poverty for children.

Following their hearts

Talent Mine Academy, in the town of Ota, enrolls children from low-income households, many earning as little as 15,000 naira (about $11) a month. The energy in the school鈥檚 classrooms belies the dire learning crisis in the country, where schools are crumbling, teaching quality is often poor, and teacher-student ratios are high. Approximately 11 million children ages 5 to 14 don鈥檛 attend school, one of the highest numbers globally.

Aramide and Oluwaseun Kayode each turned down lucrative offers in finance to work in education. They met in 2018 as part of Teach for Nigeria, a program requiring fellows to teach in low-income communities for at least two years. Ms. Kayode had just graduated from Covenant University in Ota with a degree in economics when she started her fellowship. Mr. Kayode, an accounting graduate, was a year ahead in the fellowship and already working to start Schoolinka, a social enterprise that trains teachers.

Courtesy of Oluwaseun Kayode
Oluwaseun Kayode and his wife, Aramide, both turned down well-paid careers in finance to work in Nigeria鈥檚 troubled education sector.

Their choice to work in the education sector was initially unpopular with their families.

鈥淭he teaching profession has an unfavorable public image in Nigeria, coupled with the poor pay, so it鈥檚 not able to attract talent,鈥 says Godwin Henry, an education policy analyst at The Nigerian Economic Summit Group, a Lagos-based think tank. 聽

Ms. Kayode鈥檚 father gave her six months to prove herself in education, while Mr. Kayode鈥檚 mother agreed to two years. If the couple failed, they were expected to pursue well-paid careers.

Ms. Kayode won her parents over early on in her fellowship.聽

鈥淎t some point, my mom donated a full box of clothes she鈥檇 bought from the [United Kingdom] to the kids,鈥 Ms. Kayode says, the surprise still fresh in her voice.

Keeping kids in class

Talent Mine Academy began in 2019 as a Saturday class for out-of-school children whom Ms. Kayode met in her fellowship. 鈥淚 was literally their first volunteer,鈥 Mr. Kayode points out. He taught digital skills 鈥 one of three subjects, along with math and English.

After the COVID-19 pandemic interrupted the class, Ms. Kayode and some friends raised funds to put the children in private schools but 鈥渨eren鈥檛 seeing the kind of results we wanted,鈥 she says.

One student had been invited to an after-school coding class alongside wealthier children. When the student heard the others speak, she went silent because she didn鈥檛 believe that she belonged. 鈥淭heir accent is so smooth,鈥 she told Ms. Kayode afterward.

Ms. Kayode鈥檚 students also were singled out as suspects when a teacher鈥檚 money went missing, and some students reported verbal abuse in the classrooms.聽

Kate Okorie
Students at Talent Mine Academy play on a trampoline at the end of the school day.

Talent Mine became its own school in 2023, providing 12 years of free education. More than 100 students are enrolled this academic year, with significant support from donors.

Each student is matched with a sponsor. When one progress report noted a child was going hungry, the donor began paying for daily meals. Students not covered by donors now receive food for nominal rates.

Adeola Sunday鈥檚 son, Samuel, has been a student at Talent Mine for two years. At his former school, Ms. Sunday struggled to scrape together his school fees. 鈥淭alent Mine has now made everything easy for me,鈥 she says.

Though Nigerian law mandates free education for every child, 鈥渂ooks, bags, meals 鈥 none of that is accounted for,鈥 Mr. Henry says. 鈥淲hat Aramide is doing ensures children stay in school.鈥

A teacher-training platform

Mr. Kayode grew up in a working-class neighborhood in Lagos where educational role models were scarce. When he finished his undergraduate degree and was sent to teach during his required year of national service, he found little had changed from his own schooling years: teachers who didn鈥檛 show up, students without books, poor school infrastructure.

Mr. Kayode began collecting used books from friends and setting up donation drop-off points across southwestern Oyo state. He then took the books to underresourced schools.

Next, two years as a Teach for Nigeria fellow laid bare the problem of teaching quality, which eventually led Mr. Kayode to start Schoolinka and create its online teacher-training platform. More than 1,000 teachers have accessed its free courses, which Mr. Henry says improve teacher quality and retention.聽

The basics, and more

On Fridays, classes at Talent Mine end at 1 p.m. Students rush outside toward a battered, well-loved trampoline, its springs exposed and rusting. Still, the kids drop their shoes on the grass and scramble, five or six at a time, onto the trampoline.

Ms. Kayode posts about the kids on social media a lot. The posts have built an audience that shows up when it counts 鈥 most recently to raise 20 million naira to buy the children a school bus.

Once, a teacher says, the kids were told that a video about them went viral. They didn鈥檛 know what it meant, and didn鈥檛 much care.

What they do understand is that this school is theirs to treasure. They have only to show up and learn.聽

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