For many Nigerian students, the quality of their education often comes down to one simple thing: the teacher standing in front of the class. When teachers are motivated, trained, and supported, learning feels different. That reality sat at the centre of discussions this week as the Federal Government rolled out a new package of education reforms focused squarely on teachers.
The reforms were unveiled on Tuesday at the Nigeria Teachers’ Summit 2026 in Abuja, themed “Empowering Teachers, Strengthening the System: A National Agenda for Education Transformation and Sustainability.” While the summit brought together policymakers and education stakeholders, its real impact is expected to play out in classrooms across the country — including those students walk into every day.
According to the Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, Nigeria’s education system cannot rise above the quality of its teachers.
“Teachers are the foundation of education, and education is the foundation of national development,” he said.
Alausa stressed that no reform, no matter how well designed, can succeed unless teachers are empowered, motivated, supported, and respected. For students, this is an important acknowledgment: teacher welfare and professional growth directly shape how learning happens.
One of the major announcements from the summit was the launch of EduRevamp, a nationwide Continuous Professional Development programme designed to modernise teacher training and link incentives to measurable classroom outcomes.
“Empowering teachers means continuous professional development that reflects our realities. It means dignity in service, clarity in career progression, and fairness in reward,” the minister said.
EduRevamp is open to teachers across both public and private schools in Nigeria. However, the performance-based incentive package under the programme will apply only to public school teachers, a decision
Alausa said is guided by equity, accountability, and responsible use of public resources.
Beyond training, the reforms also include the Ignite digital platform, aimed at reducing teachers’ workload. For students, this could mean better-prepared lessons and more focused teaching time.
There is also the Diaspora Bridge programme, designed to strengthen STEMM education, and the planned distribution of 60,000 tablets to teachers in underserved communities — a move expected to improve access to digital teaching tools.
Other initiatives announced include reforms to the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria’s digital platform, the expansion of Communities of Practice, and progress on the Accelerated Teacher Training Programme, which fast-tracks the professionalisation of in-service teachers.
All the initiatives, the minister said, are anchored on a newly introduced National Teacher Policy, which will guide teacher welfare, professional standards, and development nationwide.
The Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaiba Ahmad, also highlighted the central role of teachers in the reform agenda.
“When teachers are supported, trained, motivated, and valued, the entire system is strengthened, learning outcomes improved, equity expands, and national development is accelerated,” she said.
She described the summit as a national platform bringing together teachers, unions, policymakers, regulators, development partners, and the private sector to push practical education reforms forward.
Speaking at the event, the wife of the President, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, described the summit’s theme as “timely and relevant,” especially in addressing long-standing challenges in Nigeria’s education sector.
She referred to teachers as “the quiet architects of great nations,” noting their role in shaping young minds, instilling values, and nurturing hope.
“Meaningful education and national progress can only be achieved when teachers are adequately equipped, motivated, and supported,” she said, adding that teacher empowerment remains a key pillar of President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
The National President of the Nigeria Union of Teachers, Audi Amba, described the summit as a historic milestone in recognising teachers’ contributions to national development.
As part of the event, the Federal Government honoured 12 outstanding teachers with national prizes of N25 million each. The overall Best Teacher of the Year, Solanke Taiwo, received an additional N25 million, a brand-new car, and a fully furnished two-bedroom flat.
Nigeria’s education sector continues to face familiar challenges — from teacher welfare and limited professional development to overcrowded classrooms and weak infrastructure. These are issues students encounter daily, especially in public schools.
While summits and policies do not automatically fix classrooms, the renewed focus on teachers sends a clear signal. If these reforms move beyond paper and into practice, students may begin to feel the difference — one lesson, one classroom, and one teacher at a time.











































































EduTimes Africa, a product of Education Times Africa, is a magazine publication that aims to lend its support to close the yawning gap in Africa's educational development.