President Bola Tinubu’s education agenda is being projected as a sweeping national reset, with the Federal Government positioning his administration as the force behind what officials describe as a rapid shift from certificate-based learning to innovation-driven development.
This framing came to the fore at the inauguration of the Mine-Tech University Innovation Pod (Mine-Tech UniPod) at Nasarawa State University, where the Minister of Education, Tunji Alausa, spotlighted what he called a deliberate effort by President Bola Tinubu to reposition Nigeria’s education sector as a catalyst for economic transformation.
Describing the administration’s approach as far-reaching, the minister said Tinubu’s government is deliberately investing in institutions to turn them into engines of innovation, job creation and industrial growth, rather than traditional certificate-awarding centres.
The project itself is backed by a $2 million grant from the United Nations Development Programme, with additional support from the Tertiary Education Trust Fund—a combination officials present as evidence of both local and international confidence in the reform agenda.
At the centre of the initiative is the Mine-Tech UniPod, a facility designed to accelerate research, experimentation and commercialisation of ideas in mining and technology. Government officials say it is part of a broader plan to establish innovation hubs across tertiary institutions nationwide.
Alausa said the administration is actively working to scale such centres into “Centres of Excellence,” arguing that duplication across every state is unnecessary if capacity can be concentrated and strengthened strategically.
“We don’t need to build each of these in every state of the Federation. That’s how we can build capacity,” he said, reinforcing the government’s consolidation approach.
The minister also pointed to ongoing scientific work within the facility, including the analysis of mineral samples from different parts of the country, which he said underscores Nigeria’s untapped resource potential and the role of research in unlocking it.
Beyond infrastructure, the messaging around the project leans heavily on youth participation. Students and researchers are being encouraged to shift toward innovation, entrepreneurship and technology-driven problem-solving as part of what officials describe as a new national mindset.
Under this vision, universities are expected to function not just as academic institutions, but as production hubs for ideas, products and services capable of feeding into the broader economy.
Supporters of the initiative say it reflects a growing alignment between education policy and economic strategy, with emphasis on turning research outputs into commercially viable ventures.
As the Tinubu administration continues to roll out similar projects, the Mine-Tech UniPod is being held up as an early symbol of what officials portray as a bold restructuring of Nigeria’s education landscape—one where universities are expected to do far more than educate, but actively power the economy.
Credit: TheGuardian











































































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