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History education in Nigeria: Past, present and future

Research Article • DOI: 10.52289/hej8.204 • May 6, 2021 | ← Back to Articles

History education in Nigeria: Past, present and future

Grace Oluremilekun Akanbi, Alice Arinlade Jekayinfa

Abstract

Before and after the introduction of western education to Nigeria by Christian missionaries, the teaching and learning of history was given pride of place, although the contents of school history privileged the Bible and English history by celebrating the importance of the arrival of the colonial powers with their religion. This position, indeed this narrative, was challenged and contested by Nigerian nationalists even before 1960. Therefore, the need to overhaul the curriculum content arose after independence in October 1960 which led tothe organisation of the 1969 Curriculum Conference. Part of the outcome of the conference was the emergence of the first Indigenous education policy in 1977. However, in 1982 History was delisted from the basic school curriculum and retained only as an elective subject in the Senior Secondary school. The outcry from stakeholders since then (over thirty years) recently reached a crescendo and has yielded a positive change, as History was reintroduced into the school curriculum in the 2018/2019academic session. This paper, therefore, addresses the following questions, with recommendations on how the study of History might be promoted at all levels of education in Nigeria: What was the position of history education in the past? Why was it delisted from the basic school curriculum? What were the consequences of the delisting? How did it find its way back into the basic school curriculum? After reintroduction, what next?
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Cite this Article

Akanbi, G.O. & Jekayinfa, A.A. (2021). History education in Nigeria: Past, present and future. Historical Encounters, 8(2), 73-89. DOI: 10.52289/hej8.204.

Keywords

  • Collective Memory
  • Curriculum
  • History Education
  • History Wars
  • Indigenous Histories
  • National Education Policy
  • Social Studies
  • Vernacular Histories

License

CC-BY 4.0 International.

Open Access & Double-Blind Reviewed.

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DOI: 10.52289/ISSN22037543

© 2014–2026 HERMES Research Network

The University of Newcastle, Australia

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