Girls belong in classrooms, this is more than a slogan; it is a vision for the future of Northern Nigeria, and particularly, Plateau State.
It is the simple but powerful idea that a girl’s place is where her mind is nourished, her dreams are nurtured, and her future is prepared, not where her potential is confined to the four walls of domestic duties.
In a society still wrestling with traditional expectations, poverty, and systemic neglect, this vision is not just a matter of equality; it is a matter of survival and development.
The Scene in Plateau State
Plateau State, with its lush green hills, cool weather, and diverse cultural communities, is often celebrated as the “Home of Peace and Tourism.”
Yet beneath the serene landscapes lies a reality that many overlook: too many girls here are being prepared for marriage before they are prepared for mathematics.
In villages like Bokkos, Barkin Ladi, and Mangu, it is not uncommon to see girls as young as twelve withdrawing from school to care for younger siblings, fetch water, or help on the farm.
Girls Belong In Classrooms
While boys are encouraged to “face their books,” girls are often encouraged to “learn their roles.” These roles, unfortunately, rarely involve passing exams or pursuing careers.
A Cultural Inheritance
For many families, the reasoning is more economic than malicious.
Families struggling to survive believe education is an investment best reserved for sons, who are perceived as future breadwinners. Girls, on the other hand, are seen as destined to marry into another household.
“Why invest in a tree you will never harvest from?” a farmer in Riyom once told me, his words a chilling summary of an age-old mindset.
This cultural inheritance is not unique to Plateau State; it is a reality across much of Northern Nigeria.
But here, the paradox is striking: a state with some of the highest literacy rates in the North still sees girls dropping out of school at alarming rates.
The Numbers Behind the Story
UNESCO estimates that over 129 million girls worldwide are out of school, with sub-Saharan Africa carrying a significant portion of that number.
In Nigeria, 10.2 million children are out of school, according to UNICEF, and girls make up a disproportionate share in the northern regions.
Girls Belong In Classrooms
In Plateau State, urban centers like Jos North boast better enrollment rates, but rural districts tell a different story: overcrowded classrooms, long distances to school, and insufficient teachers.
For some girls, the nearest secondary school is over 5 kilometers away, and safety concerns, from harassment to road accidents, compound the challenge.
Early marriage also plays a major role. UNICEF reports that 43% of Nigerian girls are married before the age of 18, and the percentage is higher in parts of Northern Nigeria.
Poverty deepens the divide, with uniforms, books, and examination fees remaining out of reach for many families.
The Cost of Keeping Girls in Kitchens
When a girl leaves school for domestic work, the loss is not hers alone. Educated girls marry later, have fewer and healthier children, and contribute more significantly to their communities.
The World Bank notes that closing the gender gap in education could add billions to Nigeria’s GDP annually.
“Every girl who leaves school early is a lost doctor, teacher, engineer, or leader,” says Miriam Audu, a girls’ education advocate based in Jos.
“The kitchen will always be there — but education gives her the choice to enter it by will, not by force.”
The loss is generational: a girl kept from school today is far more likely to raise daughters who also miss out on education, creating a cycle of poverty that becomes harder to break with each passing year.
Stories of Change
In a small community near Pankshin, 14-year-old Amina was pulled out of school in Primary 5 to help her mother at home.
Girls Belong In Classrooms
Her life seemed mapped out: early marriage, children, and a lifetime of domestic work. But a local NGO intervened, covering her school fees and providing a bicycle for transportation.
Two years later, Amina is now in Junior Secondary School 3, dreaming of becoming a nurse.
Her mother, once skeptical, now tells neighbors with pride: “If she becomes a nurse, she will take care of me better than if she married early.”
Girls Belong In Classrooms
In Langtang, a headmaster introduced a “Girls Club” to mentor female students. The club teaches life skills, leadership, and career planning, while also engaging parents in community meetings to change perceptions. Enrollment numbers have doubled in just three years.
Policy and Community Solutions
Tackling this challenge demands both policy and cultural shifts. Some proven solutions include:
1. Scholarships and Incentives – Conditional cash transfers to families for keeping daughters in school have been effective in other states and could be scaled in Plateau.
2. Safe Transportation – School buses or bicycle programs can reduce dropouts caused by long, unsafe journeys.
3. Community Sensitization – Religious and traditional leaders wield influence; when they advocate for girls’ education, attitudes change.
4. Infrastructure Development – Building more schools in rural areas shortens commutes and improves safety.
5. Legal Enforcement – Plateau’s Child Rights Law must be enforced to prevent early marriages and protect girls from exploitation.
The Role of Storytelling
Media, literature, and public discourse have the power to shift narratives.
When journalists highlight both the barriers and the breakthroughs, they turn statistics into human realities. It is not enough to report; we must tell stories that awaken empathy and drive action.
Girls Belong In Classrooms
A Vision for Plateau State
Imagine a Plateau State where every girl, from the tin-rich hills of Barkin Ladi to the farmlands of Mikang, walks into a classroom with her head held high, knowing she belongs there.
Imagine parents seeing their daughters as future doctors, engineers, and leaders, not just future wives.
This vision is achievable. It requires families making sacrifices, communities valuing education alongside tradition, and policymakers prioritizing resources for the most vulnerable.
From Slogan to Reality
The phrase “Girls in Classrooms, Not in Kitchens” should not remain a catchy slogan; it should be a policy-backed, community-owned reality.
When we put girls in classrooms, we put families on a path to prosperity.
The kitchen is a place of nourishment and culture, but it must never be a cage for a girl’s ambition. Her destiny should be written in ink on exam papers, not in smoke from cooking fires.
As one teacher in Bassa put it to me: “When you teach a girl, you teach the nation. When you keep her at home, you hold the nation back.”
Girls Belong In Classrooms
If Plateau State champions this cause, it could stand as a model for Northern Nigeria and beyond, a place where the hills are not just green with vegetation, but green with hope, ambition, and equality.