The Federal Government has inaugurated a Book Ranking and Selection Committee.
It will introduce reforms to cap the number of approved textbooks per subject, ensure transparent and objective ranking, and protect learners and parents from exploitative practices.
The committee, inaugurated yesterday in Abuja by Education Minister Tunji Alausa, is expected to improve the quality and affordability of textbooks used in Nigerian schools.
The committee is chaired by the Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaiba Ahmad, with members drawn from key education agencies.
The agencies include the National Educational Research and Development Council (NERDC), Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), the National Teachers’ Institute, and the National Senior Secondary Education Commission.
Alausa explained that the government raised the committee to reform the current textbook approval process that has allowed poor-quality materials, lack of standardisation and excessive financial burden on parents to persist.
The minister said the existing system failed to properly validate and rank textbooks before approval, resulting in some subjects having as many as 50 approved books without clear quality benchmarks.
He said the absence of a structured ranking system meant that low-quality instructional materials were approved alongside books of higher pedagogical value.
Alausa also faulted publishers for bundling workbooks and consumables with core textbooks, a practice he said forced parents to buy new books yearly and placed unnecessary financial pressure on families.
Addressing the committee, he said: “Your assignment is both timely and strategic. You are expected to critically review existing approval frameworks, recommend strengthened assessment instruments and ranking systems, define clear and enforceable quality benchmarks, and propose mechanisms that ensure genuine content improvement before new editions are approved.
“You are also expected to address issues of pricing transparency, edition control, separation of textbooks from consumable workbooks, and protection of learners and parents from unnecessary financial burdens.”
Alausa stressed that although regulatory agencies could approve more books, only seven textbooks per subject would be officially ranked for selection by schools, particularly under the UBEC framework.
The minister said once ranked, textbooks would remain in use for a minimum of three years, except where major curriculum or technological changes required updates.
He urged the committee to address issues of pricing transparency, edition control, and the separation of durable textbooks from consumable materials, and called on the Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council to publicise the reforms to reassure parents.
Also, Ahmad pledged the committee’s commitment to reforming the textbook approval process to ensure learners have access to high-quality materials.
She added that the committee will plug existing gaps identified by ensuring that books are standardised and properly ranked.
“As long as a textbook meets the minimum standard, it is approved, without any benchmark to determine whether it is of grade A, B or C quality,” she said.
Also, the NERDC Executive Secretary, Prof. Salisu Shehu, said the initiative would end arbitrary book selection in schools and ensure that only the best instructional materials are adopted nationwide.
The NERDC will serve as the secretariat for the committee’s work.
