Bayelsa State Education Commissioner Gentle Emelah visited Igbomotoru to check a finished secondary school project for students. Governor Douye Diri ordered the construction to help riverine communities access better education facilities. Hefdas Constructions built a 12-classroom building with furniture and housing for teachers, despite the difficult and swampy conditions. The contractor completed the work quickly and delivered quality results that impressed government officials. Emelah praised the project as a significant step toward improving education in remote areas.
The commissioner explained that education provides the best path for communities to develop and prosper over time. He toured another construction site at Fonibiri, where workers are building additional classrooms and staff accommodations. The Fonibiri project includes hostels for students and special housing for principals and service personnel. Government officials aim to narrow the educational gap between urban schools and rural community schools. These major investments demonstrate the administration's commitment to providing children with a comfortable learning environment.
Emelah asked community leaders to encourage parents to enroll their children in the new schools. He emphasized that quality education helps young people build better futures and contribute to the growth of their community. The commissioner traveled with project monitoring officials and education ministry directors who checked the construction progress. Both school projects represent important milestones for expanding educational opportunities across Bayelsa State. The completed facilities provide comprehensive learning environments that support student success and teacher effectiveness.
The commissioner explained that education provides the best path for communities to develop and prosper over time. He toured another construction site at Fonibiri, where workers are building additional classrooms and staff accommodations. The Fonibiri project includes hostels for students and special housing for principals and service personnel. Government officials aim to narrow the educational gap between urban schools and rural community schools. These major investments demonstrate the administration's commitment to providing children with a comfortable learning environment.
Emelah asked community leaders to encourage parents to enroll their children in the new schools. He emphasized that quality education helps young people build better futures and contribute to the growth of their community. The commissioner traveled with project monitoring officials and education ministry directors who checked the construction progress. Both school projects represent important milestones for expanding educational opportunities across Bayelsa State. The completed facilities provide comprehensive learning environments that support student success and teacher effectiveness.