In a bold move to future-proof Nigeria’s workforce and align with global technology trends, the Federal Government has introduced new Higher National Diploma (HND) programmes in Artificial Intelligence (AI), Cybersecurity, Software Engineering, and Networking.
This strategic upgrade, announced by Prof. Idris Bugaje, Executive Secretary of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), reflects Nigeria’s commitment to modernising technical education and preparing its youth for the demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
According to Bugaje, the curriculum overhaul is part of the Federal Government’s broader digital transformation agenda under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. “We have unbundled the traditional HND programmes into specialised skill sets to better reflect the needs of today’s digital economy,” he said during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
Empowering Nigerian Youth with Future-Ready Digital Skills
The new HND programmes are being implemented through the Nigeria Skills Qualification Framework (NSQF), which provides more targeted and advanced training in emerging tech fields. Areas like AI, cybersecurity, and networking are at the core of this initiative, designed to boost employability and foster innovation.
AI-Powered Accreditation to Improve Standards in Polytechnics
In addition to revamping curricula, NBTE has launched a digital accreditation system powered by Artificial Intelligence to ensure compliance, transparency, and academic integrity across Nigerian polytechnics.
“This AI system flags faculty duplication and helps monitor academic standards. If a lecturer appears across multiple polytechnic portals, the system raises a red flag,” Bugaje explained.
Technical institutions are now required to upload data on staff, infrastructure, and equipment onto a central digital platform, reducing the need for physical site inspections and minimising fraud, cost, and human error.
For institutions in remote regions with limited internet connectivity, NBTE will deploy accredited vendors to conduct on-site assessments and submit digital verification reports.
Repositioning Nigeria’s Education System for Global Competitiveness
All reforms are guided by the Minimum National Academic Standards (MNAS), which detail the academic, infrastructural, and professional requirements for both ND and HND programmes.
Prof. Bugaje emphasized that these changes are essential for positioning Nigerian polytechnics as globally competitive institutions and engines of economic development.
“Nigeria must embed technology in both education and economic planning if we want to achieve sustainable growth in the digital age,” he said, citing success stories from Southeast Asia as a model for replication.
The Federal Government expects that the newly introduced tech-focused diploma programs, alongside AI-enabled governance, will enhance Nigeria’s digital capacity, drive innovation, and contribute significantly to GDP growth.
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