The Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP) has strongly condemned the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE)’s plan to outsource its quality assurance responsibilities, describing it as an attempt to commercialise the regulation of polytechnics in Nigeria.

In a statement released on Friday, ASUP President, Shammah Kpanja expressed the union’s rejection of the policy, which he said undermines the credibility and integrity of the accreditation process for technical and vocational education institutions.

Kpanja explained that at the core of NBTE’s mandate is the quality assurance bouquet, comprised principally of accreditation and accreditation of programmes of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET). “This responsibility is currently the target of this outsourcing policy,” he said.

“This strange policy brings to question the continued relevance of the NBTE as a public institution,” he added.

He warned that the union would work with key stakeholders to resist the move, adding that allowing private consultants, who are profit-driven entities, to handle accreditation would weaken regulatory oversight and increase financial burdens on institutions already struggling with inadequate funding. He said, “The key justification of the NBTE in pursuing this policy is the fact that NBTE currently regulating Seven Hundred and Eighty-Nine (789) institutions covering the nation’s TVET sector is overwhelmed by the number of institutions in its regulatory portfolio.

“This fact has been severally pointed out by our Union over the years culminating in the demand and current legislative efforts at unbundling the current NBTE and creation of a dedicated Commission to regulate the tertiary division of TVET in the form of a National Commission for Polytechnics and in alignment with the other two tiers of tertiary education in the country.”

The ASUP President reiterated the union’s demand for the unbundling of the NBTE and the establishment of a dedicated National Commission for Polytechnics, similar to regulatory bodies overseeing universities and colleges of education. He recalled that at a recent stakeholders’ meeting convened by the NBTE on 4 March 2025, participants had rejected the outsourcing proposal and instead advocated for the digitisation of quality assurance processes.

The union further demanded a rollback of the outsourcing and commercialisation policy, a fast-tracking of the migration to digital platforms for quality assurance activities with enforceable deadlines for institutions, and the provision of adequate technical support and access to appropriate funding intervention platforms to drive the digitisation move.

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