United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. To save their lives. To defend their rights. To help them fulfill their potential. Across 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, every day, to build a better world for everyone.
Nigeria has striven to provide quality education, learning and skills development opportunities to the increasing number of children, but it has fallen short of the goal.
Although basic education is free and compulsory, 10.2 million children of primary school age and 8.1 million children of junior secondary school age remain out of school.
Due to the limited access to schooling and poor quality of education, about 75 per cent of children aged 7–14 do not develop foundational literacy and numeracy skills4, which are building blocks for continued learning and acquisition of advanced skills.
In Benue state, 12.8 per cent of children of primary school age and 6.7 per cent of junior secondary school age are out of school, and about 76 per cent of children aged 7–14 do not develop foundational literacy and numeracy skills.
There are multiple bottlenecks. Supply-side factors include inadequate domestic funding and government planning capacity, whereas demand-side barriers include poverty and social/gender norms. Humanitarian crises, driven by recurrent farmer-herder conflicts and armed violence, affected the provision and access to quality education in the state.
According to IOM’s Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) Round 46 (2024), over 400,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) were recorded in Benue. Displaced families are scattered across 15 formal IDP camps in 5 LGAs of Logo, Guma, Makurdi, Kwande, & Gwer West , informal settlements, and overstretched host communities, often surviving with limited or no access to education and learning.
Scope of work
Completion of a needs assessment report for Benue, including visits to the state to meet with state officials and humanitarian actors, in conjunction with the UNICEF Enugu education specialist
Completion of a needs assessment report for Sokoto including visits to the state to meet with state officials and humanitarian actors, in conjunction with the UNICEF Sokoto education team.
Work Assignment Overview
Task / Work Area:
Component 1: Rapid education needs assessment in Benue state
Develop a draft work plan including data collection tools for both needs assessments in conjunction with the UNICEF teams at state and country office level
Deliverables / Output:
Draft work plan for needs assessment in Benue and Sokoto submitted
Conduct visits to Benue and Sokoto states and conduct meetings, training of enumerators for Sokoto and other data collection activities, as required.
Deliverables / Output:
Mission plan and data collection tools submitted.
To qualify as an advocate for every child you will have…
Advanced university degree in education, international development, social sciences or other relevant fields.
Minimum of 5 years of experience in education. research, including quantitative and qualitative methods, in development and/or humanitarian contexts.
Experiencing in leading and/or coordinating a research team.
Experience in training
Experience in mapping data against key policy and international priorities.
Experience in developing and publishing research reports and policy briefs with policy recommendations.
Application Closing Date
28th October, 2025; 11:55 PM West Central Africa Standard Time.