The Federal Government has introduced a new National Textbook Ranking System for primary and secondary schools to improve quality and bring uniformity to classroom materials, the Federal Ministry of Education said Saturday in a press release signed by Director of Press and Public Relations Boriowo Folasade.
The system will cover Primary, Junior Secondary, and Senior Secondary levels and is designed to reduce the flood of textbooks in schools, the Ministry said.
Education Minister Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa and Minister of State for Education Prof. Suwaiba Sai’d Ahmad stated that the move will ensure only high-quality, curriculum-compliant books are approved for use.
NERDC will keep its legal duty to approve textbooks, but every approved title will now face an extra ranking process to pick the most suitable ones for each subject and class level, the ministers explained.
To carry out the rankings, NERDC will set up Standing Subject Committees of experts, the Ministry noted. The committees will grade textbooks using set academic and teaching standards. Only a limited number of top-ranked books will get final approval for nationwide use to improve quality control and consistency, the statement said.
Any textbook that is not ranked will be banned from classrooms, even if it was licensed before, the Ministry warned.
The policy will start in September 2026 after stakeholder meetings with teachers and publishers and once the evaluation framework is complete, according to the release.
The Federal Government restated its commitment to raising learning outcomes and giving students access to better educational resources, the Ministry added.

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