By Onyeanya Ebere Immaculata
The House of Representatives has asked the Federal Government to immediately reverse the removal of Civic Education, Computer Studies, Electrical Installation and other subjects from the WAEC registration portal, warning that the decision endangers national development and disrupts preparations for the 2026 WASSCE.
The resolution followed a motion of urgent public importance moved on Thursday by Oboku Oforji (PDP-Bayelsa), who argued that while curriculum reviews are necessary, the delisted subjects are vital to modern learning and workforce readiness.
He said Computer Studies is key to digital literacy at a time when examinations are moving toward computer-based testing, while Civic Education plays an essential role in citizenship and national values.
Oforji said many SS3 students who have taken these subjects since SS1 now risk falling below the minimum requirement of eight subjects, stressing that with the exam only months away, it is “academically impossible” for them to switch to entirely new subjects.
Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu put the motion to a voice vote, and the House unanimously supported it.
Lawmakers also directed the Ministry of Education to rescind the directive and set up an ad hoc committee to investigate the delisting.
The confusion stems from the Federal Government’s September 3, 2025 curriculum overhaul, which merged Civic Education, History and Social Studies into a new subject, Citizenship and Heritage Studies and streamlined vocational courses.