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SELI Inaugurates Two Educational Playgrounds to Inspire Learning for 500 Children in Plateau
Seriki Adinoyi in Jos
Star Education and Leadership Initiative (SELI) has built and inaugurated two fully equipped educational playgrounds for schools in underserved communities in Plateau State, expanding access to play-based learning for more than 500 schoolchildren.
The beneficiary schools: Baptist Model Academy, Gwafan Lamingo, and Happy Days Private School, Tina Junction, Jos, received customised playgrounds fitted with age-appropriate educational play equipment including seesaws, monkey ladders, tire calculators, swings, playhuts, slides, walkways, pyramids, and other interactive learning structures.
Speaking at the inauguration and formal handover of the playgrounds, Founder and Executive Director of SELI, Esther Onyinyechi Mark said the project was designed to motivate children to be in school, remain in school, and thrive academically.
“We believe access to quality education is the fundamental right of every child,” she said. “These playgrounds are an enticing reason for children to want to come to school. Beyond the fun, they also serve as teaching aids and educational instructional materials. Teachers can embed many of the play elements into their classroom curriculum to support learning.”
She added that SELI introduced the playgrounds to strengthen school attendance and boost children’s love for learning in a region facing significant education challenges.
“In Northern Nigeria, across the North-central and the North-east, we have some of the highest numbers of out-of-school children.
“This is our own way of encouraging more children to be in school and stay in school. Through these playgrounds, we want them to feel joy, to develop cognitively, socially, and emotionally. Play is not just play; play is learning.”
The playgrounds serve dual purposes by supporting children’s cognitive development while also promoting communication skills, social skills, and critical thinking.
The initiative was supported through the Reciprocal Exchange Component of the Mandela Washington Fellowship, a program of the U.S. Department of State, administered by IREX, in collaboration with Play360.







