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Title: | ICT and Library in the Teaching of Arabic and Islamic Studies |
Authors: | Etubi, Muhammad |
Issue Date: | 4-May-2009 |
Publisher: | University of Jos |
Abstract: | The teaching of Islamic studies in Nigeria started in houses of Islamic scholars where verses of the Qur’an were learnt only by rote. An
Islamic Scholar read verses of the Qur’an while his pupils repeat after
him thereby memorizing them. Islamic education was introduced into
Northern Nigeria about the 14th
century and its aim was to enable pupils
memorize the Qur’an and be able to reci
te it (Fayose,1995). When an Islamic scholar
is satisfied with his pupils in memorizing the verses of
the Qur’an they then move to identification of alphabets with their respective sounds, then to formation of syllables with vowels, and then
writing (Enoh, 1987).
The nex
t stage in
Islamic education is
to understand
the meaning
of the Qur’an memorized by the pupils. This is done by translating the
Qur’an to them. At this level of translating the Qur’an, other subjects of
instruction are included in the pup
ils’ training, such as hadith, fiqh
,
Arabic literature; comprising
of Arabic
grammar
, poetry and
rhetoric
etc.
Western education was
not included in the subjects taught during
these stages of Islamic education because it was thought it would lower
the standard of Arabic and Islamic studies.
According to Umar (2000)
Islamic education began to witness tremendous growth between 1976
and 1996 from sitting on mats in houses to benches at modern Islamicschools. Islamic
schools were established to teach Arabic a
nd Islamic studies alongside western education subjects. These periods, at the
beginning, helped to change Muslims’ long existing negative attitude
towards western education particularly when available manpower could
not fully utilize the employment opport
unities created by the petroleum
boom and during the implementation of the new national policy on
education in 1976 when the Federal Government Introduced
compulsory
and free universal primary education (UPE), then in 1996 when
government call
ed
for privat
e sector, communities an
d non
-
governmental
organisation
s
’
participation in the educational system. Some of the
Islamic schools established at these periods were Arabic Teachers’
College, Jos, 1976; Al
-
Iman International Schools, Jos, 1982; College of
Islam
ic Studies, Bauchi Road, Jos, 1986; Taoheed Private Schools, Old
ICT
and Library in the Teaching
of
Arabic and Islamic Studies
3
Airport Road, Jos, 1983; Al
-
Hilal secondary school, Rikkos, Jos, 1996
etc.
The
Arabic and Islamic teacher
armed with the knowledge acquired
from both formal and informal education impact it
on his pupils and
students. His tools of continuous reference in the process of teaching are
personally possessed books. ICT age library resources are not available
to
the Arabic and Islamic teacher
to demonstrate and update lessons.
A
survey of some schoo
ls in Plateau state teaching Arabic and Islamic
studies shows that books on the subj
ects are either kept in offices
or
where there
exists
a library there is no sensitization on the use of these
materials by both teachers and pupils or students. |
Description: | Presented at the workshop on “Information and
Communication Technology (ICT) and contemporary
Challenges in the teaching of arabic and islamic studies” from 9th–11th jumadha ula 1430 A.H. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1102 |
Appears in Collections: | Library Seminars
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