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secondary school | Page 3 of 8 | Zikoko!
  • QUIZ: Get 7/11 To Prove You Were A ‘Cool Kid’ In Secondary School

    QUIZ: Get 7/11 To Prove You Were A ‘Cool Kid’ In Secondary School

    If you were among the “happening” boys and girls in secondary school, then you definitely used or knew someone who used at least 7 of the products in this quiz. These were gateway drugs to the expensive perfumes and fancy makeup lines we use today.

    Give it a try:

    11 Of Our Most Popular Geography Quizzes

    Take these quizzes.

  • QUIZ: Which Prefect Should You Have Been In Secondary School?

    QUIZ: Which Prefect Should You Have Been In Secondary School?

    Whether you were actually a prefect or not, we know which role would have suited your personality. Take this quiz and we’ll let you know whether you were head prefect or social prefect material.

    Go ahead:

  • 16 Triggering Sentences That Will Take Every Nigerian Back To Secondary School

    16 Triggering Sentences That Will Take Every Nigerian Back To Secondary School

    Everyone who attended secondary school in Nigeria probably has a bunch of great memories, but we are sure there are some terrible ones too. Here are 16 sentences that will remind you of how annoying secondary school could be sometimes.

    1. “ALL STAND GREET!”

    The pain you felt whenever that annoying teacher entered the class.

    2. “What was the last thing I said?”

    Why did they love stressing us?

    3. “Everyone tear out a sheet of paper.”

    You knew failure was around the corner.

    4. “You have just 10 minutes more.”

    You never understood how the time always flew by.

    5. “PENS UP!”

    The worst.

    6. “Results are out.”

    This sentence always put the fear of God in you.

    7. “I’ll be calling out your scores.”

    The whole class got to see your shame.

    8. “All of you kneel down there.”

    Getting dragged into group punishments that didn’t concern you.

    9. “Everybody move out for prep.”

    Why did this even exist?

    10. “The principal is calling you.”

    The scariest thing you could ever hear.

    11. “LAST JUNIOR!”

    The most triggering of all.

    12. “When is your next free period?”

    That teacher that always wanted to steal your free period.

    13. “Just give me 5 minutes out of your break time.”

    You now had to watch everyone else play outside.

    14. “Come and collect it at the end of the term.”

    What you heard whenever your contraband got seized.

    15. “Everyone bring out your notes.”

    You knew you were about to get flogged for an incomplete note.

    16. “Go and wait for me in my staff room.”

    That moment you got sent to the land of no return.

  • QUIZ: Only Take This If You Attended A Nigerian Secondary School

    QUIZ: Only Take This If You Attended A Nigerian Secondary School

    If you went to a Nigerian secondary school, then you should know every single item in this quiz. The real challenge here is remembering the brands responsible for them. Let’s see if you can get more than 7 right.

    Go ahead:

    11 Of The Most Popular Zikoko Quizzes Of All Time

    Here are the best performing Zikoko quizzes ever. Take them.

  • 13 Things You’ll Get If You Ever Had A Nigerian Lesson Teacher

    13 Things You’ll Get If You Ever Had A Nigerian Lesson Teacher

    If you had a Nigerian parent, then you most likely had to deal with an annoying lesson teacher at some point in your life. Well, for the sake of nostalgia, we’ve compiled 13 hilarious things you’ll relate to if you ever had one.

    1. Every lesson teacher’s uniform:

    2. “Your lesson teacher is here.”

    The worst thing you could hear.

    3. When you get home and your lesson teacher is already there.

    Can I rest?

    4. When your lesson teacher comes during a public holiday.

    Don’t you have a life?

    5. When your school teacher is also your lesson teacher.

    Double wahala.

    6. When their time is up, but they continue teaching.

    Monday morning

    WHAT IS IT?

    7. When they come late but still want to use their full time.

    Why are you punishing me for your lateness?

    8. “Go and get me chilled water.”

    Don’t disturb me, biko.

    9. When they start cleaning their ear with a biro cover.

    Monday morning

    Grossssss.

    10. When they teach you a different thing from what you learnt in school.

    Gombe state 100 computers

    So, who should I believe?

    11. When your lesson teacher tries to flog you.

    In my father’s house? God forbid.

    12. When they refuse to help you do all your homework.

    What are they now paying for?

    13. When they give you assignment too.

    Don’t add to my stress, abeg.

  • 11 Things You’ll Get If You Filled A Slum Book In Secondary School

    11 Things You’ll Get If You Filled A Slum Book In Secondary School

    If you went to a secondary school in Nigeria, then you probably know what a slum book is. Filled with mostly banal questions and a few nosy ones, it was the ultimate way to fish out your crushes and confirm who you real friends were.

    1. When your friend doesn’t give you their slum book to fill.

    Jesus, is this what it feels like to be betrayed?

    2. When no one writes your name amongst finest in class.

    So, I am ugly?

    3. When someone’s slum book has too many questions.

    Abeg, we’ve already done exam.

    4. When you find out you’re not your best friend’s best friend.

    So, the last few years have been a lie?

    5. Girls designing their slum book page like:

    Oshey artist.

    6. When a teacher gets their hands on a slum book.

    Hay God.

    7. You, checking to see if your crush likes you too:

    God, do it for your child.

    8. When your crush writes “nil” instead of their phone number.

    What are you forming?

    9. When someone you don’t rate gives you their slum book to fill.

    Who be this one?

    10. “Books before boys because boys bring babies.”

    Every girl wrote this.

    11. You, trying to think of the perfect phrase to sign out with:

    Still landing on “Cool. calm and collected.”

  • 13 Secondary School Memories That Will Give Every Nigerian PTSD

    13 Secondary School Memories That Will Give Every Nigerian PTSD

    For everyone who went to secondary school in Nigeria, there are common annoying and borderline traumatic experiences that link us all together. So, we gathered 13 of them to see if they’d trigger some equally funny and unpleasant memories.

    1. Losing these weeks to exams:

    Your enemies have won.

    2. When two seniors are giving you opposing instructions.

    What is this stress?

    3. “Tear out a sheet of paper.”

    Excuse me?

    4. When you see your name in the list of noisemakers with “X 6”.

    Based on what?

    5. “All stand greet.”

    Here we go again.

    6. The sound of this:

    The worst sound ever.

    7. “Last junior.”

    Can’t be me.

    8. These outfits:

    Ugly nonsense.

    9. “Everybody kneel down.”

    Hay God!

    10. “Don’t touch it or I’ll start again.”

    The last thing you want to hear when they are flogging you.

    11. When they finish flogging you and your friends start saying sorry.

    That’s actually making it worse

    12. “You forgot to collect the homework.”

    Shut your damn mouth, oversabi.

    13. Never having a complete case of this:

    It’s like they stand up and run away.

  • 5 Valentine’s Day Gifts Everyone Gave In Secondary School

    5 Valentine’s Day Gifts Everyone Gave In Secondary School

    Back in secondary school, people starved for months just so they could use their pocket money to buy stupid gifts (or stage elaborate gestures ) for their then significant others. Tell me. How did those relationships turn out? Do you even still remember their names?

    You didn’t expect to be shamed when you opened this article, did you? Well, sit back, relax, and grab a snack because there’s more on the way. Here are 5 valentine’s day gifts you most likely gave or received in secondary school.

    1) A Card

    Full of mushy heartfelt and sincere wishes written by some poor child in a Chinese sweatshop. All you did was write your name at the end and hope that the sentiments expressed in the card were enough to get you to second base.

    2) Flower

    SAMSUNG CSC

    Notice how I said “flower” and not “flowers?” That’s because they usually bought that single synthetic rose (you know the one) that smelled like camphor. Seriously, one strong sniff of those things was enough to instantly get you to Chernobyl-levels of cancer.

    3) Perfume

    Perfumes that were more water than fragrance and had the most insane packaging e.g. having the bottle be shaped like a woman striking a sexy pose and the cover be a giant flower, making the woman look like a distant relative of Toad from Super Mario.

    4) Love-shaped picture frame.

    The ones nobody could ever use because no photographer back in the day developed pictures that small.

    5) Teddy Bear

    They were hella cheap too so they always fell apart slowly over a couple of months like a poorly-built build-a-bear project. It was the thought that counted, though.

    #ICYMI: We made a new show named Blind Date in which we sent a bunch of single people on an all-expense-paid date, interviewing them before and after they met. The first episode drops February 14 (Valentine’s Day) on our YouTube channel.

  • 4 Things People Who Liked To Resume School Late Can Relate To

    4 Things People Who Liked To Resume School Late Can Relate To

    For many people, the start of a new school term was something to look forward to. The excitement to start a new class, the eagerness to use new textbooks, and of course, school also meant a lot of people got a long-ass break from being the grumpy in-house maid. And there was you who liked to add a week to your holidays. You didn’t feel the urgency others felt to return to school, you would be there for the remainder of the year, so what was the rush?

    Now is the perfect time to remind you of everything you faced whenever you eventually decided to “show your face”.

    The struggle to get a seat

    Your mates had been moved to a new class, and the early birds seemed to have taken all the good spots. Your friends, who you had hoped would help you get a seat, sly you. It meant doom because you had to take wherever was available, which could be the one spot with a direct view of the teacher.

    Your friends had moved on from you

    The minds of children are fickle, and your first experiences of that were during your secondary school days. It turned out that the people you thought were your friends really couldn’t give two shits if you came back. It was one thing for them to have new seat partners, and another thing for them to have settled into a life without you in it.

    There was a mountain of work to catch up on

    Yes, this was a given. Nobody was going to wait for you before serious work started. It’d been only a week, but there were series of class works and assignments already. And of course, the hardest part of it all was the notes you had to copy. When you got to the senior class, this became even more of an inconvenience because, biology and economics.

    But none of this mattered because you were the flyest

    New term, new school bags, uniforms, and shoes. The others got the same new things, but theirs didn’t count as new anymore. Yours were the newest and you couldn’t be caught un-fresh. The tardiness may be a thing your teachers hated, but your drip was forever.

  • I Attended Schools With The Children Of Bank Executives, My Mother Was A Cleaner.

    I Attended Schools With The Children Of Bank Executives, My Mother Was A Cleaner.
    Illustration by Celia Jacobs

    To get a better understanding of Nigerian life, we started a series called ‘Compatriots’, detailing the everyday life of the average Nigerian. As a bi-weekly column, a new installment will drop every other Tuesday of the month, exploring some other aspect of the Nigerian landscape.

    In this article, we had a peephole view into the life of a Nigerian whose primary and secondary schooling experiences were marred by the simple fact that he was from a sphere of life entirely different from that of his peers.

    My formative years were spent navigating life in primary and secondary schools, filled with the children of parents whose combined incomes could easily fund the running of a small country.

    As the child of parents whose determination to provide the fineries of life was marred only by a glaring financial incapacity to do so, this afforded me a double education of sorts. On one hand, I grasped the rudiments of arithmetic, civics and the like. And on the other — I was made privy to a very, very practical approach on just how class-systems worked.

    I had easily one of the best purely educational experiences money could buy, and I say this not in an overly sentimental ‘I love my school’ kind of way. My primary school, with its adjoining secondary institution, surely cracks any list recognising top academic performers in Lagos State, or maybe even Nigeria (but this might be the sentiment creeping in). Its (needless) nationally exclusionary syllabus boasted a mix of British and American curricula, or something of the sort – which made it a fly trap for the children of CEOs, bank executives, Consul Officers and other officials whose hyphenated positions only served to underscore the importance of their roles.

    Equally enamoured by the prospect of a school that promised international learning at your back door, was my mother. Now, by no contortion of reality was she in the same league as CEOs and bank execs. Throughout the duration of my elementary and secondary schooling, she served as a cleaner in an incredibly ornate high-rise apartment complex within the vicinity of my schools. From there, she would make, what I I can only imagine was a constantly harrowing daily trip, past manicured lawns and fortified estate gates, to our sparsely furnished home in one of the lesser known shanties of Lagos State.

    Perhaps this spurred the determination that her last child have a fighting chance at a better life. Resolute, she sourced for support for my education in the multi-levelled complex which she cleaned. Finding and spreading sponsors across its many floors like confetti. Thus began my journey as a shanty boy, rubbing shoulders with the spawn of the high and mighty of society.

    Having a chance to look back at it, it’s a bit of a marvel how children, yet to fully comprehend the notions of good and evil, or even the three-times table, can so unreservedly grasp the concept of shame without any outside assistance.

    I’ve never been able to pinpoint the exact moment I knew for a fact, that there was something that made me distinct from my peers. But it was always the little things that set me off.

    It was in the way my mates in primary school appeared pristine to class every morning, not a hair out of place, or a sweat broken, during their commute from air-conditioned home to air-conditioned chauffeur-driven car, straight into the school premises. I, on the other hand, was sure to make an appearance, a little slick with sweat, shirt most likely untucked, with socks just begging to tell the tale of how my 13-minute (unaccompanied) walk to school, made friends of the dirt and sand along the way.

    It was noticing, in Year 4, during that great stationery transition ⁠— how my Bic pen, with paper rolled into the tube proudly announcing your name, surname and class, differed greatly from that of my peers. Whose fountain, ballpoint and fluffy-headed gel pens added an extra flourish to writing, that the stain-happy Bic pen, just couldn’t.

    It was even in the timbre of their voices. These children, who barely scratched the surface of adolescence, had a certainty of self and a rapport with teachers, I can only imagine was lubricated by being surrounded by, and giving direction to, armies of domestic staff. Whereas they had no reservations letting the teacher know where they had trailed off, or asking to have a missed point repeated; I was resolutely mute. Almost looking for permission to exist within the classroom.

    It was listening in on conversations that centred round children programmes only available on satellite televisions and feeling like my peers were speaking in another language. One which needed an Ikoyi- club membership and a minimum two-person domestic staff to understand.

    But sometimes, it was in the big things.

    Like a teacher laughingly requesting that I put my hands down, after instructing that all last-born children in class raise their hands during an exercise. My kind of ‘last born’ wasn’t the sort being referred to.

    Or having to feign disinterest for the umpteenth time, in school excursions that might as well have required pounds of flesh in payment.

    The very many humiliating instances of  being pulled out of class to answer for late fee payments. There was being invited to the homes of my peers for birthday celebrations and feeling like I had taken a left from earth and somehow landed in The Emerald City. Houses with corridors big enough to envelop the entirety of my home, that included dogs held as voluntary inhabitants, and not resilient strays you had to shoo away for picking your home as a marked spot.

    It was being relegated to the service quarters in the apartment complex where my mother cleaned, while my peers (who lived in the flats), freely traipsed about the community.

    It was always managing to stick out somehow in class photographs, no matter how much I laundered my uniform the day before.

    It was a perpetual inability to fit in.

    By secondary school, when adolescence multiplied self-awareness and embarrassment  to the Nth degree, I had learned to reserve the whole truth when asked about my mother’s profession. Substituting her role as cleaner, for the more  non-committal ‘worker’ in the buildings. An act for whose memory still makes me recoil.

    Resumption weeks came to be dreaded. When stories of those who travelled abroad and had international hang-outs were freely swapped. Somehow, I knew my tales of transforming Lagos’ beaches into second homes with my friends, wouldn’t quite have made the cut.

    My battles with esteem raged on during those years. Mornings, afternoons and evenings were hard. On several occasions, I fantasised about transferring to the public schools my neighbours in our shanty community attended. Where group walks to school wouldn’t be viewed as odd. Where no one would hide a snigger, while pointing out the fact that I had outgrown the uniform I honestly considered a better fit from the only other ill-fitting unit at home. Neither of which could be replaced for obvious financial reasons.

    A school where I wouldn’t have to smile through students expressing fake-worry at the additional letters my ‘designer’ footwear sported, when kitting up for recreational activities in school.

    But watching me, you would never have guessed.

    To the outside observer, I was a spunky teen in class. Quick with retorts to anything that bordered on absolute disrespect to myself or my family’s station in life. Admirable athletic ability and some intelligence, or enough intelligence that it didn’t pose additional ammo for my already blood-thirsty colleagues. When in reality, I was constantly riddled with self-doubt, anxiety and shame.

    This is not to say I had nothing but a nightmarish experience in school. For all the bad, it was almost completely countered by the lifelong relationships I forged with classmates who didn’t consider status in life, a caveat for fostering friendships. I’d also be remiss to ignore the great educational impact the school had in my life, while simultaneously exposing me to students whose ways of life, travels and experiences broadened any knowledge I could probably have hoped to gain, relating only with my ilk.

    But was I glad to finally see the back of it, to attend a more socially-representative university? You can not imagine the relief.

    *Locations and specific experiences have been tweaked to protect the identity of the narrator.