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Ogun Daily Newspaper > Blog > Opinion > From Ogun to the Nation: How Abiodun’s Learner Identification Number Became a Template for Reform
Opinion

From Ogun to the Nation: How Abiodun’s Learner Identification Number Became a Template for Reform

Olufemi Soderu
Last updated: March 23, 2026 8:18 pm
Olufemi Soderu
ByOlufemi Soderu
Olufemi Soderu is a journalist at Ogun Daily Newspaper with over 15 years of professional experience in reporting. He is based in Nigeria and has worked...
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By Yekini Alli

In public policy, ideas rarely gain true legitimacy until they travel. A reform conceived in one place, tested under real conditions, and then adopted more broadly carries a certain authority—proof not just of concept, but of impact. This is the trajectory now defining Nigeria’s adoption of the Learner’s Identification Number (LIN), a reform that has quietly moved from state innovation to national policy.

At the centre of this transition is Ogun State, where the foundations of the LIN framework were first laid under the leadership of Governor Dapo Abiodun. What is today presented as a nationwide digital education initiative had its earliest expression in the Gateway State five years ago, where it was designed not as a symbolic gesture, but as a practical response to systemic weaknesses.

For years, Nigeria’s education sector has grappled with a familiar set of challenges: fragmented data, weak accountability, and planning processes undermined by unreliable statistics. In many cases, the absence of a unified system for tracking students meant that records were inconsistent, enrolment figures were inflated, and policy decisions rested on uncertain ground. Beyond these distortions, the lack of a single, verifiable database also weakened the integrity of national education statistics, limiting effective planning and international comparability.

It was within this context that Ogun State introduced the Learner’s Identification Number as part of a broader reform agenda aimed at revitalising education. The goal was both simple and ambitious—to assign every student a unique, verifiable identity that would follow them throughout their academic journey, from entry to graduation, creating a single source of truth across schools and districts.

But the strength of the initiative lies not in the number itself, but in what it enables.

By creating a centralised digital record for each learner, the system brings coherence to what was once a fragmented landscape. Attendance, assessment outcomes, transfers between schools, and progression milestones are captured and updated in real time. This architecture not only eliminates duplication and data loss, but also enables seamless student mobility—ensuring that learners transferring between schools can do so without disruption or administrative delays. The result is an education system that can, for the first time, see itself clearly—one in which data is no longer scattered across files and institutions, but integrated into a single, functional framework.

For policymakers, this shift is transformative. Decisions about resource allocation, infrastructure, and staffing can now be guided by evidence rather than estimation. With reliable data, government can more accurately deploy teachers, identify underserved communities, and monitor outcomes over time. For school administrators and teachers, the system simplifies record-keeping, reduces paperwork, and enhances the monitoring of attendance, performance, and progression. For parents, it offers reassurance that their children’s academic records are secure, continuous, and transparent, strengthening trust in both public and private school systems.

Perhaps most significantly, Ogun State’s approach did not treat compliance as optional. By linking the Learner’s Identification Number to participation in critical examinations such as the West African Senior School Certificate Examination and the Basic Education Certificate Examination, the government ensured widespread adoption. This enforcement mechanism proved decisive. It curtailed the long-standing problem of “ghost candidates,” blocked multiple registrations, reduced identity fraud, and reinforced the credibility of examination processes.

In this sense, the LIN system evolved beyond a technological tool into an instrument of institutional integrity—one that strengthens accountability while safeguarding the authenticity of student identity across the education ecosystem.

The impact of these changes has been far-reaching. Where inflated enrolment figures once distorted planning, the state now operates with verifiable data. Where gaps in record-keeping once hindered continuity, there is now a seamless academic trail for each learner. Efficiency has improved, accountability has deepened, and the broader education ecosystem has become more responsive. At the same time, the system enhances transparency for parents, reducing disputes over student records, results, and certification.

Beyond administration, LIN is embedded within a broader digital learning ecosystem. Through Ogun State’s reform framework, students are not only identified but also connected to digital platforms where they can access lesson notes, recorded classes, and live teaching sessions, as well as retrieve certificates online. In this way, LIN serves as both an identity tool and a gateway to digital education, aligning with wider efforts to modernise learning delivery and expand access.

It is little surprise, then, that the initiative began to attract attention beyond Ogun’s borders. Delegations from other states sought to understand its architecture, implementation strategy, and measurable outcomes. What they found was not an abstract proposal, but a working system—one already demonstrating gains in data integrity, administrative efficiency, and student tracking.

The Federal Government’s decision to introduce a nationwide Learner’s Identification Number can therefore be seen as part of a broader pattern in governance: the scaling of proven ideas. Rather than starting from scratch, national policy has drawn from a model that has already been tested, refined, and validated at the subnational level.

This process of policy diffusion underscores an important reality in Nigeria’s federal system. Innovation does not always originate at the centre. Increasingly, it emerges from states willing to experiment, adapt, and implement reforms tailored to their specific challenges. When successful, such initiatives provide a blueprint that others can follow, particularly in aligning public and private education systems under a unified framework—an effort strengthened through collaboration with bodies such as the National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools.

Governor Abiodun’s role in this evolution reflects a governance approach that prioritises execution alongside vision. By embedding digitisation within a clear policy framework, his administration avoided the pitfalls of reform for its own sake. Instead, it focused on solving concrete problems—ensuring that technology serves as a means to stronger institutions, not an end in itself.

As Nigeria moves forward with the nationwide rollout of the Learner’s Identification Number, it does so with the advantage of precedent. Ogun State has already demonstrated that the model is workable, scalable, and impactful. The task now is to replicate these outcomes across a far more complex national landscape, while addressing practical challenges such as digital infrastructure gaps, capacity building for educators, system adoption in rural areas, and the need for strong data protection and cybersecurity safeguards.

Acknowledging the origins of this reform is not merely a matter of credit. It is an opportunity to recognise the value of practical innovation—of ideas grounded in experience, tested in reality, and refined through implementation.

In the unfolding story of education reform in Nigeria, the journey of the Learner’s Identification Number offers a compelling lesson: meaningful change does not always begin with sweeping national declarations. Sometimes, it starts quietly, in a single state, with a clear vision and the discipline to see it through.

From Ogun to the nation, that journey is now well underway.

Alli, a political analyst, sent this piece from Koye-Lambe, Ogun State

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ByOlufemi Soderu
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Olufemi Soderu is a journalist at Ogun Daily Newspaper with over 15 years of professional experience in reporting. He is based in Nigeria and has worked across local, regional, and national newspapers, covering a wide range of public affairs issues. Olufemi’s work reflects extensive newsroom experience, multiple professional recognitions, and a strong commitment to press freedom and responsible journalism.
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