Downloads: 2
Case Studies | Entrepreneurship | Volume 15 Issue 2, February 2026 | Pages: 1333 - 1338 | Nigeria
Rise and Decline of a Community-Based School in Abuja: A Case Study of BEFEST International Nursery and Primary School
Abstract: This case study examined the rise, operation, and eventual regulatory-driven disruption of BEFEST International Nursery and Primary School in Lugbe, Abuja. It chronicles how a community-driven, low-cost education initiative emerged from a perceived need for early schooling, evolving from an informal Bukka to a registered private institution serving hundreds of children. The analysis highlights the dynamics of social entrepreneurship in a low-resource setting, where trust, local networks, and a benevolent pricing strategy facilitated rapid enrollment growth, while governance gaps, licensing challenges, and external shocks (notably urban development regulations) threatened long-term viability. Through qualitative narrative and stakeholder perspectives, the study interrogates the sustainability, succession, and governance considerations for small private educational enterprises operating at the intersection of community needs and formal regulatory environments. The paper also situates BEFEST within wider debates on out-of-school children in Nigeria and the role of community-based schools in contributing to inclusive educational access and local development. The establish emphasises the need for deliberate pathways to formalization, robust governance mechanisms, and adaptive strategies that align entrepreneurial energy with regulatory and infrastructural realities.
Keywords: Community schooling, entrepreneurship, private education, school governance, UNESCO
How to Cite?: Ezekiel Oseni, "Rise and Decline of a Community-Based School in Abuja: A Case Study of BEFEST International Nursery and Primary School", Volume 15 Issue 2, February 2026, International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), Pages: 1333-1338, https://www.ijsr.net/getabstract.php?paperid=SR26221031753, DOI: https://dx.dx.doi.org/10.21275/SR26221031753