Across Nigeria, a wave of entrepreneurial learning is transforming secondary education. More schools are embedding student-led businesses into their curricula—giving learners the opportunity to build real ventures, earn revenue, and develop vital life skills. These programs not only promote teamwork and financial literacy but also prepare students for future business success.
Here are five leading schools where students don’t just learn about business—they live it.
1. Loyola Jesuit College, Abuja
At Loyola Jesuit, entrepreneurship is built into every term. Students are grouped into teams and tasked with identifying market gaps, developing business plans, and launching real products or services—ranging from artisanal soap lines to event coordination services.
Each team manages procurement, production, branding, and sales, using both on-campus kiosks and digital platforms to reach customers. Teachers guide students in financial management, pricing strategies, and customer service. Proceeds often support community outreach, blending business with social responsibility.
2. Greensprings School, Lagos
Through the school’s Young Entrepreneurs Programme, students work in cooperatives that create and run projects such as organic farms and personalized fashion items.
Equipped with tools like 3D printers and sewing machines in a dedicated makerspace, they learn to rapidly prototype and validate ideas. Public exhibitions and online campaigns test real demand, while expert-led sessions delve into intellectual property, logistics, and digital sales. The experience culminates in a pitch competition where students compete for seed grants and mentorship opportunities.
3. Dowen College, Lagos
Dowen integrates entrepreneurship into students’ daily schedule through its BizTech Club. Learners take on real company roles—CEO, CFO, marketing head—and operate student-run startups like coding tutorials for younger kids and healthy snack shops.
Digital dashboards display live performance metrics such as revenue and customer feedback, teaching students how to analyze and respond to data in real time. Industry visits and guest lectures from tech entrepreneurs offer a deeper connection to Nigeria’s startup scene.
4. American International School, Abuja
AIS’s Enterprise Challenge spans an entire school term, encouraging students to form mixed-age teams that build scalable business models—such as virtual tutoring services or green cleaning companies.
Senior students mentor juniors, while all teams submit funding requests to a panel of alumni investors. Successful projects receive seed funding, workspace, and recognition as official school clubs, ensuring their growth continues beyond a single school year.
5. British International School, Lagos
The Young Innovators Hub at BIS supports a wide range of student ventures—from sustainable fashion brands to tech-driven recycling services.
Weekend boot camps offer deep dives into topics like e-commerce, customer targeting, and product iteration. Real-world partnerships with local SMEs provide practical briefs and mentorship. Final project showcases connect students with funders, accelerators, and investors, giving standout ventures a path toward commercialization.