What was once a purely student affair is becoming a whole-family spectacle — and some Nigerian schools are leading the way.
At Sunshine International School in Ibadan, Oyo State, the annual inter-house sports competition took on an entirely different dimension this year, blending athletics with cultural pageantry in a way that left parents as much a part of the show as their children.
The event, branded the “Sunshine School Olympiad” and held on Thursday, April 2, 2026, at Adamasingba Stadium, drew widespread attention — not just for what the students did on the track, but for what the parents did off it.
Students competed across track events, march-pasts, cheerleading routines, and dance performances, combining athletic skill with creative flair. But the moment that stopped the crowd and subsequently went viral online was a parents’ fashion parade inspired by the popular Ojude Oba festival.
Dressed in colour-coordinated traditional attire tied to the school’s competing houses — blue, yellow, orange, and white — parents transformed the stadium into an open-air runway. Fathers and mothers danced in animated, synchronised groups, their matching outfits and choreographed movement reflecting weeks of planning and a shared sense of community pride.
The display was not without its backstage drama, however. One parent, identified on Instagram as Simbel_fabrics, offered a candid account of the behind-the-scenes hustle. Each participating family had reportedly contributed N30,000 towards the coordinated outfits — a sum that did not sit entirely well with all involved. “Make I catch my sub, we paid 30k and my pikin no kukuma stepped out of the house, anything paparazzi, count me out,” she wrote, drawing laughter and sympathy from followers in equal measure.
The clip, nonetheless, drew overwhelmingly positive reactions from Nigerians online. “This is better — na so my sister go fall for her son inter-house sport,” wrote Instagram user Jummsytee. Another user, Emanessentialsouvenirs, quipped, “Adults too enjoying inter-house sport,” while Teem_teemah declared simply, “I want to be a parent in this kind of school.”
The Ibadan school’s event appears to reflect a broader shift in how Nigerian schools are reimagining inter-house sports. In at least one other school, parents were reportedly asked to purchase matching “aso ebi” to take part in activities alongside students — a sign that the tradition of collective dressing is finding a new audience beyond weddings and naming ceremonies.
As schools continue to push creative boundaries, inter-house sports are fast shedding their reputation as routine school-calendar events, evolving instead into vibrant community celebrations where parents are no longer spectators but co-performers — costly outfits and all.
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