Thursday 15 January 2015

Revitalizing Nigeria's Educational Sector

REVITALIZING NIGERIA’S EDUCATIONAL SECTOR

 
According to BBC English Dictionary, Education is ‘the process through which a person is taught better ways of doing something or a better way of living’. Same dictionary also recognizes it as the act of teaching people various subjects in a school or college. In the same vein, the Wikipedia Online Dictionary defines it as ‘a form of learning in which the knowledge, skills, values, beliefs and habits of a group of people are transferred from one generation to the next through story-telling, discussion, teaching, training, and/or research’.

Whilst, Revitalization is simply the act or process of making something more active, lively, or successful. So, to revitalize something or a system means to make it more lively, active, or successful, as the case may be.

Frankly, the survival of any nation as an entity depends solely on the health status of its educational sector. In line with this singular fact, the unavoidable role of education in the development of any society has been vastly documented in series of global academic journals.

Presently, unequivocally Nigeria which is widely regarded as the giant of Africa is still uncertain where she is headed regarding her educational system. Suffice to say that, her destination is yet to be known by the concerned citizenry. It is against this backdrop that the minds of many of our young ones are preoccupied with the intention of leaving the country for elsewhere for their academic pursuits.

It is no longer news that most educational programmes initiated both in the past and present by the Nigerian government, have ended up serving as mere siphons to transfer money to the bank accounts of the corrupt political officers and their allies. To start with; since the commencement of the Universal Primary Education (UPE) in 1976, the programme has failed to perform effectively as anticipated as a result of lack of funds necessitated by corruption, among other related factors.

Furthermore, the Universal Basic Education (UBE) initiative launched by Chief Olusegun Obasanjo in Sokoto State on 30th September 1999, which was intended to be universal, free and compulsory, has in the long run seemed incapacitated due to the ongoing troubling revelation of the shortage of teachers as well as employment of half-baked ones in our various schools, which is also attributed to the aforementioned socio-political cankerworm known as corruption. These and lot more similar programmes taking place in the Nigeria’s educational sector have been hampered by corruption thereby crippling the nation’s socio-economic system.

It is obvious that most of our school structures are in dilapidating states, which shows that Nigeria has a weird value system. Indeed, Nigeria is a society where priorities are considered to be less-important. For example, the monthly wages of the less/non-educated local government councillors are far greater than that of university professors. Of course, something is apparently wrong with any society that doesn’t take its educational system seriously.

As the disgusting culture of corruption persists, the public tertiary institutions have been left to rot away. Some of the loans received from the World Bank towards the revitalization of the nation’s educational system, were rather used to purchase inconsequential equipment that could not be properly installed or maintained, and several institutions received irrelevant books and journals in this regard. Due to this anomaly, each year the nation’s tertiary institutions send-forth hundreds of thousands of half-baked graduates in different fields of endeavour to the nation’s labour market.

Sincerely, to restore the Nigeria’s economic sector, there is an urgent need to revitalize the nation’s educational system, and this measure can only be actualized by revisiting all the factors that currently affect the system in question such as lack of infrastructure, teaching facilities, social amenities, poor wages and incentives, substandard teaching curriculum, high tuition fees, just to mention but a few.

First and foremost, we must begin from the grass root. The government ought to as matter of urgency rehabilitate all the dilapidated technical colleges situated in various locations across the country as well as provide adequate facilities required to run the schools, and sufficient funds to sustain the said structures and equipment. Honestly, the country’s anticipated technological development or enhancement shall remain a mirage if the grassroots are not properly addressed.

Most of the technical works presently done in China is being carried out by the school children. Nevertheless, barely few years ago, China was recognized as one of the third-world countries in the world alongside Nigeria and other developing nations. But today, China is among the world’s ruling class as regards science and technology.

Also, there is an urgent need to reintroduce History subject, which has abruptly vanished, in the Nigeria’s school curriculum. And, a law mandating every tertiary institution in Nigeria to offer History as General Studies should be enacted by the National Assembly. It is pathetic that most of our young ones barely know their past or lineage, and such anomaly is solely as a result of the sudden disappearance of History subject in the nation’s education curriculum. It is worthy for us to note that without knowing our past, we can never comprehend where we are meant to be headed.

Furthermore, world-class libraries, laboratories, and research centres, should be establish in all the existing primary, secondary and tertiary institutions across the federation, which would go a long way to enhance both the reading culture and the practical method of teaching faced by the pupils and students.

The medical and engineering undergraduates ought to be meant to pass through befitting teaching hospitals and workshops respectively, to enable them acquire the desired skills. Also, well-equipped national engineering workshops are expected to be established at strategic localities in the country, so that, any graduating engineering student would be meant to pass through any of them; and it would serve as a prerequisite to  the mandatory National Youth Service Programme, just as it is observed by the medical students.

In the same spirit, the ongoing Industrial Training and Teaching Practice schemes embarked upon by the students of our Universities/Polytechnics and Colleges of Education respectively, must be taken more seriously by the concerned authorities. The officers assigned to supervise the students or to visit the various firms or schools where they claimed to be, should endeavour to pay regular sudden visits to the said establishments. This measure would help to eradicate any form of insincerity found among the students/trainees since most of them prefer to dodge the training, thereby enabling the institutions to actualize the primary aim of the Students Industrial Work Experience Scheme (SIWES). And the institutions involved must on their parts endeavour to encourage the supervisors by providing sound vehicles and other logistics for the concernment.

On the other hand, the tuition fees of all the public citadels of learning in Nigeria must be revisited by the appropriate authorities with the view of reducing the fees to their barest minimum, so that, it would be affordable by every parent or guardian. Due to payment of high tuition fees, some of the students whom are less-privileged often indulge in menial jobs while in their respective schools in order to assist their parents or guardians or to supplement what the said benefactors have given to them. And by so doing, they would pay less attention to their studies thereby indulging in examination malpractices, cultism, armed robbery and other kinds of criminality which ends up affecting their academic statuses negatively; most of them even become dropouts at the long run, due to the financial challenge.       

Most importantly, government ought to endeavour to employ qualified applicants to teach in all the public institutions regardless of their levels, including nursery, primary, secondary, as well as tertiary. Engaging quack teachers in our public schools has cost the nation a very grievous harm and we cannot afford to pay more for the damages. Thus, formidable and trustworthy agency must be set-up in earnest by the government in this regard, in order to put to stop nepotism, lack of due process, and all forms of corrupt practices.

Above all, conducive or enabling environment should be provided for the teachers at all levels. At the tertiary level, befitting offices ought to be allocated to both the academic and non-academic staff to enable them discharge their duties effectively and efficiently. Also, revisiting the teachers’ salaries or wages is long overdue. They, especially the lecturers, should be meant to receive reasonable amount of money regarding their levels/cadre as salaries and they ought to be paid as at and when due; and all their entitled incentives are expected to be revisited from time to time. No doubt, this measure would help to eradicate all manners of corrupt practices namely, admission racketeering, examination malpractice, sorting, and what have you, taking place in our various schools; as well as help to eradicate the incessant strikes embarked upon by the teachers at all levels.

In a more serious note; the private sector ought to also be mandated to follow suit as regards revitalizing the nation’s educational sector. In view of this, any private institution that is unable to live up to the expectation should be shut down indefinitely by the appropriate regulatory body, such as National Universities Commission (NUC), National Polytechnics Commission (NPC), Universal Basic Education Board (UBEB), the state ministries of Education, and so on, as the case might be.

For the above suggested measures to work, all hands must be on deck and we must endeavour to tell ourselves the gospel truth. It is needless to state that Nigeria has suffered tremendously in the area of education; therefore it is high time we eliminated any form of hindrance behind the ordeal. Think about it1

 

           FDN NWAOZOR
Public Affairs Analyst & Rights Activist

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            frednwaozor@gmail.com   
            +2348028608056  

       

       

                    

             

     

 

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