"An
illiterate society is a useless one in words and in deed. The collapse of
education in Nigeria has contributed in no small measure to the general malaise
afflicting and ravaging our land today."
– Dele Momodu
– Dele Momodu
(Image Source) |
Education, the pillar on which every
serious and purposeful nation or sovereignty that has ever existed has been
built, is something Nigeria does not seem to be getting right. Despite the
claims by parties - political and not - that they can move our country forward,
the truth remains that without a sound educational system or even a semblance
of one, we are going nowhere!
The current system in the country has failed, in my opinion, producing a lot of graduates that, to put it mildly, do not know their lefts from their rights. Even taking a step before graduation, the quality of students leaving secondary schools today is nothing to write to your grandmother about; the terribly abysmal WAEC results in recent times clearly spells this out. Still taking another step backwards, barely anyone remembers the once popular final primary school examinations that once made headlines (on the Backyard News Network), making young children carry books like ‘Ugo C. Ugo’ that were often bigger than they were. I wonder what the trend for the Common Entrance examination is these days.
The current system in the country has failed, in my opinion, producing a lot of graduates that, to put it mildly, do not know their lefts from their rights. Even taking a step before graduation, the quality of students leaving secondary schools today is nothing to write to your grandmother about; the terribly abysmal WAEC results in recent times clearly spells this out. Still taking another step backwards, barely anyone remembers the once popular final primary school examinations that once made headlines (on the Backyard News Network), making young children carry books like ‘Ugo C. Ugo’ that were often bigger than they were. I wonder what the trend for the Common Entrance examination is these days.
The Nigerian educational system is in dire
need of resuscitation, recent attempts to fix problems in the sector have not
yielded much tangible fruit; as I write this, the failure rates still remain
largely unchanged. The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) and State
Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) Fund are examples of ‘gallant’ efforts
to revive our schools but the method of application of these funds is a topic
for another day. I believe the lack of success of these efforts,
notwithstanding the issues in implementation, is due primarily to their being
channeled in the wrong direction. We have a fundamental problem yet solutions
are being targeted at the symptoms and not the disease. One thing is that we Nigerians tend to focus solely on the ‘end’, we complain
about final products but do little to scrutinize the full process holistically.
The situation with our educational system
is no different, we are quick to condemn lecturers and universities, as we
rightfully should, for their incompetence and flaws (where they exist), but we
fail to criticize the rotting and dilapidated primary schools that are more
often than not, in our very own backyards. You should have heard of students
sitting under trees for classes in some so called schools by now, if you had not,
you have now. So who are we kidding? We expect Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), University
of Ibadan (UI) and University of Benin (UNIBEN) to produce top notch graduates
but we feed them second tier undergraduates, we expect Barewa College, King’s
& Queen’s Colleges and Federal Government College Warri students to achieve
distinctions in WAEC, NECO and JAMB but we feed them teenagers with the
intellects of toddlers. No, it is not possible; miracles do not work that way.
(Image Source: Pending) |
Our current status quo is an expression of another of our fundamental problems today. We
have to change our thinking. We have to start looking at the path we follow and
not just that the fact that we arrive; we have to step out of our own shadows. We
have to sit down, think deeply, ask the right questions and design an appropriate
solution to our moribund educational system; we need to plan!
Looking around the world at countries that
have made it or that are currently making it, one can see that there is a
positive correlation between their success and mass quality education. The
United States (US) has most of the top universities in the world - 37% of its
young population are tertiary graduates, Japan’s University of Tokyo is ranked
one of the world’s top ten by several organizations - 40% of its young
population are tertiary graduates and even our very own South Africa houses most
of the top African universities - 12.1% of its above 20 population are tertiary graduates, despite its recent outburst of xenophobia. These three nations are just some of
the well-known examples. Education, formal or not so formal, is one of the only
things that can take a people ‘somewhere’. Our Nigerian institutions and
students are seething with potential but it is a shame that the current
structure leaves that potential as it simply is, potential, instead of
harnessing such latent power to help the nation 'make it'. If you are in doubt of
the immense potential, click diaspora to see what Nigerians outside Nigeria have
achieved. Let’s get to the plan.
[The Background] There are six years of
primary school, six years of secondary school and about four years in
university. Adding all the school years together we get sixteen, sixteen years.
This is the basis of my plan but I must confess at this point that it is not a
fool-proof solution to the existing problem in the educational sector but
rather more of a guiding path that can be improved upon before being followed. My
plan is called the sixteen year plan because it will actually take at least
sixteen years for its full effects to enter society. This is a long time, I
know, but remember that the patient rat gets to eat food from the pot when the
cat leaves the kitchen.
[The Plan] The sixteen year plan (16-yp)
refers to a complete reformatting of our current educational output, or so to
speak. It does not involve a change in curriculum or anything so drastic,
although I believe the current syllabus is in need of some tweaking. The plan
is to gradually change the quality of students in our institutions starting
from year ‘N0’, when the first set of students to be affected by
16-yp is admitted into their first primary class across the country. I should
step back a bit here; part of the restructuring of the scheme is to gradually
replace old and retiring teachers with a new wave of newly employed and
properly trained teachers. I am not insinuating that our current teaching staff
is not properly trained but this sketch of a plan aims to leave no room for
errors, it is a holistic resurrection.
Now, the new set of teachers will begin
teaching with the new set of pupils and as the pupils progress from grade to
grade, new 16-yp quality of teachers will be continually added to schools as
the older teachers retire and leave the service. There will be minimal
educational contact between old staff and the ‘new pupils’ (Old teachers who
still have significant years of service to render may also receive training on
the 16-yp ideology). This plan is not a fire brigade approach; it takes into
cognizance the system in place and attempts to make pertinent changes without
causing unnecessary unrest in the system. For this plan to work, schools across
the country have to be improved to international standards and the training the
new teachers are to receive needs to be what is attainable in countries like
South African, Japan and the US. More importantly, the minimum requirement and
level of remuneration for educators needs to be raised, to attract bright minds
to the service.
The first major sign
of progress of the scheme should be seen from a generally improved common
entrance result six years after commencement of the 16-yp programme but I know
this will not be enough to convince the world. Yet another sign of improvement will
be a better ‘Junior WAEC’ result than has been seen in recent times, still I am
sure there will be doubters. The first major incontestable sign that education
has evolved would be an unbelievable WAEC result, more ‘A’s than would have
been seen in the last ten years combined. The first generation of a new Nigeria
would be on the right track, twelve years after we would have set their course.
After sixteen years, we should have a new set of engineers, lawyers, medical
personnel, scientists, social scientists, technicians and even artists that will propel
Nigeria into another world. It is worthy to note that every
educational opportunity to be obtained during this new regime is to be by
merit, no longer shall we lower the bar for any individuals.
Fixing education from
the foundation upwards is the only way to build, as my learned lawyer friends
would put it; “Nihil fit ex nihilo ” meaning,
“Nothing comes from nothing.” I castigate the system that produced me
knowing full well that I am indicting myself, but the truth must be told. I believe that for Nigeria to show its seriousness to progress, its drive
to join the League of Nations, my dear country must first find a way to teach
her children. No more half-baked and partially polished minds, we need our gems
to shine and our bread to remain in the oven until it browns.
(Image Source 1 & 2) |
God bless The Federal Republic of Nigeria
and beg our brothers in South Africa to stop killing us!
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