The second part of the essay by former governorship aspirant in the gubernatorial elections in 2015 in Abia State, Dr. Alex Otti. Read the first entry here.
“The educated differ from the uneducated as much as the living
from the dead” Aristotle (384-322BC).
“Training is everything. The peach was once a
bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with college education” Mark
Twain (1835-1910)
We
open the second phase of our discourse of education with two great quotes from
two great minds. Aristotle and Mark Twain need no introduction. Aristotle was
an ancient Greek philosopher and scientist, who together with Plato and
Socrates laid the foundation for what is today referred to as Western
Philosophy. His contributions cut across logic, metaphysics, mathematics,
physics, biology, botany, ethics, agriculture, medicine, and politics. He was a
student of Plato, who was in turn, a student of Socrates. He is often referred
to as the father of logic. One of his theories that I like so much is called
syllogism. Simply put, syllogism refers to a sound reasoning that says that “if
A is equal to B and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C.” To Aristotle, to
the extent that the premises of an argument are true, then the conclusions are
guaranteed to be true.
Samuel
Langhorne Clemens who is popularly known by his pen name, Mark Twain, was an
American writer, humorist, publisher, and lecturer. He was well known for
creating two unforgettable characters in literature namely, Tom Sawyer and
Huckleberry Finn. He made a fortune from his writings and lectures. He was
later to lose everything in his investments which turned out very badly, mostly
owing to innovative disruptions of that period. One interesting thing about
Twain, beyond his well-acknowledged humor, was his integrity. Having filed for
bankruptcy in April 1894 and having transferred his copyrights to his wife to
prevent creditors from laying their hands on them, he worked extra hard with
his friend, Henry Rogers of Standard Oil, and ensured that all his creditors were
paid every dime they were owed, one year after. Mark Twain insisted on paying,
even though he was under no legal obligation to do so. I consider his action a
great feat given that the current President of his country, Donald Trump,
and/or his companies had filed for bankruptcy between 4 and 6 times, depending
on how one counts resulting in unmitigated losses to banks, creditors,
bondholders, and stockholders. Twain’s humorous talent is demonstrated in his
quote about cauliflower being cabbage with a college education.
There
is no controversy over the fact that we have consistently paid less and less
attention to education in the recent times in this country. To corroborate
this, all one needs to do is to assess the quality of products of our
institutions of learning over time. In the immediate post-colonial era, someone
with a First School Leaving Certificate, also known as “San Six”: a bastardized
pronunciation of Standard Six certificate, could speak very well, write very
well, knowing where to punctuate, add commas and full stops. That is hardly the
case with holders of School Certificates and equivalents today, not to talk of
First School Leaving Certificates. A lot of them can hardly make correct
statements without grammatical and mechanical blunders. Some can't even write
their names. What do we expect when their teachers are as bad, teaching them
nonsense? The Governor Oshiomole/Graduate Teacher episode presents a funny but
interesting scenario. In a verification exercise in Edo State, a few years ago,
Governor Adams Oshiomole had asked a “graduate” teacher to read what was
written on her age declaration certificate. What followed was a complete
disaster. The teacher who was supposed to teach students, simply could not
read. She had to be assisted by the governor to read virtually every word on
that paper. You don’t have to take my word for it. Just watch “Nigerian
Graduate Teacher Can’t Read Own Certificate in Edo State” on YouTube.
In
teaching, just like most things in life, what you sow is what you reap. You
cannot have a teacher who can’t read and expect his or her products to be able
to read. The rigour that goes into the selection process and the minimum
standards set for teachers have a lot to do with the quality of teachers we
have. In the past, teaching was a very respectable and noble profession,
attracting the best hands and brains. I am not too sure that the situation is
the same today. In so many places in Nigeria, teaching has been left for those
who could not find jobs elsewhere. A major reason for this is the
competitiveness of both compensation and motivation. If we do not get these
right, we may as well forget attracting the right quality of personnel to this
otherwise important profession. After all, it is said that if you pay peanuts,
you attract monkeys. It is also for survival reasons that a lot of terrible
things happen between teachers and students particularly at tertiary level.
These days, you hear about “sorting” by the higher education students. This
shameful word, for those who have not encountered it, refers to buying of
grades from teachers in cash and kind. You may be as scandalised as I was a few
years ago when a university student explained it to me. Students actually pay
teachers for grades and depending on how much the student is willing to pay, he
could score A, B, or C. Female students whose teachers are male could sort in
kind. Here, the teacher sleeps with students in exchange for grades. That is
the level of decay that has become the hallmark of our educational system.
Those who went to school decades ago would agree that these kind of actions
were abominable at that time.
Some
teachers have also devised another way of merchandising the students in order
to make illegitimate money off them and their sponsors. They sell handouts and
pamphlets and shamelessly make the students understand that the purchase of
these materials at extortionist rates determine whether the students would pass
or fail their subjects. You refuse to buy at your own peril. The quality of the
materials put together for this purpose; most times is so poor and substandard.
This is the reason why we have a lot of unemployable and poor quality graduates
roaming the streets.
Just
like Eneke the bird said in Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart,” “since men
have learnt to shoot without missing, it has learnt to fly without perching.”
Following from that lead, since many educational institutions have opted to
churn out ‘certificated illiterates,' a lot of organizations have devised ways
to ensure they select only the best from the lot to ensure a
“contamination-free” environment. They, therefore, organize stiff recruitment
exercises and set up ‘finishing schools’ for retraining of the few manageable
graduates prior to engaging them. Some oil companies have had to set up schools
that their prospective recruits have to pass through before they are finally
hired. In my previous life as CEO of a financial institution, I had to get
personally involved in the recruitment of fresh graduates. I would make out
time within an otherwise crowded schedule to have a final one on one interview
with those who the stiff selection, training and retraining process had thrown
up. It was such an expensive exercise, but I insisted and still insist it is
very much worth it, given my belief that no organization can be better than the
quality of its people.
Beyond
the issue of the faculty, there is the fundamental issue of the number of
spaces available for our students. In my last intervention, I demonstrated that
we have failed to plan for the education of our populace going by the number of
spaces available at primary and secondary school levels. The situation becomes
even worse at the tertiary level. According to recent figures released by the
National Bureau of Statistics, out of the 11, 703, 709 applications received by
the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB, between the years 2010 to
2016, only 2, 674,485 students were admitted. This means that on the average,
less than 23% of our young people who indicated interest in studying at the
tertiary level were given the opportunity to do so. This, you will agree is
very sad. You will also agree that if not for the entry of the private
universities, the situation would have been worse. Out of the 152 universities
in the country as at the end of 2016, 40 are Federal, 44 are owned by states
while 68 are private universities.
While
there is no argument about the help that the private universities have offered
in admitting a lot of the students, some of them have been said to be dealing
with problems of funding, faculty and curricular. Some have located around
existing institutions to benefit from the existing faculty from other
universities. Some of these resource persons have now been so stretched, and
this is one of the main reasons why quality has continued to drop. Some of them
that were set up as a business have painfully begun to find out that owning a
university is not a business that yields money in the short run. Unfortunately,
they are realizing too late. It is, therefore, important that regulators are
empowered to ensure minimum standards are met and continue to be met by the
universities, be they government or privately owned. We know that is not
happening at the moment and the presence of mind to enforce that is painfully non-existent.
It is
for the foregoing reasons and more that Nigerian universities have remained in
the lower rungs of the rating of the universities in the World and Africa. In
the latest edition of Times Higher Education Ranking, 2016, no Nigerian University
made it to the top 981 universities in the world, quite unlike in 2015 when we
featured at No. 600. That explains how fast the rest of the world is moving and
or how fast Nigeria is moving in the wrong direction. In this same report for
Africa, the University of Ibadan that placed 11th in 2015 had dropped to the
14th position. Out of the best 15 universities in Africa, South African
Universities took the first 6 positions, except the 4th position that went to
Makerere University, Uganda. The university of Ghana came 7th, while the
University of Nairobi came 8th. Three Egyptian universities took the 9th to the
11th position while 2 Moroccan universities placed 12th and 15th. In another
report, the 2017 African University Ranking, which largely agreed with the
Times ranking, only 4 Nigerian universities made it to the top 50 in Africa.
These are Universities of Ibadan and Lagos, Obafemi Awolowo University and
Ahmadu Bello University Zaria.
From
the above report card, it is clear that we need to have a serious conversation
about education in our dear country, particularly if we agree with the words of
Nelson Mandela that “education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to
change the world”.
Like they used to say in the
early years of Nollywood home video, watch out for Part 3.
Happy Soaring!
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