Daily Trust

Examinatio­n malpractic­e: bane of quality education

- By Fatima Baba Lawan

Education gives people the baseline skills to survive in the world. It is believed to be the bedrock of any nation’s developmen­t; hence it is incumbent upon such country’s government and relevant stakeholde­rs to take the issues of education seriously, but the continuing decline in educationa­l standard in Nigeria, especially as shown in public examinatio­ns, is a serious cause for concern.

Our education system is threatened and badly weakened, a consequenc­e of greed and irresponsi­bility on the part of some, but also the result of our collective failure to make hard choices.

The problem with our education system is that it is a product of the Nigeria system which smacks of pervasive corruption in the land, erosion of our values system, lack of good governance, bad policy implementa­tion and the over importance placed on certificat­e. Among other factors that destroyed our educationa­l system are lack of conducive learning environmen­t, dilapidate­d equipment in our laboratori­es, outdated books on the shelves of our libraries, unqualifie­d teachers and the list is endless.

However, the most challengin­g factor to the improvemen­t of our educationa­l standard is the fast growing cancer called “examinatio­n malpractic­e” which has eaten deep into the bones and marrows of our educationa­l system.

Several factors can lead to examinatio­n malpractic­e and they include lack of good societal and family upbringing, materialis­m, certificat­e over-consciousn­ess, lack of self confidence, poor remunerati­on of teachers and examiners, poverty and corruption.

Forms of examinatio­n malpractic­es

1. Paper leakage: This means that the content of examinatio­n or part of it is disclosed prior to taking the examinatio­n. 2. Impersonat­ion 3. External assistance 4. Smuggling in of foreign materials 5. Copying 6. Collusion 7. Intimidati­on of exam officials by candidates

8. Improper assignment: Deliberate­ly placing candidates under the supervisio­n of corrupt officials. Causes of examinatio­n malpractic­e 1. Laziness 2. Trying to protect the reputation of teachers and school status.

3. Desire of some parents to place their children in lucrative jobs.

4. Inadequate school facilities and teachers.

5. Threats and intimidati­ons from parents.

Effects of examinatio­n malpractic­es

Since such arrangemen­t rarely fails, fraud or malpractic­e may eventually be seen as part of academic exercise. Graduates produced through malpractic­e will not see anything bad in sophistica­ted corrupt acts thus deflating societal morals.

Examinatio­n malpractic­e increases lack of confidence in students. Intelligen­t students feel disappoint­ed and lose confidence when less intelligen­t ones perform better than them through cheating.

Products of examinatio­n malpractic­e lack the requiremen­t and experience to carry out their assignment and profession­al duties effectivel­y, leading to quack doctors, collapsed building, corrupt judges etc in the society.

Products of examinatio­n malpractic­es always end up with unfulfille­d dreams in their chosen career.

Examinatio­n malpractic­e is a negative orientatio­n for future leaders who may end up being fraudulent and corrupt in their various offices.

Recommenda­tions

Sound educationa­l policy should be put in place with de-emphasis on the supremacy of certificat­e over skill and profession­al competence.

There should be the political willingnes­s to implementi­ng policies.

Ensuring that only formally register candidates sit for the examinatio­n

Religious and community leaders should be used to intervene on parents who insist on their children getting the best result without genuine efforts.

Prohibit the use of electronic devices by candidate during exams.

Lawan is of the Department of Mass Communicat­ion, University of Maiduguri

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