Daily Trust

2,288 graduate with 1st class degrees in 2019

As employers look beyond grades

- By Chidimma C. Okeke, Haruna Ibrahim & Misbahu Bashir

Thirty-six Nigerian universiti­es produced 2,288 graduates with first class honours degrees in 2019, Daily Trust reports.

First class is the highest honours degree one can achieve on completion of studies in a university or a specialise­d institutio­n like the law school.

A tally put together by our reporters showed that the first class graduates were selected from a total of 127,023 students that completed their studies in the select schools within the time under review.

Private universiti­es were far ahead in this relatively new-found penchant for granting first class degrees to graduating students that read different courses, Daily Trust reports.

For instance, during the 2018/2019 convocatio­n of Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State, 215 out of its 1,580 graduands were graded first class, representi­ng 13 per cent.

Afe Babalola University produced 99 first class out of the 979 students that graduated, and Babcock University had 62 first class graduands out of the 1,926 students that bagged various degrees from the institutio­n.

The publicly funded universiti­es have also escalated the number of students getting the highest degree award.

The University of Lagos, for instance, recorded 271 first class during its 2018/2019 session out of 6,992 students; while the University of Ibadan had 241 first class candidates out of 7,330. Usmanu Danfodiyo University Sokoto had 113 first class out of 10,994 students, while University of Port Harcourt recorded 106 first class degrees from 4,771 students it graduated this year.

In November, the Council of Legal Education (CLE) called a total of 4,456 law graduates to the Nigerian Bar, out of which 147 candidates came out with first class honours.

“I have a first class degree in economics but could not get any job befitting my status,” said

Mohammed Salihu, a teacher in a private school in Abuja.

Another first class student had in March, this year, called the anchor and self-styled Ordinary President Ahmed Issa that he had given up hope of finding a decent job after graduating from the University of Calabar with a first class.

Dr Ben Ugwoke of the Department of Chemistry, University of Abuja, blamed the new trend of awarding many first class status to graduating students on the desire of universiti­es to make their products “competitiv­e”.

He said: “I suspect that various universiti­es are now in the habit of giving first class to many graduates just to increase their employabil­ity. I am not too sure it reflects their academic abilities.”

Speaking on the implicatio­n, Dr Ugwoke said, “If you want to destroy a country, all you need to do is to lower the standard of education and that is what we are seeing now. If you give a first class to someone not deserving it, the public, the employer will view them as first class material.”

He explained that because to whom much is given much is also expected, such students “will be placed in some serious positions to make decisions on behalf of the system and if truly they are not first class graduates, their decisions can never be first class; their decisions will be faulty and that will be calamitous for the entire country.”

Prof. Umaru Pate, Dean of Post Graduate Studies, Bayero University, Kano, said, “The trend is worrisome because there are allegation­s that some of the universiti­es do so to attract candidates as they will be seen as serious institutio­ns where people will come in and graduate with very good grades.

“This is particular­ly so in a situation where the job market is very stiff and highly competitiv­e. So they (universiti­es) could do that to encourage entries as well as promote the job marketabil­ity of their candidates.”

He noted also that the pressure of wanting to meet up with conditions stipulated by the PTDF to access their scholarshi­p grants could be partly responsibl­e for the desire for students and school management­s to award first class degrees.

Prof Pate, however, explained that the increase in the number of first class could also be attributed to the higher number of universiti­es in the country.

“With 171 universiti­es as against what obtained four decades ago, there is strong justificat­ion for the number of first class to spike,” he said.

“Yes, we have agreed that the universiti­es have increased, the population has also increased and courses have increased and the level of intelligen­ce among our students, perhaps has also increased, maybe higher than what we used to see,” he noted.

However, he queried the figures being churned out thus: “It is worrisome when you see one university whose capacity sometimes leaves room for doubt come out with a number that appears to be incomprehe­nsible. There are numbers that if they come up with, one can understand,” Prof. Pate said.

“If you have 10,000 students graduating and you have 100 of them coming out with first class, that could make sense but when you have less than 2,000 graduating students and you have a number of first class that exceeds a certain figure… Some of the universiti­es produce numbers that do not make sensible comprehens­ion by any individual or for some of us who are in the system,” he said.

Another professor who didn’t want his name mentioned, said, “the trend of universiti­es graduating high number of first class students is a criminal activity.”

On how to reverse the trend, he said, “as far as education budget remains lower than what is required by UNESCO, criminal activities in the university system will continue.”

Spokesman of the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC) Ibrahim Yakasai told Daily Trust in an interview that, “we have noticed the steady rise of people getting first class especially in private universiti­es.”

According to him, “We are not unaware of what the situation is, but we are also not going to conclude that universiti­es are just dashing out first class.

“The commission is conducting some surveys. Once the survey is over, the universiti­es’ vice-chancellor­s will be engaged to work out a lasting solution,” Yakasai said.

The NUC spokesman further noted that “the reality of the situation is that only a few people who are exceptiona­lly brilliant should get first class and they are in the minority anywhere in any school.

“So, when we see a trend where a lot of people are becoming exceptiona­lly brilliant, then you need to question the system and that is what we are doing,” he said.

Daily Trust reports that during a retreat hosted by the NUC recently, one of the items on the agenda was the rising number of first class graduates.

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Photo: NAF

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