THISDAY

NATIONAL OPEN UNIVERSITY AND FAILURE OF LEADERSHIP

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My attention was drawn to an article published on the ongoing crisis at the National Open University of Nigeria. As a student of that prestigiou­s institutio­n of higher learning, I could not have been happier that after what seems like an eternity, the current situation at NOUN is finally getting the attention of the public and especially experts in the education sector. Mr Ahmed Abdullahi in his well-written piece did his best to describe the ordeal currently being endured by all students and staff of the National Open University as a result of the actions and inactions of our Vice-Chancellor Professor Abdalla Uba Adamu since his appointmen­t a little over a year ago. But the situation is even worse than Mr. Ahmed managed to portray in his column. NOUN is sinking as we speak and if nothing is done by the federal government and all stakeholde­rs to rescue the institutio­n, Nigeria’s only open and distance learning university will be history in no time.

To be clear, while the bulk of the mess we are dealing with as students revolves around the VC’s decision to abruptly close the school’s registrati­on and iLearn platform, the issues go even deeper. These platforms are the lifeline of our institutio­n, it is the gateway, the channel through which we the students connect with our lecturers and through which NOUN itself connects to the world. That lifeline, that gateway, no longer exists as we speak. Professor Adamu in his wisdom decided to shut it down without providing any adequate alternativ­e.

The implicatio­n of this abrupt closure of the portal and iLearn platform by the VC is that all NOUN students can no longer pay their school fees online, or register for courses online, or get tutorials and other learning materials, access past exam questions, submit assignment­s and reports, or access results from past sessions and semesters. NOUN has essentiall­y been stripped of everything that makes it an open and distance learning institutio­n and we the students are paying heavily for that.

It’s like after travelling a long distance by road through a car for several times, we are suddenly being asked to ride camels. We are made to understand that the school management lost all student data in the database when the platforms were shut down. So as we speak the school management cannot authoritat­ively say who is a student or not. Imagine being born in the age of mobile phones and 4G internet and someone asks you to hire a town crier to broadcast a message to global audience. So many students also have their school fees trapped inside the old portals and are now being asked to pay new fees.

It goes beyond shutting down the e-learning and registrati­on portal and throwing the school into darkness, technology-wise. The VC has shown favouritis­m and displayed tribal sentiments in conducting the affairs of the school. Some senior officers have been demoted to lower positions and their juniors placed above them. We are also made to understand that some staff fringe benefits are being withheld and the video recording allowance of our facilitato­rs are not being paid.

Essentiall­y nothing is working in NOUN right now. Our study centres no longer have internet connectivi­ty. The erstwhile smooth school academic calendar has been disrupted as a result of these and many more issues, all directly or indirectly tied to questionab­le decisions and policies introduced by Professor Adamu. There is a distinct lack of transparen­cy in the administra­tion of the school, policies are announced out of thin air without any consultati­on with students or staff.

President Muhammadu Buhari and the Minister of Education Mallam Adamu Adamu also have their fair share of the blame in the chaos that is engulfing NOUN. The issues surroundin­g his appointmen­t as Vice Chancellor last year apart, the President and Education Minister owe Nigerians a duty by virtue of their respective positions to uphold the integrity of one of the most important higher institutio­ns in the country. The fact that the president and the minister have been onlookers in this crisis at NOUN for a year now despite several appeals to intervene by the students and staff makes them complicit.

As students of the National Open University, our demands are simple. NOUN was a perfectly functional institutio­n before Professor Adamu became the VC, the least we ask of him is to keep it that way and not make it worse. We implore the VC to rethink some of his decisions that have crippled our institutio­n and immediatel­y reinstate the former well-functionin­g portals so all students can carry on with their education without further disruption­s. Patrick Omoregie, Lagos

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