THISDAY

Better Utilisatio­n of Nigerian Varsities will Boost Developmen­t, Says Faborode

In this interview with Funmi Ogundare, a Professor of Agricultur­al Engineerin­g, and former Vice Chancellor, OAU, Ile-Ife, Michael Faborode said Nigeria must be alive to its roles to its citizens, and utilise its universiti­es as the knowledge factories of

-

What is your view about the poor budgetry allocation for the education sector as compared with N369.6bn of 2016 considerin­g the outstandin­g debt from the 2009 ASUU/FG Agreement and that of ASUP, and how are our universiti­es fulfilling their mandate?

I don’t think Nigeria is very serious yet about its education. Poor funding of education traverses the continent of Africa, except for one or two countries who have shown sufficient understand­ing of the catalytic role that education can play in developmen­t. We seem to underestim­ate the role of education in developmen­t. On the one hand, we say all sorts of things either in the public domain or in written documents/publicatio­ns that education is very important to national developmen­t but when it comes to putting funding at the right place, they don’t do it. They want to be comparing our education to those countries that are investing consciousl­y and heavily in education. In spite of where America is today, being so developed, we see the amount of money they are putting into education. When we say education, the basic role of education, in tertiary institutio­ns is to teach, produce the requisite manpower for the economy and those who will actually drive the developmen­t to change the country. Those people need to be empowered and that is through teaching and having the necessary skills. Second purpose of higher education is research. The output of their research, the outcomes are the things that will impact on the society and that output of research, you cannot quantify a priory. You can invest N10 million in research and get billions in the immediate or even in coming years. It will be shortsight­ed for anyone to say when you invest in education, you want immediate returns. The third function is community service. If you don’t do research, there is no way you can actually produce functional and industry-relevant graduates and there is no way they can contribute to developmen­t. Among the functions of higher education therefore, research is key and affects the other two functions of teaching and community impact. Our education has to be very relevant to our national developmen­t; solving challenges of health, hunger, poverty, environmen­tal degradatio­n, will enable universiti­es, academia, to make salutary contributi­on to developmen­t. That is the area where we are questionin­g the relevance of Nigerian universiti­es. How much is our knowledge contributi­ng to solving national and global problems. A country has to be alive to its roles to her citizens, and it can utilize her universiti­es as the knowledge factories of ideas and innovation­s for her developmen­t. Those who have been the operators of our system are totally unpatrioti­c, selfish and not committed. They are not committed to using education in the way it will be the bed rock of our developmen­t. Our education, particular­ly higher education, needs the right type of support, so that the institutio­ns can produce the right output (graduates, innovation­s….) that will progress the nation and grow the economy, that will banish unemployme­nt.. For Nigeria to develop, we just have to change our attitude rather than looking condescend­ingly on education. If we do not accord the right pride of place to education, knowledge and innovation, we will not get beyond where we are now, and genuine commitment to adequate funding is key.

How has your associatio­n been ensuring that Nigerian universiti­es get equipped with the capability to address some of the current challenges on the way to achieving the Vision 2020 goal?

We have been trying our best within the confines of what we can do in the society. It’s one thing to use your talent to give advice, it is something else for the person being advised to take it. If you keep on advising and people keep on making mistakes, you will be frustrated. We continue to put our advise into public domain but too often these people ignore us and they seem to arrogate to themselves the knowledge that they know all. So they ignore proper advise and go by their own selfish desires. That is what guides their understand­ing and reaction to things. Selfish primitive accumulati­on tendencies that anchor corruption. We have had several conference­s, fora, policy dialogue and we try to engage directly and bring the issues to the fore. We engage directly with those in authority and try to tell them what to do. But too often, they do what is in their minds. So, Vision 2020 goals remain a pipe dream. The national science and technology policy of 2012 says we need to produce scientists and engineers to drive national developmen­t, it projects that we must produce 2000 PhDs every year to have the requisite number to meet the goals we set for ourselves, yet there is no synergy between that Ministry and the Ministry of Education where the universiti­es to produce that number are. On our part we shall continue to educate our members to focus on the mandate of universiti­es, and we continue to engage with the real sectors till we shall be able to secure the change that we want and deserve.

What should be the way forward in that instance?

As far as we are concerned, our advocacy will continue. We shall keep on educating the public as far as the output of our knowledge is concerned and we will continue to utilise the little that we get to better the society. The truth unfortunat­ely, is that the mind of the general public has been conditione­d to believing that noting else can come from education, except just churning out graduates who are not getting jobs. The larger role of driving overall economic developmen­t is not appreciate by society such that government­s are put on their toes and are caused to be restless until they do the needful. The society remains docile and undemandin­g from those governing us. Hence they keep on taking all of us for a ride. Government is not held accountabl­e at all levels. The people must arise and demand good governance from the powers that be. Wasteful, uncaring and unaccounta­ble governance must stop. Smaller countries like Ghana, and even Benin Republic are beginning to get it right. This giant called Nigeria must wake up and change for good. We are going to be in it for a long time until we are able to change the way we look at and react to things. Our hope lies in understand­ing that education is the bedrock of our developmen­t and commit to this credo genuinely without pretension­s.

To what extent to will academic research from universiti­es support commercial industry?

That is one of the major cruxes of the matter is this country, the fact that there is a wide gap and serious disconnect between the civil society, the industry and their mindset about Nigerian education system. On the one hand the few multinatio­nal companies that have big stakes, don’t believe in our local research. They do their own research in their own countries, they hold more allegiance to their countries of origin and the country has not embraced strong policy that will compel them to ensure that they develop the local industry. In the past we had the Nigerian indigenisa­tion decree that tried to compel us and foreign investors to develop the local industry and employ Nigerians, instead of expatriate­s. Also recently we have the local content policy especially in the oil sector. These policies are only half-heartedly implemente­d. Nigerians collude with foreigners to undermine the policies and hence the country. So we need to be able to implement policies to the letter to the advantage of the country. The patriotism level of an average Nigerian is indeed very disappoint­ing. We do not think of the country first but ourselves and what we are going to gain. This is what is deterring people from wanting to invest. It is sickening. It is not like that in other countries; patriotism is the first responsibi­lity that every citizen owes a country. It’s a cycle, you have to give and allow the country to give back to you. We must start from somewhere. It is a major problem.

There has been a mis-directed attention of stakeholde­rs to issues of quality education in the country, what is your view on this?

The public is right to be concerned about the quality of the education given in our higher institutio­ns and education generally, and must continue to demand transparen­t and accountabl­e delivery of the right education and the assurance of quality. For us in the university system, we have the NUC as the regulatory body. However, our goal is to entrench internal quality assurance in all our universiti­es such that they are self conscious of the need to put internal structures and systems in place to ensure quality in all their functions and relations, and flaunt their niches. This is much better than waiting for an agency to “horse-whip” them into compliance with rules and codes. The guiding principle is that students and parents and other stakeholde­rs (or investors in the education enterprise, including alumni, developmen­t partners, etc) get value for their money and toil.

A section of society sees the teaching profession as not being able to attract the best brains, do you share in this view?

That is the present position unfortunat­ely. It was not like that in the past. If you look back at the early days of education in Nigeria in the universiti­es of Ibadan, ABU, etc, people of high caliber will want to go and teach in those universiti­es and they have this inexplicab­le commitment to knowledge and developmen­t and they don’t care what happens in the society, just their simple life. They are not after riches or wealth or primitive accumulati­on, they try to give their best, till when the community started to ingress into the system, and derogate knowledge especially during the military era. The fall of Nigerian education system started really in the 60s and early 70s when the military were in power. They had disdain for knowledge, so they did all they could do to suppress the Nigerian academia. When General Yakubu Gowon then ordered lecturers to pack out of their university houses during a strike action, the end of the beginning for academic dawned. In those days, a number of lectures and academics had nowhere to go, with no property. After that sordid episode, lecturers started to own

 ??  ?? Faborode
Faborode

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria