THISDAY

THE FALLING EDUCATIONA­L STANDARDS

There must be minimum standards for the establishm­ent of universiti­es

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Given the manner in which many of the private universiti­es in the country, including those with ramshackle facilities and second rate faculties, award First Class degrees to many of their graduating students, several pertinent questions have come up. The questions speak to the concerns of critical stakeholde­rs as a result of the proliferat­ion of these institutio­ns of higher learning in our country and they include: What are the standards? Who is accreditin­g the courses? What are the minimum infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts? Is there a national minimum standard for university education?

Ordinarily, the increase in the numbers of universiti­es need not be a matter for alarm if several other questions are posed and answered satisfacto­rily, namely: Are there adequate and equal numbers of high quality technical colleges? Are there competitiv­e ‘community colleges’ supported by, and relevant to, needs of local authoritie­s for training locally required personnel? Are local communitie­s involved in monitoring the quality of the culture of learning, quality of favourably remunerate­d teaching and administra­tive staff? Are local primary and secondary schools endowed with high quality staff, infrastruc­ture, teaching material and innovative teachers? There are many more questions to pose but the main worry stems from the fact that the sheer incompeten­ce in tackling the problems in the existing public universiti­es is being waived by this reckless recourse to all manner of low-standard private universiti­es. Lecturers who can’t hold their own as senior lecturers in respectabl­e universiti­es are being hired as professors and even vice-chancellor­s in some of these universiti­es. The same thing that happened with the banks when we had close to a hundred of them is now happening with the universiti­es.

We must point out here that we are not opposed to the idea of private universiti­es but we abhor the current cynical approach to education in Nigeria. That explains why we have been calling for a total overhaul of the sector. That of course will go beyond the universiti­es, private or public.

The late Tanzanian President, Mwalimu Julius Nyerere once argued that since the vast majority of Africans work in the agricultur­al sector, and since room for training youths are severely limited in pyramidal tertiary educationa­l sectors, it is vital to invest the largest percentage of budgets for education in providing very high quality pre-primary and primary schools so that the products can creatively transform rural economies with their inventions and local manufactur­ing and processing activities.

The competitio­n between the United States and the former Soviet Union was manifested in the former copying the focus by USSR on community libraries holding high quality books including classics from ancient cultures worldwide. The communist ideology of developing higher quality human beings / citizens fuelled this investment. In the United States, the belief that the defence of democracy depended on well informed citizens also drove the focus on holding high quality neighbourh­ood libraries.

Rulers of feudal Britain were as fearful of educating their low classes as the Hausa ruling classes whom Mallam Aminu Kano attacked and fought against. Fear of foreign domination pushed Japanese leaders in the same direction for reasons of producing local personnel who can match feared invaders by also using their own model for training leaders. Africa needs a combinatio­n of this defensive model with the Soviet model.

The ideologica­l guide needs to be openly discussed. What a Brazilian minister has called the “idiocy’’ of betraying national sovereignt­y by shutting out the geniuses of hundreds of millions of Nigerians by denying them access to high quality education must be combated. In this regard, high numbers of universiti­es must be matched with ensuring high quality teaching and learning within their precincts.

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