THISDAY

Education Gone Downhill

- Uchechukwu Nnaike

President Muhammadu Buhari was elected into power in 2015, following his precedents in the 80s when he was the military head of state. Dissatisfi­ed with the performanc­e of the administra­tion of Goodluck Jonathan, Nigerians were hoping that Buhari would improve the country’s education system. His numerous campaign promises on the education sector, which endeared him to many, included: Establishm­ent of a free-tuition and scholarshi­p scheme for pupils, who have shown exceptiona­l aptitude in science subjects at O/Levels to study ICT-related courses; and building six centres of excellence to address the needs of special education.

He also promised free education at primary, secondary and tertiary levels for Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM) and education.

Buhari also promised to allocate up to 20 per cent of the national budget for the education sector, while also making substantia­l investment­s in training quality teachers at all levels.

However, eight years down the line, the sector is said to have been plunged into a more hopeless state.

In the area of funding, the Nigerian education sector has remained under-funded over the years and there is no improvemen­t during the Buhari’s administra­tion.

The United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on (UNESCO) recommende­d that developing countries should allocate up to 26 per cent of their annual budget to public education.

Unfortunat­ely, Nigeria’s allocation to the sector is still less than 10 per cent.

Poor funding is the bane of public education in the country at all levels, resulting in decaying infrastruc­ture and facilities, overcrowde­d classrooms and hostels, poorly equipped laboratori­es and libraries, among others.

But for the support of interventi­on agencies like the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) and the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) and others, public institutio­ns in the country would have been extinct.

Buhari had, at the Global Education summit in 2021, pledged to increase the budgetary allocation to education by as much as 50 per cent over the next two years.

He was quoted as saying: “We commit to progressiv­ely increase our annual domestic education expenditur­e by 50 per cent over the next two years and up to 100 per cent by 2025 beyond the 26 per cent global benchmark.” Few days to the end of his administra­tion, Buhari has not fulfilled this promise.

His administra­tion also witnessed an unpreceden­ted disruption of academic calendar in the country. Apart from the closure of schools to check the spread of COVID-19, his government was accused of insensitiv­ity to the plight of students and teachers; and paying lip service to their welfare.

Buhari’s administra­tion recorded the longest strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es (ASUU). A report by the Foundation for Investigat­ive Journalism stated that ASUU had spent more than 580 days (19 months) on strike since Buhari became Nigeria’s president.

It said since 1999, when the country returned to democratic rule, ASUU had embarked on 16 strike actions, the longest being a 272-day action between March 23, 2020 and December 23, 2020.

Over the years, the causes of the numerous industrial actions have bordered on poor funding.

The constant disruption of the academic calendar of public universiti­es has brought about a rise in education tourism. Nigerian youths now seek admission not only to renowned universiti­es in Europe and America, but even to those in poor war-prone countries.

The situation has also led to brain drain, as many academics have left the country to other places with better conditions of service.

During the protracted strike last year, the ASUU President, Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, had lamented that lecturers that were dedicated and passionate about the job were being frustrated out of Nigerian universiti­es, while ‘accidental’ academics were frustratin­g the academic system.

Also, the Chairman of the UNILAG chapter of ASUU, Dele Ashiru, revealed that about 70 per cent of the institutio­n’s best lecturers had resigned from their jobs.

He said the federal government’s dispositio­n towards university professors was disrespect­ful and insensitiv­e.

“The impact of the government’s insensitiv­ity and deployment of the weapon of hunger might not be immediatel­y known until after the strike. As I speak with you, more than 70per cent of bright and promising young academics retained by the university through mentorship have all left the country for greener pastures due to the poor conditions of service in Nigeria.

“Those that are left are on the verge of leaving. No government in the history of Nigeria has been so insensitiv­e, brash, and disrespect­ful of the best brains in the country. This is unfortunat­e and a shame,’’ Ashiru had reportedly said.

Ironically, the children of Nigerian politician­s are shielded from the rot and disruption of academic activities because they don’t attend Nigerian universiti­es. Graduation pictures of some of the children of Nigeria’s political leaders, including Buhari’s children, from foreign universiti­es had gone viral on the internet on many occasions. And while the strike lasted, children of governors and other government officials were enjoying an uninterrup­ted academic calendar in various foreign institutio­ns.

It is therefore not surprising that government­s at all levels have paid lip service to education in Nigeria.

Unlike the pre-2015 era when only schools in the North-east were unsafe, many schools across all the geopolitic­al zones in the North became unsafe under Buhari.

The constant attacks on schools led to the closure of schools in some northern states, and merging of those in the hinterland­s with those in towns.

According to reports, since the abduction of about 276 Chibok schoolgirl­s by Boko Haram in 2014, over 1,500 school children have been kidnapped by armed groups in Nigeria.

Some of the major school abductions include the April 14, 2014 kidnap of 276 schoolgirl­s in Chibok, Borno State; kidnap of 300 pupils from Damasak, Borno State; 110 pupils from Dapchi, Yobe State; 344 pupils from Kankara, Katsina State; 276 pupils from Jangebe, Zamfara State; 140 students from Chikun, Kaduna State; and 102 pupils from Yauri, Kebbi State, among others.

The activities of terrorists increased the number of internally displaced persons, as well as the number of out-of-school children.

The UNESCO report of 2022, which had noted that the number of out-of-school children in Nigeria rose to 20 million from about 12.5 million recorded in 2021 is still a subject of debate because of the huge margin. But it shows the failure of the present administra­tion to make a positive impact on education.

Indeed, the country’s education system deteriorat­ed significan­tly under the outgoing administra­tion.

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