THISDAY

THE STATE OF UNIVERSITY EDUCATION

Investment in university education is inadequate. It is a mistake

-

In 2020, the year of Covid-19 pandemic when almost everything was disrupted, the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC) undertook a very important assignment. In ‘The State of University Education in Nigeria, 2020,’ fourth in the series, the NUC painstakin­gly chronicled the academic environmen­t in Nigeria, and in the process highlighte­d the successes and challenges of university education in our country. It is a report that will serve the administra­tion of President Bola Tinubu and other critical stakeholde­rs if we must address the challenge of tertiary education in Nigeria.

As the immediate past Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu wrote in the foreword to the publicatio­n, “Keeping the doors of learning open was a challenge for the Nigerian University system in 2020” while the report “has exposed the strengths and weaknesses of the Nigerian University System with new data, recommende­d solutions for government to implement and allowed us to gain an exclusive look at the educationa­l landscape post-Covid-19.”

Particular­ly striking was the demographi­cs of the university system in the year under considerat­ion. From just over 2000 students in 1962, some 2.1 million students enrolled for full undergradu­ate and postgradua­te courses in Nigerian universiti­es in 2019. The National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) topped the list with 479,966 undergradu­ate and 101,983 post-graduate students. Despite the then raging war against the Boko Haram insurgency, particular­ly in Borno State, the University of Maiduguri held second position with 59,226 students while Ahmadu Bello University was ranked third with 50,673 students. The University of Benin, University of Ilorin, Bayero University Kano, University of Nigeria, University of Port Harcourt, University of Lagos and the University of Jos, all federal universiti­es, followed suit. Overall, 68 per cent of students in the country enrolled in federal universiti­es while the states’ universiti­es had 26 per cent of enrolment. Despite their number, all the private universiti­es in the country enrolled only five per cent of the students’ population.

Another noteworthy informatio­n from the publicatio­n is the percentage of total enrolment by geopolitic­al zones. The Northcentr­al had most enrolment with 40 per cent, followed by Southwest with 17 per cent; South South, 15 per cent; Northwest, 11 per cent; Southeast, 10 per cent, and the Northeast, 10 per cent. It is difficult to explain but in all the public universiti­es, the teaching staff were outstrippe­d by non-teaching staff with the University of Calabar having the most staff of 11,294, 7,681 of them were nonacademi­c. The University also had 597 professors, the highest in the country. Curiously, however, the top 10 universiti­es with the highest percentage of First Class graduates in 2020 were private universiti­es, a trend that has continued till this day.

However, while the private universiti­es were unaffected by the paralysing and prolonged strike embarked upon by the Academic Staff Union of Universiti­es (ASUU) in the public universiti­es for most of the year, they also switched easily to technology-mediated tools to impart lectures during the lockdown. Their emphasis on the use of multi-media to complement traditiona­l teaching enabled students to undertake practical and tutorials in interactiv­e sessions. Many of the public institutio­ns dependent mostly on the lecture mode of instructio­ns were caught unprepared.

Overall, be it public or private, the State of University Education speaks to the concerns of critical stakeholde­rs regarding tertiary education in the country. Despite its important role in the society, it is evident education is inadequate­ly funded in Nigeria. There is dearth of qualified academic staff to drive the universiti­es. Most of the institutio­ns of higher learning are not only suffering from inadequate infrastruc­ture, ill-equipped laboratori­es, overcrowde­d classrooms, but they are ill-staffed. Indeed, the Committee on Needs Assessment of Nigerian Public Universiti­es, had long identified these challenges.

With a robust environmen­t for learning, quality teachers and internatio­nal competitiv­eness, the Nigerian university system, once attracted the best from Africa and beyond, to study. The products could match the best anywhere. In the last few decades, however, the system has suffered benign neglect, and many are increasing­ly questionin­g the ability to maintain comparable standards in the knowledge world.

The situation has deteriorat­ed further since the publicatio­n with the continued registrati­on of new universiti­es by both government and private individual­s without the backing of adequate resources. Only recently, a bill to establish 47 new universiti­es went through second reading in the House of Representa­tives. If passed, it will push up the number of public and private universiti­es to 309. With the proliferat­ion of these institutio­ns, teachers 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 new universiti­es. The implicatio­ns are clear: limited skilled human resources have contribute­d to the declining quality that has continued to elicit concern from stakeholde­rs.

The situation is exacerbate­d by brain drain. Many senior academic staff, due to poor remunerati­on, continue to take their services to countries where they are more appreciate­d. The depletion of scholars inside faculties is also aided by inability to attract visiting scholars from other academic environmen­ts.

The birth of TETFUND opened a window of opportunit­ies as it initiated the funding of many postgradua­te students to some prestigiou­s universiti­es in Europe and North America. Even though this window itself was abused by many recipients who reportedly collected scholarshi­p funds but avoided travelling abroad for training, TETFUND has started something remarkable by promoting national research culture which will flow into encouragin­g academic staff to stay in Nigeria instead of migrating offshore. And though the present administra­tion should be commended for approving some N683 billions for the public universiti­es, the decay in the system is deep, and it may not yield much.

Thus, while we support the clamour for increased funding, we nonetheles­s think that given the dwindling resources of government, the tertiary institutio­ns need to think out of the box and find more creative solutions to the problem. Elsewhere, universiti­es have explored several ways of raising money to fund their operations. The common avenues include donations, endowments, scholarshi­ps and bursaries, profession­al chairs, gifts, grants, and consultanc­y services, and more. This newspaper has long argued for such a move. The holes in the system are many. We need all the package to dispel the current crisis.

Given the dwindling resources of government, the tertiary institutio­ns need to think out of the box and find more creative solutions to the problem. Elsewhere, universiti­es have explored several ways of raising money to fund their operations. The common avenues include donations, endowments, scholarshi­ps and bursaries, profession­al chairs, gifts, grants, and consultanc­y services

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria