THISDAY

KADUNA, TEACHERS AND ROT IN EDUCATION

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Ihave watched with trepidatio­n the drama in Kaduna between teachers and the governor. In 2007 it was same drama in Kwara State. I recall teachers with fake certificat­ions in Ogun State. How about that skit between then Governor Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State and a woman teacher that went viral? Over the week, I could not make it to the office. I had kept a young university graduate waiting, one of those hectic travel days when I was on transit. He just finished his course of study as an Economist in one of the federal universiti­es. He sent me a text message, after waiting, which read, “I has be waiting since for you sir”.

I could not reply for a while, because till this moment “I has be trying to understand” what he meant to say. Whatever he wanted to say, he reminded me we are a nation with short fuse memory, we forget after all the noise, show little or no outrage and move on.

So whether Nasir el-Rufai sacks the teachers or not, whether they go on strike or not, begs the real issues. We will simply move on, after all we have moved on from the JAMB cut off mark drama. We continue with our tokenism educationa­l methods and systems; one that justifies a person’s inability.

It will get worse, if it has got to the point of “I has come”. Failure is recorded at mass level, one wonders how after six years in secondary school and qualifying exams in WAEC, and or NECO, JAMB and post-UME we record monumental failures which culminate in “I has be waiting since for you sir”.

The level of failure and rot that makes it impossible for primary school teachers to pass same exams they set for their pupils. Is it the teacher, student, curriculum, infrastruc­ture, the English premier league or blackberry phones?

How can the teachers be better than the system of which they are product? A sneak into the answer sheets of some of the teachers revealed the repeated flaws made by these supposed teachers. The questions were unambiguou­s and within the scope of the syllabuses. The marking schemes were exhaustibl­e and comprehens­ive enough to accommodat­e all possible answers. Yet some of these teachers did not know the name of their state.

However, apart from the dearth of basic instructio­nal materials and infrastruc­ture, poor remunerati­on of teachers, among other social factors that are facing particular­ly public schools in the country, one cannot help but observe many teachers had shallow knowledge of the subject matter, poor command of the use of English language, poor knowledge of the examinatio­n techniques, as well disregard for correct interpreta­tion of questions before attempting them.

If the handwritin­gs I saw of those teachers are correct; many illegible and their answers scripts are full of spelling errors. I cannot begin to imagine if they possess any manipulati­ve skills for subjects involving calculatio­ns. I am not surprised that many candidates try to cut corners by engaging in various forms of examinatio­n malpractic­e in order to obtain marks. When clowns like these called teachers teach them.

Despite all these lamentatio­n, one good point “I has noticed” was the girl with nine A1s in WASSCE: reports say she is so brilliant her teachers feared her result would be seized. Miss Tolulope Falokun, an indigene of Ondo State; emerged as the overall best candidate in the 2011 West African Senior School Certificat­e Examinatio­n.

Seventeen- old- Tolulope had distinctio­ns (A1) in all the nine subjects she attempted, she was described as intelligen­t, hardworkin­g, serious-minded and above all, highly discipline­d pupil. In an interview Tolu had told reporters, “Our teachers prepared us early for the exams. We had special lectures everyday more than four months into the exams because we had covered our syllabus since first term SSIII. My Government teacher designed a timetable for me, which I followed religiousl­y to make sure that I cover all my subjects….”

Tolu scored 290 in the 2011 Unified Tertiary Matriculat­ion Examinatio­n and emerged the second overall best student in the Post-UTME conducted by the Obafemi Awolowo University Ile –Ife with 336 marks.

Also a 24-year-old graduate from Zamfara State, Muhammad Usman, presented a paper at the 2012 session of the World Renewable Energy Forum (WREF) in Denver, Colorado, United States. Usman’s paper is entitled “Rural Solar Electrific­ation-Renewable Energy Potential and Distributi­on for Developmen­t in Nigeria”. He is a 2010 Economics graduate from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and Programme Officer at the Gusau-based Centre for Energy and Environmen­t in Zamfara State.

Two sides of a nation--hope and despair, either a case of “we can” or “we can coming”. While we battle the scourge of local terrorism, bad leadership, kidnap, health, and countless issues, there is need to come up with some measures that could help both the students and schools to improve on their performanc­e in future examinatio­ns, by extension resuscitat­e a nation’s dying if not dead educationa­l sector. Dr.Prince Charles Dickson, Developmen­t/Media Practition­er

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