If we’d really improve education
here, we have to make our universities competitive. It starts with
making them compete with one another.
Around the turn of the 20th century the
West accelerated past the whole world. Mass access to education was a
key factor in building the gap. Western governments forced their
citizens to send their children to school and in many cases provided
free access to education for such kids. However, and this is important,
what they provided is what has to be examined: they provided free access
to basic education. As the kids advanced in their educational careers, a
streaming took place which categorised them based on ability and
intelligence. Those who clearly had the ability, and could not pay, were
granted scholarships to gain access to higher education. They were the
A-stream and the state funded. Most of the others went to vocational
schools or grammar schools, and then started apprenticeships aged 18.
This is also very important.
Vocational schooling built the large
numbers of technicians that any country requires in order to
industrialise. Nigeria needs to build this. Nigeria CANNOT become a
developed nation if we do not have welders or carpenters or
stenographers. That, no matter how you cut it, is fact. For too long
we’ve abandoned technical and vocational education in favour of sending
everyone to universities, and we must accept this flaw. One of the
reasons that our universities crumbled was because their populations
expanded faster than they could expand, leading to a drop.
Another reason is our inability to
handle competition within ourselves. Universities CANNOT be equal, stop
this shit habit of subventions. Oxford competes with Cambridge, Harvard,
Yale and Princeton are in competition. UNILAG and UNIBEN should be
competing to solve the power ish. One of the things that will spur
competition, and attract the best talent is a sieve that makes the
universities exclusive, not inclusive. If high school fees will make our
universities exclusive, then so be it. The high fees will achieve two
things – they will sieve off the jokers among those who are unable to
afford it. Those who can afford it, but are still unserious about their
studies will be sieved off by the examinations. The second thing that
higher fees will achieve is to make the lecturers more competent. I
won’t pay 250k and sit through crap. No one will.
My lecturers in the UK, Abu Lasabae,
Glenford Mapp among others are VERY intelligent men. Of course they had
to be I paid £12k for the privilege of listening to them, and I can
vouch for the rigour they put me through, and I can vouch for the fact
that they took their jobs with the utmost seriousness.
While I admit that the Lagos state
government went about its school fees increase in the wrong way, I
insist that higher education is not for all. Simple and short, let’s get
real in Nigeria: we need to get our polytechnics in shape, that is the
key to our future, not the universities.
Views expressed are solely the author’s
culled form OMOJUWA.COM
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