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Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari - Politics - Nairaland

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Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by cosby02(m): 12:15pm On Apr 24, 2016
At the combined 19th and 22nd Convocation Ceremony of Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi in January this year, President Muhammadu Buhari lamented the low ranking of Nigerian universities in Africa and the world.

The expectedly concerned President expressed his dismay in the following words: “We rank below a thousand, if we do not aspire to be among the world class universities, we cannot boast of robust system capable of making the country among the top economies of the world. It is worrisome that no Nigerian university is among the top 100 universities in the world’’.

Represented by Professor Julius Okojie, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), President Buhari said whatever makes the nation’s abundant talents to fail at home but excel abroad must be identified and neutralized for the benefits of the present and future generations of Nigerians. He identified the incessant strikes by university teachers as a major bottleneck to the progress of the country’s university system.

All the President said about the Nigerian university system is not new. But it is a peep into the mind of a concerned leader who, perhaps, is determined to tackle the problems and the rot that have permeated the nation’s academia.

While incessant strikes by academic and non-academic staff of our universities have detracted from whatever remained of the system, the President should not just blame the teachers for the frequent industrial actions, he should first ascertain real reasons for the frequency and muster enough political will to address the fundamentals.

As a stakeholder, I am aware that most of the industrial actions are borne out of frustrating work conditions arising from inadequate or lack of teaching and research facilities, poor remuneration, and the disdain with which the system had treated university teachers before some dignity was achieved.

The President’s identification of strikes as a major threat to the health and progress of the nation’s university system is in tandem with the opinion of many Nigerians, who focus only on this factor, and believe an end to the incessant strikes will be a positive turning-point for a return to quality and productive university education for the country’s teeming youths. They may not be far from the truth, but this could just be a scratch of the surface as the rot in the university system is deeper and widespread.

First is the issue of staffing. In the days of old, universities attracted the best and brightest to their faculties, but the reverse is the case today. The best and the brightest now go to places other than the university. While poor remuneration and inadequate work facilities are known to discourage some from joining the faculty, today, nepotism controls appointments and promotion in most of the country’s universities. As it happens in other sectors of the country, qualified people who have genuine interest in teaching in our universities are overlooked while academic positions are given to cronies who have absolutely no business being in the system. The consequence is better imagined.

Related to this is the petty bickering and personality wars tearing the faculty apart. While this cannot be completely ruled out in any human enclave, the rate at which academics get at one another over mundane and ridiculous issues has turned departments into mere artisanal structures and our universities into a marketplace. This has led to the creation of cliques and camps, and usually, the wars between these camps are pursued at the expense of students and the system.

There is also the wide gap between town and gown; an increasingly inevitable aspect of modern and globalized academic curriculum. It is shocking and sad that a significant number of 21st Century Nigerian academics does not operate beyond the four walls of the university.

Rather than facilitate a constant interplay of theory and practice by encouraging professionals to impart some industry knowledge, this category of academics will hide under anachronistic systemic rules to frustrate any attempt at a theory-praxis symbiosis.

Professionals with invaluable field experience who attempt to join the faculty are usually offered repugnant positions in order to discourage them. As a result, students are deprived of the much needed industry skills that could enhance their employability.

But according to available information, there are a few exceptions, as the Department of Music, Obafemi Awolowo University is reported to have recently appointed juju music maestro, King Sunny Ade as a Visiting Lecturer. Accomplished composer, musician, artist, designer and administrator, Sir Victor Uwaifo is probably still teaching at the University of Benin following his engagement by the school at a point. More of this town and gown synergy is required in all fields of study if Nigerian universities are to be in reckoning for serious webometrics.

The increasingly confusing admission process is another reason why the nation’s universities are ranked low. The Joint Admission and Matriculations Board (JAMB) was doing well before the peculiar Nigerian vices overwhelmed the body. Disturbed by the erosion of JAMB’s credibility, stakeholders came up with Post-UME Tests, an intervention some universities have also turned into an opportunity to serve primordial interests.

Students’ disposition to learning and research is another source of concern. Generally, the present generation of the country’s undergraduates just read to pass examinations. There is a pervasive lazy attitude to learning, aided, ironically, by the internet. Libraries are occupied only when examinations are approaching and the quality of assignments and long essays continues to ebb.

The country’s high unemployment rate equally makes nonsense of the little efforts made by our universities. It is seriously questioning the essence of university education. With significant emphasis on theory, Nigerian universities continue to produce graduates with little or no entrepreneurial orientation. While most of the schools now have tangential entrepreneurial contents at the General Studies level, current national and global economic realities demand that this be made a core element of curriculum.

As President Buhari pointed out at that convocation ceremony, Nigeria is blessed with an abundance of talents who excel elsewhere but appear incapacitated at home. Therefore, to address the rot in the nation’s universities and make them eligible for noticeable ranking, we must meticulously interrogate the fundamentals and be ready to take hard decisions. In addition to emplacing a sustainable paradigm for injection of funds and facilities into the system, a periodic academic staff audit is also necessary. This should be handled by independent and objective assessors beyond the universities. The essence is to ensure quality and gradually weed out those who see the job as a mere meal ticket and those who use the platform to harass, intimidate and extort students.

Academic staff should collaborate more in the area of teaching, research and mentoring instead of bickering and being negatively envious of one another. They should also stop discouraging professionals who genuinely wish to add value to the system. Most times, their disposition is borne out of envy and complex and a morbid passion to protect imaginary territories. In today’s world, gown and town need each other. More objectivity should go into the admission process while undergraduates should have an eclectic attitude to learning, research and studying. The rot in Nigerian ivory tower should not be allowed to continue. We all have a role to play in repositioning our universities and make them citadels of pride and key players in the global academic community that they once were.


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/04/nigerian-universities-rank-low/

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by SeverusSnape(m): 12:17pm On Apr 24, 2016
Imagine Buhari talking about universities grin

An illiterate for that matter.

Them tell wines to raise up their hand, Zobo and kunu join raise their hand, Yeye dey smell. grin

138 Likes 12 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by thesicilian: 12:17pm On Apr 24, 2016
Stop telling us what we already know. we want solutions, not a restatement of the problem

70 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by BeeBeeOoh(m): 12:17pm On Apr 24, 2016
Oga show your certificate or u kpichikom

58 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by doublewisdom: 12:18pm On Apr 24, 2016
Wonderful! Unto what is Buhari talking about universities? Did he ever study in one? Wetin concern bicycle and filling station?

103 Likes 11 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by queenoflafia(f): 12:31pm On Apr 24, 2016
I thought he was going to blame GEJ again

50 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by yarimo(m): 1:03pm On Apr 24, 2016
Nonsense see as PDP past regime useless our universities mtchew, but buhari please do something to make it better and remember to show your own certificate also.

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Nobody: 1:51pm On Apr 24, 2016
cosby02:
At the combined 19th and 22nd Convocation Ceremony of Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi in January this year, President Muhammadu Buhari lamented the low ranking of Nigerian universities in Africa and the world.

The expectedly concerned President expressed his dismay in the following words: “We rank below a thousand, if we do not aspire to be among the world class universities, we cannot boast of robust system capable of making the country among the top economies of the world. It is worrisome that no Nigerian university is among the top 100 universities in the world’’.

Represented by Professor Julius Okojie, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), President Buhari said whatever makes the nation’s abundant talents to fail at home but excel abroad must be identified and neutralized for the benefits of the present and future generations of Nigerians. He identified the incessant strikes by university teachers as a major bottleneck to the progress of the country’s university system.

All the President said about the Nigerian university system is not new. But it is a peep into the mind of a concerned leader who, perhaps, is determined to tackle the problems and the rot that have permeated the nation’s academia.

While incessant strikes by academic and non-academic staff of our universities have detracted from whatever remained of the system, the President should not just blame the teachers for the frequent industrial actions, he should first ascertain real reasons for the frequency and muster enough political will to address the fundamentals.

As a stakeholder, I am aware that most of the industrial actions are borne out of frustrating work conditions arising from inadequate or lack of teaching and research facilities, poor remuneration, and the disdain with which the system had treated university teachers before some dignity was achieved.

The President’s identification of strikes as a major threat to the health and progress of the nation’s university system is in tandem with the opinion of many Nigerians, who focus only on this factor, and believe an end to the incessant strikes will be a positive turning-point for a return to quality and productive university education for the country’s teeming youths. They may not be far from the truth, but this could just be a scratch of the surface as the rot in the university system is deeper and widespread.

First is the issue of staffing. In the days of old, universities attracted the best and brightest to their faculties, but the reverse is the case today. The best and the brightest now go to places other than the university. While poor remuneration and inadequate work facilities are known to discourage some from joining the faculty, today, nepotism controls appointments and promotion in most of the country’s universities. As it happens in other sectors of the country, qualified people who have genuine interest in teaching in our universities are overlooked while academic positions are given to cronies who have absolutely no business being in the system. The consequence is better imagined.

Related to this is the petty bickering and personality wars tearing the faculty apart. While this cannot be completely ruled out in any human enclave, the rate at which academics get at one another over mundane and ridiculous issues has turned departments into mere artisanal structures and our universities into a marketplace. This has led to the creation of cliques and camps, and usually, the wars between these camps are pursued at the expense of students and the system.

There is also the wide gap between town and gown; an increasingly inevitable aspect of modern and globalized academic curriculum. It is shocking and sad that a significant number of 21st Century Nigerian academics does not operate beyond the four walls of the university.

Rather than facilitate a constant interplay of theory and practice by encouraging professionals to impart some industry knowledge, this category of academics will hide under anachronistic systemic rules to frustrate any attempt at a theory-praxis symbiosis.

Professionals with invaluable field experience who attempt to join the faculty are usually offered repugnant positions in order to discourage them. As a result, students are deprived of the much needed industry skills that could enhance their employability.

But according to available information, there are a few exceptions, as the Department of Music, Obafemi Awolowo University is reported to have recently appointed juju music maestro, King Sunny Ade as a Visiting Lecturer. Accomplished composer, musician, artist, designer and administrator, Sir Victor Uwaifo is probably still teaching at the University of Benin following his engagement by the school at a point. More of this town and gown synergy is required in all fields of study if Nigerian universities are to be in reckoning for serious webometrics.

The increasingly confusing admission process is another reason why the nation’s universities are ranked low. The Joint Admission and Matriculations Board (JAMB) was doing well before the peculiar Nigerian vices overwhelmed the body. Disturbed by the erosion of JAMB’s credibility, stakeholders came up with Post-UME Tests, an intervention some universities have also turned into an opportunity to serve primordial interests.

Students’ disposition to learning and research is another source of concern. Generally, the present generation of the country’s undergraduates just read to pass examinations. There is a pervasive lazy attitude to learning, aided, ironically, by the internet. Libraries are occupied only when examinations are approaching and the quality of assignments and long essays continues to ebb.

The country’s high unemployment rate equally makes nonsense of the little efforts made by our universities. It is seriously questioning the essence of university education. With significant emphasis on theory, Nigerian universities continue to produce graduates with little or no entrepreneurial orientation. While most of the schools now have tangential entrepreneurial contents at the General Studies level, current national and global economic realities demand that this be made a core element of curriculum.

As President Buhari pointed out at that convocation ceremony, Nigeria is blessed with an abundance of talents who excel elsewhere but appear incapacitated at home. Therefore, to address the rot in the nation’s universities and make them eligible for noticeable ranking, we must meticulously interrogate the fundamentals and be ready to take hard decisions. In addition to emplacing a sustainable paradigm for injection of funds and facilities into the system, a periodic academic staff audit is also necessary. This should be handled by independent and objective assessors beyond the universities. The essence is to ensure quality and gradually weed out those who see the job as a mere meal ticket and those who use the platform to harass, intimidate and extort students.

Academic staff should collaborate more in the area of teaching, research and mentoring instead of bickering and being negatively envious of one another. They should also stop discouraging professionals who genuinely wish to add value to the system. Most times, their disposition is borne out of envy and complex and a morbid passion to protect imaginary territories. In today’s world, gown and town need each other. More objectivity should go into the admission process while undergraduates should have an eclectic attitude to learning, research and studying. The rot in Nigerian ivory tower should not be allowed to continue. We all have a role to play in repositioning our universities and make them citadels of pride and key players in the global academic community that they once were.


http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/04/nigerian-universities-rank-low/
laf wan kill me...abeg wetin concern okada and seat belt??

31 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Nobody: 2:11pm On Apr 24, 2016
He wouldn't know considering he's never attended one

grin cheesy grin cheesy grin cheesy grin grin grin

Does the irony of this situation strike anyone else as extremely hilarious?

cc: pidggin

16 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by greatiyk4u(m): 2:12pm On Apr 24, 2016
My presido has spoken..........................

The word "illiterate" is most times abused in this forum.

Referring to an accomplished Army General as an illiterate makes me wanna know if the word has a different meaning


Before I forget, he spoke through a professor!

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by cosby02(m): 2:31pm On Apr 24, 2016
greatiyk4u:
My presido has spoken..........................

The word "illiterate" is most times abused in this forum.

Referring to an accomplished Army General as an illiterate makes me wanna know if the word has a different meaning


Before I forget, he spoke through a professor!
The word 'illiterate' and 'coward' means something different to some people.

2 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by SeverusSnape(m): 2:37pm On Apr 24, 2016
BADNEAT:
laf wan kill me...abeg wetin concern okada and seat belt??
Hehehehehehehehehehe grin

Good question, Lalasticlala (sorry for mentioning you, I can't imagine the number of mentions you have on a daily basis), Mynd44 and Obinoscopy front page abeg!

3 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by youngeagle(m): 2:49pm On Apr 24, 2016
Lol so funny when a NEPA receipt holder is lamenting on the state of education in a country he leads,I'm yet to see a single action or policy in repositioning the educational system in this country

16 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by sdindan: 3:05pm On Apr 24, 2016
Illiterate talking.



grin

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by swagaholic: 4:04pm On Apr 24, 2016
Buhari nd university be like cat nd dog!!!!! Smh

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Sweetguy25: 4:15pm On Apr 24, 2016
We rank low because monkeys like you ran our educational system to the ground with their short sightedness and ignorance.

18 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Emekamex(m): 4:21pm On Apr 24, 2016
Only in Nigeria where a dullard claims to be a professor.

10 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by ShowYourCertificate: 4:50pm On Apr 24, 2016
SeverusSnape:
Imagine Buhari talking about universities grin

An illiterate for that matter.

Them tell wines to raise up their hand, Zobo and kunu join raise their hand, Yeye dey smell. grin
BeeBeeOoh:
Oga show your certificate or u kpichikom
doublewisdom:
Wonderful! Unto what is Buhari talking about universities? Did he ever study in one? Wetin concern bicycle and filling station?
BADNEAT:
laf wan kill me...abeg wetin concern okada and seat belt??
MrsPhyno:
He wouldn't know considering he's never attended one
grin cheesy grin cheesy grin cheesy grin grin grin
Does the irony of this situation strike anyone else as extremely hilarious?
cc: pidggin
youngeagle:
Lol so funny when a NEPA receipt holder is lamenting on the state of education in a country he leads,I'm yet to see a single action or policy in repositioning the educational system in this country
sdindan:
Illiterate talking.
grin
swagaholic:
Buhari nd university be like cat nd dog!!!!! Smh
Sweetguy25:
We rank low because monkeys like you ran our educational system to the ground with their short sightedness and ignorance.
Emekamex:
Only in Nigeria where a dullard claims to be a professor.
grin grin grin grin grin

Nairalanders are so so funny. This Buhari of a person is a disaster, I swear.

26 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by bunmioguns(m): 7:06pm On Apr 24, 2016
undecided
Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Jediel1(m): 7:07pm On Apr 24, 2016
person wey no get certificate dey give speech abt university, him done experience the university self. Abi na high school musical him jst watch finish dey shack am. Lwkm ooo.

20 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by malton: 7:08pm On Apr 24, 2016
grin

It's just funny how embittered these kids are!

How can a people be so full of outrage, fury and a kind of visceral hatred that goes beyond simple bigotry!

Buhari's crime?

Having unmitigated galls to win against their "hero"...

Yikes!

With brains like these, it's worthless having a degree!

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Marvyx(m): 7:09pm On Apr 24, 2016
Chai... Nigeria... How did we get here for crying out loud? undecided

7 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by tbaba1234: 7:10pm On Apr 24, 2016
doublewisdom:
Wonderful! Unto what is Buhari talking about universities? Did he ever study in one? Wetin concern bicycle and filling station?

Buhari went to the NDA and the US war college, and finished with a degree equivalent to a masters degree today.

What is your educational qualification?

21 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by iyobs7(f): 7:10pm On Apr 24, 2016
grin grin grin ;Dp
Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by mmsen: 7:10pm On Apr 24, 2016
Who is this man to talk to anyone about the standard of education?

We know the problems - what is this fraudster doing to solve the issues he keeps reminding us of?

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by driand(m): 7:10pm On Apr 24, 2016
Ok
Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Jalubarika(m): 7:10pm On Apr 24, 2016
Hehehehehehehehhehehheheheehheeheeheheh Isokay.
But why grin buhari my man.
Y u no jéjély dey ur lane?

4 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Nobody: 7:11pm On Apr 24, 2016
E no kuku go anyone

5 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by Nobody: 7:11pm On Apr 24, 2016
It is people like Buhari the dullard who has no certificate made them rank us low period.

6 Likes

Re: Why Nigerian Universities Rank Low- Buhari by geraldhumphrey(m): 7:11pm On Apr 24, 2016
plx tell me.hw wd wan dey top hundred wen bulhary our presi no go skul? Hw dem wan take rank us!

4 Likes

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