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Better Education, Better Nigeria -By Ibironke Oluwatobi

Better Education, Better Nigeria -By Ibironke Oluwatobi

The idea of developing a nation without educating its people is surrealism. For any community to be transformed, the education of its residents is essential. Education possesses the transformative power to spread across the whole hog of any nation. This grain of truth is consolidated by Nelson Mandela’s words, “education is the most powerful tool which can be used to change the world”.

 Nigerian writer, Ujunwa Atueyi gave a hint on the potency of education, prescribing it as the antidote to the challenges in the entire constituent sectors of the country. With this knowledge; the thought of the slipshod state of our educational system becomes perplexing. The question of ‘why education is considered dispensable’ remains a query. The closest thing to an answer is the hypothesis that the dilution of the educational quality in Nigeriais a ploy to limit the level of exposure of the natively educated.
Education is continually drained of its potency by our acts of botchery and self-interest. Evidence to this is the fact that the field of the nation is grassed by a multitude of ‘government approved’ institutions of knowledge, yet the signs of education are missing. This conundrum raises ashes of questions such as; what we call education; is it really educating or a paper religion? According to Malcolm X, our pose object is no guarantee of education. He opined that “because you have colleges and universities does not mean you have education”. Ralph Waldo Emerson gave a near definition of our schooling system. He said “we are students of words, we are shut up in schools and college-and recitation rooms for ten to fifteen years, and come out at last with a bag of wind, a memory of words and do not know a thing.”
Sadly, the problems of our educational sector are numberless and associative. An array of adversity is responsible for consistently victimizing and robbing education in our institutions of its value. One of the major causes is poor facilities. Though the call for mass improvement in institutional facilities is well heard, it has yielded little response from the educators. The outcry grows louder, while the redundancy of our curriculum grows to gather noise of its own. Our schools have become regular venue for strike actions. Corruption, malpractices and scandals have all added to the cacophony in the system. The state of the system has denigrated to the point that a cloud of doubt readily hangs over the future of Nigerian graduates. To survive the wind outside school walls, graduates need to get educated elsewhere. For the mass of graduates that cannot afford educational tourism, the other available education is given by the streets. Some have considered this a more effective and useful learning process to schooling. However, this is not a case of options but a portent for Nigeria as a nation. The quiz for our educators is; how valid are our units of measuring educational quality? Some ministries grade the competence of teachers solely on the performance of their students in external examinations. Then, all the teacher has to do is to ensure the students pass the examination regardless of the method. This has led some teachers to provide answers for students during examinations and to indulge in other forms of malpractices to scale high on the ministries’ record.
Also, the design and methods of our educational outlay are moving in the opposite direction from perfect. Tutelage and mentorship are becoming strangers to our schools. Provisions for personal assessment of students are becoming difficult to trace. For instance, the ratio of student to teachers in our schools is alarmingly high, high enough to threaten to extinguish the existence of student-teacher relationships. Though this scenario has been the norm in government institutions overtime, private schools have started to accept faults of this nature. It augurs well for more students to seek formal education but if educational facilities do not multiply at a proportional rate, the inundation of facilities becomes the status quo.
The defect in the educational system deepens with the high level of career misplacement suffered by our graduates. This is the ripple effect of poor course orientation. The foundation of this problem occurs at the point of course selection. In our institutions, the course selection pattern is usually nomadic. For a lot of Nigerian students, it is not uncommon to crowd certain “big” courses such as Law, Medicine, Engineering. This can be partly blamed on ignorance. But the major bummer is the fact that most courses in Nigerian institutions have skeletal schemes. The path to practicing these courses is warped; this has a way of waning off the passion and zest of the students taking the course and tells off students naturally suited for these courses, leading them to deviate to the ‘loud’ courses. For instance, an average Nigerian student would not pick social work over Accounting even if better suited for the former. This happens because our milieu has little tolerance for courses like social work as specialization area. This product of illusion shares the blame with the harsh economic conditions to put the unemployment rate at its current scary level. One way to correct this menace is to create an atmosphere of course equality in our institutions. This way, students get the true reflection of the prospect of each course. With this, a better pattern of career choice making can be registered. This would cure the problems of course crowding since course diversity would translate to more opportunity spacing in the society.
Conclusively, the bad face of our educational system should not be cosmeticized but thoroughly treated. Not treatment as regards the bombardment of students with theories and laws but the use of essential elements of education to concentrate the quality of our education. Then, education can truly manifest in our country. For what it is worth, true education is the latent energy of liberation. Therefore, the itinerary to our promise land lies in the atlas of thorough education. While some believe that the answers lie somewhere in the political arena and others have propounded theories of religious intervention, the genuine cure is patently at the formative level, at the very factory of education. A native adage says that a house thrives only because the trouble child has not grown. Even if the nation’s Moses appears on the political scene to lead us to the promise land, the deficiencies in the education of our youths is bound to take us back to Egypt.

The county is in dire need of educational panacea. It is the responsibility of all party – students, parents and educators to pursue this redemption course, to bring the much sort utopic development to our dear nation, Nigeria.
Twitter: @ibironketweets

source: http://www.opinionnigeria.com/better-education-better-nigeria-by-ibironke-oluwatobi/#sthash.lxJGrLiF.dpbs
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