In the run-up to the last Ekiti
gubernatorial contest of June this year, I wrote a piece about Fayose, a
little reminder of some of the scandals that led to his being kicked
out of office the first time around.
To my shock, a lot of young responders on Facebook never got it.
They thought I was saying that because Fayose was once a cab driver in
London he was unfit to seek office as Governor. Continue...
How they arrived at that bizarre conclusion is a feat only known to
them. But for me, that episode was a sad reminder that education has
hit the buffers in Nigeria.
And when the West African Examination Council (WAEC) results came out
a few weeks ago, no further proof was required. It was a sight for
sore eyes. It was failure on a most disheartening scale.
It’s been a gradual slide. We fell off the cliff, I think in 2011.
That year, only 30.91% of all candidates who sat the WAEC exams passed
(i.e., got at least 5 credits). Later that same year, in Edo State, all
the secondary school students who sat the National Examinations Council
(NECO) failed. All of them! In 2012, the pass rate for WAEC was
38.81. In 2013, that rate dropped again, to 36.57%. 2014 records a
31.28% pass rate with 8.61% of candidates alleged to have engaged in
exam malpractices.
Hhmm…this is quite sobering and the whole thing reads like a bad
joke. Please think about what this means in raw numbers. In 2014, of the
1,692,435 youngsters who sat the exams, 1,163,010 of them failed. That
is nearly 1.2 million students!
In this country, we’ve always had ministers and commissioners of
education. These people collect handsome salaries, live in fantastic
mansions and have 24-hour police protection. And since 2007, we’ve had
educators as presidents. What has been their collective impact on the
standard of education here?
In contrast, our kids are excelling in schools abroad – particularly
in the UK and the US. They routinely come top of the class from primary
right through to tertiary level. In fact there is a joke in the UK that
if you don’t see a Nigerian and a Chinese in any particular university,
do not let your kid go there. So what has happened to education in
Nigeria?
Well, the most obvious thing that stands out is that there is
something wrong in the way education is delivered here. I’m not certain
that funding is the main issue; after all, a sizable chunk of those
students would have gone to private schools. And some of the teachers
are hopelessly inadequate.
Another reason for these mass failures is this recent phenomenon
called ‘Expo.’ A few days to the exams, some websites would claim that
they have the genuine WAEC questions. A lot of candidates rush there.
They get access to the questions, for a fee, of course. At this point,
they cannot go to their teachers for help as they would have to explain
from where they got the questions.
So they approach undergraduates and other people who themselves are
products of previous mass failures. Half-baked undergrads provide
half-baked, and oftentimes, outright wrong answers (for a fee of course)
which students share among themselves in their group. Furthermore, this
being Nigeria, 419 practitioners have caught-on and they too set up
their own ‘genuine’ WAEC questions websites. The result? Mass failure.
Moreover, there are ‘specialised’ exam centers where some parents and
invigilators join forces to cheat on behalf of their wards. A lot of
students have come to put their trust in such centers and in prayers
rather than study well. Wrong answers supplied in such centers permeates
the whole group.
The frightening thing for me is that it would not be possible for all
1.2 million students that failed this year’s WAEC to sit the exams
again. There is simply no scope for that. So Universities and
Polytechnics would have to lower their minimum admission requirements in
order to get students because, quite frankly, those institutions need
their money to stay in business.
This means that, by hook and by crook, and via our other
miracle-working ways, people who cannot pass secondary school exams will
in a few years become ‘graduates’ and flood the job market. Goodness!
The implication and the multiplier effect on the nation’s economy (and
socio-cultural bearing) are dire.
Some of these young people will become journalists and editors, a few
will find their way into the banks, some will become teachers, some
might become First Ladies, while the rest will end up in local
government administration. And if this has been the pattern for the past
twenty years or so, it is no wonder we are where we are today.
To redress this situation, I think we really have to look again at
the curriculum with a view to revamping it. We need to redesign our
teacher training programs (because what obtains at the moment is clearly
failing young people), and perhaps introduce performance-related pay
for teachers.
We also need to improve infrastructure and reduce class sizes. And
governments, from the federal to local council levels, have got to
enforce minimum standards in school, not just colluding with school
authorities and collecting bribes.
But the government cannot do this alone, and education is too
important to be left entirely in the hands of government anyway.
Parents must play a more active role. It is not enough to pay the
school fees - no matter how expensive.
Some young people spend entirely too much time on DSTV watching
football and Mexican soaps. Parents have got to be more hands on.
Conversely, some parents have to resist the urge to overburden school
kids with disproportionate economic undertakings.
I know it is a rat-race out there and we have to put food on the
table and live comfortable enough lives, but we’ve got to take care of
the future too. A look at the WAEC result table shows quite a few
states in the North/Northeast at the root of the table. These are the
same states now in the worst grip of Boko Haram. That’s the link. That’s
the future unless we begin to change things now.

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