After many years of witnessing a downward trend in student performance,
the West African Examination Certificate (WAEC) results have hit an all
time low, as 70% of candidates failed in the May/June edition this year.
Many saw it coming considering the dwindling allocation of resources to
education in the country and the lack of quality teachers, but the most
important contributing factor has been the lackadaisical attitude of the
students. Continue...
It's not been so long since our time in secondary school but there's
been a massive drastic drop in the quest for knowledge. During our time,
we wanted to be good, studied for long hours and even overnight and
competed against ourselves. Education was an active, big part and source
of happiness in our lives but nowadays, take study out of a students
life and he/she will be happy. They like it easy and fun.
Success doesn't just fall from heaven like our pastors want us to
believe, it's a result of hard work and proper preparation because you
can't give what you don't have. Success is deliberate and so is failure.
"There is no better future than through pen and paper," were my
grandmothers last words to me. For a woman who never saw the four walls
of formal education and that I never saw her alive after hearing those
meant I had heard from God himself and never took my books for granted.
Even the bible says "study to show thyself approved", but what do we
see these days? Students are no more studying, they don't. They are not
driven or motivated by academic success anymore. Words such as hard
work, determination, perseverance, goals and all that are constantly
losing value. The reality is that boys and girls are more conversant
with Skelewu, Kukere, Dorobucci, Ukwu, Gobe and a host of other words
that hardly have any meaningful contribution to their future. Many
of them don't know anything other than what's on TV. If Don Jazzy,
Davido and the likes haven't sung it, they won't know it. Social
networks such as Facebook and 2go have not helped matters, as they have
become a hub for the waste of valuable study time. The whole day is
spent "keeping up with the Kardashians", chatting, and all sorts of
rubbish.
Students are busy browsing "cheats" or "expo" for WAEC exams and even
after the results are out, one of the most searched topics on Google is
"how to check WAEC result without scratch card", why would you want to
do that? Typical Nigerian attitude of cutting corners and it went
horribly wrong this time. WAEC's board have argued that the abysmal
performance is as a result of a clamp down on "miracle centres" and
other exam malpractices, suggesting it has always been this way, but I
bet not this bad.
I know there's a lot for the government, parents, and teachers to do
but without commensurate effort from the students, there can't be a fix
for this. There needs to be a change of priority and attitude in
secondary students of this generation, they need to understand that
there's no way around academic excellence, hardly. Hard work and merit
need to exalted and put in its rightful place for all to see and
emulate.
Until these students learn to take responsibility, we'll be talking about this or even worse for a long long time.
Usha Anenga (usha.com.ng and @UAnenga) is a concerned Nigerian.
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