BY Ogueri Onyeukwu
The education system in Nigeria has continued to
evolve over the years. The staccato evolvement has to
a large extent been directly determined by the
preferences of the man at the helm of affairs at the
ministry of Education. We have moved from the 6-5-4
system to the 6-3-3-4 system and now to the 9-3-4 system.
Regrettably most of these innovations are blind
to the cultural, social, economic, political and
environmental dictates leading to the unprecedented
disconnect between the society, the citizens and the beneficiaries of the system.
Most people pontificate that these frequent changes give rise to the production of half baked graduates who lack the necessary skills for employment after leaving the university. Where then do we go from here?
Let me examine some issues affecting education today without pretending to be exhaustive.
One of the fundamental issues that has affected the quality of education today
is the change in the social status of most families. Take a typical Nigerian family where both
parents are employed. Assume the Lagos or the typical urban setting,. Both parents leave the house early, the school bus picks the children from home and drops them back after
school. Parents make monetary provisions for lunch for the children. Before the parents come back from work, the children are asleep or too tired to have any meaningful
interaction with their parents. Most of them are unable to do their assignments. Teachers
are under strict instructions not to cain the children. More often than not the parents provide the children with sophisticated phones, pay for DSTV and other entertainment provisions. They are not always at home to monitor the use of these devices. The children
stray in the use of these devices and are exposed to programs they should not watch. Their attention is distracted and distorted. Energy channeled to educationally unproductive
ventures.
Who is to blame? There are very limited employment opportunities in the country today. The industry that
employs most in most states of the federation is the education industry. Consequently all manner of characters have invaded the industry. Those qualified and those not too qualified. When this is juxtaposed with the proliferation of private schools from Nursery to the Universities, the worry becomes disturbing. In most schools, public and private, our
sisters and mothers have invaded the teaching profession. The female genders are reputed
for their tenderness and caring attitude. As a result most of them are unable to administer punishment commensurate with any infraction by students. In some public schools many of them come to school with various products to sell. This no doubt gives rise to divided attention. The level of commitment on the part of most teachers these days is questionable.
Many of them even lack the requisite knowledge and the ability to impart that knowledge. Homeworks are not given, assignments are not marked, classrooms are not properly managed, salaries are poor, motivation has taken a flight. The future of our children suffer. These same children exposed and given equal opportunities with their American and British
counterparts always excel.
THE SOCIAL MEDIA IS THE MOST PORTENT
DESTRUCTIVE WEAPON AT THE UNRESTRAINED DISPOSAL OF THE
CHILDREN AND THE EDUCATION SECTOR.
A child may start chatting on the Facebook or Whatsapp or Instagram or any other social media, spend hours, forget his/her
food, assignment and home chores. Some have been hit by vehicles while chatting on the highway. It is that bad. Parents must restrain the children from wasting their precious study time on the social media. The discipline in most schools these days is at the lowest ebb. Where a student will challenge his teacher not to cain him because his parents are very rich.
Due to the race to have many students who can afford the exorbitant school fees of some high brow schools, some teachers have been dismissed for daring to correct students. The sheer number of employees in the education sector frustrates government efforts in its
attempt to motivate the teachers and workers.
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