Re: My Reflection on Education and Democracy in Nigeria: Vision 2020
- By Segun Akinyode
- Published 12/22/2007
- Education
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Segun Akinyode
Segun, a three-pronged oscillator, moves from his bedsitter to the office, then a cool spot. He lives near Mr Obasanjo's Abeokuta home. He is currently a teacher in the General Studies Department, Moshood Abiola Polytechnic.
View all articles by Segun AkinyodeSadiq .A. Abdullahi made me interrupt a writing assignment again with his ‘reflection’ on his earlier article titled Education and Democracy in Nigeria: Vision 2020 published on this forum in January 2007. Sadiq called my reactions to the article ‘compelling’; so I am compelled to air one or two things about the writer’s ‘reflection.’
In his defense of the shortcomings of the article articulated by some critics, Sadiq raised three basic approaches to appreciating and perhaps solving the problems plaguing the system of education in
From the foregoing, I want to believe that Sadiq is a passionate Nigerian in the Diaspora. He hopes the best for the system of education in his beloved
There is no doubt about it that the system of education being practiced in
In our situation, we have been able to establish that the running of the system of education is wishy-washy but there has been a hazy perception of the antidote. What has been happening is an unprecedented display of illogicality. And government is the guiltiest party. Instead of providing the sincere attitude, what the administration at the centre did and which it directed the state government to take cue from was to pile more pressure and stress on the decaying implementing approach by declaring UBE, Universal Basic Education programme. The funny thing is that the infrastructures for the execution of the programme were grafted from the existing dilapidating ones. Young graduates are being employed on contract, without a hope for pension and gratuity. Yet millions of naira is earmarked as salary and allowances and entertainment for legislators,
While this is going on, the parent who should shout foul have been hounded into a horrifying silence by a criminal economic climate that sees him running around in circles after the worthless naira. The pupil’s sensibility is assailed with the social aberrations and political abracadabra which make him sees more but benefits less. So he is determined to employ any crooked means to obtain a worthless piece of paper called certificate and join the ogre of madness that has been unleashed on his subconscious: he has to unravel the mystery behind the political abracadabra.
When the three active actors had mutually deprived, browbeaten and bamboozled themselves into a state of unqualified stupor, the first and the most ‘qualified’ of them went to the market of reason and found the most ‘credible’ solutions to the problem: establishment of private schools! One expectation is that the products of the private schools will provide the necessary moral, character, and an ideal manner of existence to the products of public schools! The sheer absurdity inherent in this reasoning is palpable.
My honest submission from my experience, teaching at all levels of education in
Again, there is absolutely nothing wrong with the philosophical and conceptual underpinning guiding the system of education in
Sadiq’s third focus is to visit
Spread The Word
1 Response to "Re: My Reflection on Education and Democracy in Nigeria: Vision 2020" 
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said this on 22 Dec 2007 8:53:05 AM EDT
As an educator and advocate of "FREE PUBLIC EDUCATION" in Nigeria (Lagos in particular, for I have been there), I enjoyed your article. As holding a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration, however, I do believe an "ATTEMPT" at collecting data, though faulty it may be due to Lagos numbers and the realibility of those collecting the data in a consistent manner is necessary. A solution will not be seriously considered unless some type of data analysis is done. Even when data is collected correctly, it still can be manipulated.
My heart's desire is to see a FREE PUBLIC EDUCATION system initiated in Lagos. Citizens are a countries GREATEST commodity, and if the government does not invest in their future (the youth who will run the country and make decisions that will affect the next generations), where is Lagos heading? There are too many children who cannot afford to be educated, and thus, begging and other unreputable behavior is abounding in an effort to survive day to day. Until a free public educaiton system is realized, giving all children the opportunity of a free education and the ability to excel in Lagos, then poverty, crimnal behavior, and econcomic difficulities will continue to escalate.
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