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  • We asked 5 Nigerian Undergrads What They Would Do To Fix Their Universities

    Ladies and gents, our universities need funding, internet and God. Let us pray.

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    There’s nothing, quite literally, that hasn’t been said about the state of Nigeria’s universities and the education system, at large.

    You鈥檝e heard it all. Nigerian universities are understaffed, underfunded and overcrowded. Their curriculums are as old as the lecturers鈥 degrees.

    Gangs begin to scout you from the very first day like a Barcelona prospect. Lectures happen by the special grace of God and nothing else.

    All of this paints the picture of a Nigerian university as a sufferhead training school.

    nigerian universities

    And no-one knows this to be true more than the sufferheads-in-training themselves; students.

    If they understand the problems, it only makes sense that they鈥檇 have a few ideas on how to fix things.

    We asked 5 Nigerian undergrads what they would do to fix their universities.

    Here鈥檚 what they said.

    Oriafo Fehintola – The University of Benin.

    University of Benin

    鈥淪tudents should be admitted strictly to study the courses they choose, as opposed to instances where they get admitted for a vague course as consolation. 聽Lecturers should teach students with enthusiasm and stop looking at them as avenues to make extra money.鈥

    鈥淭hings would be better if we had genuine teacher-student relationships, coupled with innovative ways of teaching that don鈥檛 involve needless dictation and long rambling.鈥

    Babalola Oyinlola Jane – Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education.

    鈥淎 good place to start would be for the Federal Government to increase the funds provided for the educational sector and ensure it鈥檚 effectively spent (because, corruption.)鈥

    鈥淎nd why don鈥檛 we have internet access on Nigerian university campuses in 2018, please? That 鈥 and basic amenities like well-equipped libraries and laboratories 鈥 so we can do what we actually came to school for.鈥

    Olumuyiwa Aguda – University of Ilorin, Ilorin, Kwara State.

    University of Ilorin

    鈥淲e need to create a more practical structure. We should set up exchange programs with universities outside Nigeria and Africa. And learning is not just about long lectures and bored students 鈥 extracurricular activities and skill acquisition will help nurture talents and so on.鈥

    鈥淎nd finally, we should show existing lecturers that they won鈥檛 die if they use tech and the internet to be better at their jobs, and hire more hands.鈥

    Oluwasindara Dada – National Open University Of Nigeria.

    鈥淚t would be unrealistic to claim the hero and want to turn things around for my entire school but there鈥檚 one thing I did and can do, its self-tutoring.鈥

    鈥淪tudents coming together to study something they鈥檝e learned individually, together is one way to balance this entire issue. And that鈥檚 what I did.鈥

    Avan-Nomayo Osasenaga. University of Lagos.

    鈥淕oing to a Nigerian University is more like a survival course than getting an actual education. Whoever decides the teaching outline needs to learn what the internet is. It鈥檚 2018, not 1982.鈥

    鈥淟et鈥檚 do a refresher course and introduce these old geezers to the world today. The delivery method needs to change. If you can鈥檛 get familiar with new teaching methods and tools, you shouldn鈥檛 be lecturing. Simple. We鈥檙e paying school fees please, don鈥檛 stress me.鈥

    There you have it, folks. If there’s one thing that stands out here, it’s that Nigerian students have little faith in the capacity of the people who teach and train them.

    For instance, Naga, who describes himself as 鈥渁 very concerned and pained student that can鈥檛 wait to finish school and breathe easy鈥 goes on to say 鈥淎 Doctorate isn鈥檛 any proof that you can teach or should be teaching.鈥

    鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 make sense when people with no imagination are put in charge of lecturing young individuals with dreams and aspirations.鈥

    So is there any hope, you ask?

    Things may look pretty gloomy, but not all hope is lost鈥搘e can fix Nigerian universities.

    Our biggest obstacle is that education is expensive, and as things are, our country is too broke to afford the quality that it鈥檚 young people need.

    There are some ways to overcome this鈥揂 wise man has suggested working with private employers to design the curriculum (and hopefully provide some funding). But that鈥檚 long-term stuff.

    Going by what our undergrads think, introducing some senior citizens to the internet as quickly as possible might be a good place to start.

    Let us know what you鈥檇 do to fix things in the comments. Don鈥檛 be shy.

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