Welcome, Guest: Join ECHOng / Login / Trending / Recent / News
Stats: 47,025 members, 241,225 topics. Date:   Tuesday 7th of May 2024 08:18 PM

Top Members (May)
LilyNLSOFT : 133 KellyE : 52 noah22 : 52 TitanKenneth : 30 haykings : 21 uzy47 : 14 BigBallsBiden : 10 EMMALEZ : 7 IzunnaOkafor : 7 bmdworld : 7
Top members are most active forum members

ASUU Strike: The real language of the Nigerian government - Naija Info - ECHOnigeria

ECHOnigeria Forum / Naija Info / ASUU Strike: The real language of the Nigerian government (1 Post | 426 Views)

(1) (Go Down)

ADD COMMENT

ASUU Strike: The real language of the Nigerian government by sweethoney12(f) : 9:24 am

Written by: Egbeolowo-Olaitan It would have sounded unpleasant to the ears of they that heard Albert Einstein the day he said, "INSANITY IS DOING THE SAME THING OVER AND OVER AGAIN, BUT EXPECTING DIFFERENT RESULTS”.

We keep under-funding the education sector and yet, we are excepting miracle in the same sector being underfunded. Then I ask: 

How can a productive graduate be produced from this rotten system? 

I think Albert Einstein was looking at this direction when he gave his own definition of insanity.
In fact, if I'm to contemplate and decipher whether there is a difference between Nigeria's pre-colonial era and post colonization, then i would say that there is something wrong with us inside our black skin and we were better off when the white man ruled. Despite the role of education in national development, Nigeria as a nation, keeps deriving pleasure in underfunding her education sector. It shows that we have misplaced our priorities as a nation. Nigerian leaders are always eager in attending to needless issues over the needful ones.

After many outcries on the importance of education and the 26% benchmark as recommended by the UNESCO for developing countries, the reverse seems to be the case in the attitude of the Nigerian government towards education. What this implies is that, for decades, the country's budget for education has been less than the 26% benchmark recommended by the United Nations for developing countries.

This implies that our education system is in shambles and our schools are underfunded.

So all of these put together have contributed to the decline in the quality of our education. It is just a shame that hardly a 4yr calendar goes by without Academic disruption. Therefore, this incompetency of the Federal government is an insult to our citadel of learning because our tertiary institution is the cradle of the society.

The thing is just that when the cradle is rendered useless it reflects on the nation as a whole,that is why we can't compete with our counterparts globally. That is why most of the Nigerian parents from the bourgeoisie class prefers to enroll their children abroad rather than enrolling them in this bottomless pit.

Furthermore, it is not surprising that the irresponsible government officials patronizes foreign universities while dumping the ivory towers in their own country into the bottomless pit.

This pontificates that our political leaders have no moral compass or a distorted moral compass such that I'm afraid they can't make it to the parking lot on their own. Many Nigerians are anxious due to the industrial action stimulated by ASUU, they want to know when the strike will come to an end, yet the FG are lackadaisical in their negotiations. They want to know what the future hold for the dying state of the education sector.

If not, what is it to fund an important sector such as education? Instead of that, what we have is the height of capitalism ruling around. Then the question to ask is, how many Nigerians can afford three square meals a day, not to talk of enrolling in a private university?

According to research, the first and perhaps the greatest challenge facing Nigeria and making it difficult for good quality education that is capable of bringing about sustainable development is inadequate funding by federal, state and local governments.

Also, in 1997 and 2000 statistics show that federal government expenditure on education was below the 26% of national budget as recommended by the UNESCO.

The most disheartening part of this strike is that, most students would become ready tools for all sort of activities in their respective environments, just because they are jobless in one way or the other.
Also, it would be a maddening crescendo if billions of naira could be used on eating snacks alone and yet, a whole sector is in shambles under the same adminstration.

The Yorubas would say "OJU TO MAA BANI KALE, KO NI TI AARO SE IPIN". The eyes that will serve one until old age won't be rheumy in one's youthful years. Could it be that the future of the Nigerian state has been sabotaged? Could it be that Nigeria is heading for better days? Where does the hope lies? Well,Whether or not Nigeria is heading for better days remains to be seen.

Seriously, If we continue threading on this thin path, then I fear Nigeria is heading for a cloud of apocalypse.

- Egbeolowo-Olaitan is a student of Tai Solarin University Of Education (TASUED), where he studies primary education/political science. A Sapiosexual Writer And Orator....




source: http://ift.tt/2gMYuzV
http://ift.tt/2xQVp8J

Man Had Unprotected Sex With 13-Year-Old Girl After Making Her Watch Austin Powers With Him  Censors Board Raids Alaba Market, Seizes Pirated Films  VIDEO: Mr P – Just Like That ft. Mohombi 

(1)

ADD COMMENT

   

(Go Up)

ECHOnigeria - Copyright © 2022. All rights reserved. Follow ECHOng on Facebook and Twitter
Inbox Peculiar (Forum Super Mod) If you have any questions (+2348171606466)
Disclaimer: Every ECHOnigeria member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on ECHOnigeria