In
my primary four, the Yoruba text book we read was ‘Kola ati Kemi’ — a series of
short stories depicting the “adventures” of two siblings: Kola and Kemi. Kola
was the crafty one while his sister, Kemi, was the clever one. One day, Kola
and Kemi followed their father to the farm. As they played around the farm,
Kemi would announce: “Daddy, I found a snail!” And the father would reply:
“Well done, my daughter.” Kola, not to be outdone, would also announce: “Daddy,
I’ve found a snail!” And the father would reply: “Good job, my son.” It became
a healthy competition as they went on picking snail after snail while their
father kept himself busy cultivating the land.
They left for home and it was soon
dinner time. So the father announced: “For your dinner tonight, you will eat
the snails that you picked on the farm.” As it turned out, Kola did not pick
any snail — he was just deceiving himself in order to keep up with his sister.
Kemi had plenty snails and had a good dinner. When the true story came to their
father’s attention, he said something like: “If you planted one hundred ridges
of yam and claim it is two hundred, after eating one hundred yams, you will eat
another one hundred lies.” In Nigeria, we have perfected a way of living on
lies, cooking the books, dancing with the digits, and whitewashing the
sepulchres. Whom are we deceiving but ourselves?
One of the biggest scandals rocking
our education system is the yearly competition for the best-performing state in
WAEC (I will leave that of the “best university” out of this discussion for
sanity sake). As a result, many state governments give school principals the
marching order to make sure the students pass very well. So the school
authorities will, like Kola, game the system. They will aid and abet cheating.
They will bribe invigilators and supervisors. The students will come out in
“flying colours” and the state will get good ratings in WAEC. But states where
things are done more decently will seem to perform poorly on the WAEC table. In
the end, who is deceiving who?
A positive thing coming out of the
controversy over the recent “competency test” conducted by Mallam Nasir
el-Rufai, the governor of Kaduna state, is that we are now having a sustained
conversation around the quality of instruction in our schools. For too long,
our attention has been more on the quality of infrastructure. We often complain
about leaking roofs and dilapidated classrooms. Politicians and their allies
have made billions of naira from contracts to build schools, but the quality of
teaching has not improved in billions. You can have a classroom that looks like
a five-star hotel, but what are the pupils learning? That is what counts the
most.
I have read a number of comments on
the Kaduna issue that caught my attention. One is that a competency test can
only be legally conducted by the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria
(TRCN). And since we claim to be operating a constitutional democracy, then we
have to follow the law. You can hardly argue against this position if you
believe in the rule of law. However, the teachers that were tested by Kaduna
state all have certificates from the same TRCN legally proclaiming them as
“qualified”. And then you will turn to the same TRCN to assess them? What is
the likely outcome? So whom are we deceiving but ourselves?
How do people get certified in Nigeria
today? How did you get your driving licence? Did you go to a driving school?
Did you do a driving test? Did you read the laws and regulations of driving? Do
you understand the road signs around you? Do you know who should give way at a
roundabout? If your answer to all these questions is “yes”, you deserve a
national honour. I know many people who have driving licences but are yet to
learn driving. I kid you not. With just N20,000, you can get a driving licence
in Nigeria and hit the road. I don’t know how much it costs to get a TRCN
“qualified teacher” certification, but you can buy it even if you can’t spell
“teacher” correctly.
I also noted the argument about the
“validity and reliability” of the test. It is an extension of the legality
argument. I support things being done properly, I should say, but I am just
curious: if you cannot spell “Donald Trump”, does it matter who is conducting
the test? Would you be able to spell the name of the eccentric American
president only if the test was conducted by TRCN and not by a consultant? I
don’t get the argument, but I will let it pass. It is also argued that a civil
servant may not be able to sing the national anthem but that does not mean he
or she is unpatriotic. Beautiful analogy. But it still breaks down at some
point: the national anthem is a competency test.
The officials of the National Union of
Teachers (NUT) said the leaked scripts were not those of the teachers. They
were filled by el-Rufai’s aides to ridicule the teachers, they said. In other
words, the teachers are not that bad: el-Rufai is only calling a dog a bad name
in order to hang it. Really? Do the NUT officials currently have their children
in public schools? If so, are they happy with the quality of instruction their
children are receiving there? Would the NUT officials please withdraw and enrol
their children in public schools to prove their point, to put their money where
their mouths are? It is very easy to pursue that line of argument when your own
children are schooling at Corona.
For those of us who believe that the
teachers are as bad as the test results showed, the next question is: what
should be done? Sack them and recruit new ones — as el-Rufai wants to do?
Re-train them? An interesting recommendation coming from the debate is the need
to re-train the teachers. Some think that with an intensive course of about
nine months, these teachers will learn to differentiate between a triangle and
a square. This is a very optimistic suggestion. I wish I could be this
generous. What experience has shown, though, is that while there will be those
who can be still be salvaged, the majority may be unserviceable and, thus,
unsuitable for teaching.
No matter the criticism of el-Rufai,
we have someone who is not just worried about the quality of education but is
determined to do something about it. All the governors must address this issue.
We live in a society where politics colours everything and where labour unions
are so powerful they can stop the rain from falling, but after the fire and the
brimstone, it is very important to keep asking the question: is this how things
should be? Can we maintain the status quo and expect a turn-around? Can we ever
make a fundamental change by papering over the cracks? Can we make omelette
without breaking eggs? Can we cleanse the education sector without a major
surgery?
The biggest headache for me, though,
is that there are so many things to reform about Nigerian institutions. The
bureaucracy is sick and weak — no thanks to corruption. You bribe to get
certified as a teacher. You bribe to get certified as a nurse. You bribe to get
certified as a driver. You bribe to get your uniform as a police officer. You
bribe police to investigate the theft of your car. You bribe to get university
admission. You bribe to pass your exams. You bribe to graduate. Bribe makes way
for everything in Nigeria, and the teaching profession is just a victim of the
system. We can’t move forward under this rigged system. If the foundation be
destroyed, what can the righteous do?
President Muhammadu Buhari last week
backed the strategic education plan of Mallam Adamu Adamu, the minister of education.
It’s a well-articulated plan. But, as we all know by now, it takes more than a
plan. It takes more than a vision. It takes more than a man. All hands must be
on deck. The institutions and human beings to actualise the vision have to be
on the same page. Unfortunately, most unfortunately, Nigeria is such a warped
society that when you think about reforming a critical sector like education,
the only thing some people can see is money. The unions are there to put a
spanner in the wheel, in any case. Who really cares about any vision?
Let’s be honest: if the TRCN were
driven by a vision and were doing such a great job, the complaint we would have
about our schools would be the infrastructure, not the teaching. All sorts of
characters, both literate and illiterate, are certified as “qualified
teachers”. I can say confidently that I was well taught in my primary school,
even if we didn’t have great toilets or cushioned chairs. Over the decades,
everything has gone on sale. Everything has a price. That is why we keep
rigging the figures. We keep deceiving ourselves that things are improving when
they are not. After eating one hundred yams, we will feast on another one
hundred lies — like Kola (no relation).
AND FOUR OTHER THINGS…
NEW CUSTOM
Just when you see and hear things that
should make you finally give up on Nigeria, a light suddenly flashes in the
darkness. I was so encouraged by the testimony of a Customs officer in court on
Thursday on the illegally imported 661 pump action rifles. Abdullahi Muhammad said
he was offered a bribe of N8 million but he turned it down — and his supervisor
fully supported him. Oh my God! In Nigeria? How many Customs officers would do
that? In a country where, for filthy lucre, fake and substandard drugs —
including life-saving insulin and antibiotics — easily pass through Customs,
this inspires some optimism about Nigeria. Maybe we are not genetically
corrupt, after all. Hope.
BUHARI KWENU!
President Muhammadu Buhari did what
some called a “soft launch” of his 2019 re-election bid last week in the
south-east, which is clearly the bastion of opposition to his government. He
was received by the politicians and the traditional rulers. He was hosted to a
banquet. He was even decorated with chieftaincy titles. Was this for real? Was
it meant for the cameras? Is he genuinely wooing them? Are they genuinely
responding to his touch? Are they faking it? Most crucially, are the Igbo elite
and the people on the same page? In all honesty, it is difficult to know the
fruits his overtures will produce, but I think there is a long way to go in
winning them over. Dicey.
PEACEFUL POLL
It was heart-warming that the Anambra
state governorship election went on smoothly on Saturday. I had my fears. The
IPOB threat was there, and with allegations that the APC was hell-bent on
taking the state to please President Buhari, I was wondering if we were not
about to reverse the gains of previous elections. I wondered if we would not
need a massive deployment of soldiers to reinforce security. When police withdrew
Governor Willie Obiano’s security aides a few days to the D-Day, I almost gave
up. You can now understand my relief that it went without any major incident
and the turn-out was good. At least we should be able to get something right in
this country. Progress.
MUGABE MISERY
How much is too much? President Robert
Mugabe of Zimbabwe has always carried on as if he can do and undo. His actions
and decisions go unchallenged by his subjects. Slammed with a hefty hammer by
the West since 1990 over his insistence on implementing agreements with the
colonialists to cede land to blacks, Mugabe has watched his country wither like
herb but he would rather eat grass than backtrack. He has not helped himself
with a series of rash and selfish decisions that have worsened his country’s
economic and political fortunes. Removing his VP to pave the way for his wife
as his successor appears to be the final straw leading to a military
intervention. Snookered.
Source: The Cable
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