Many of the degrees are not worth the paper on which they are printed
The advent of private universities in Nigeria was considered a welcome
development for the simple reason that the public universities had
become anything but centres for excellence. Aside the endless strikes by
the lecturers and the non-academic staff which sometimes lasted as long
as one academic session, the neglect of federal and state universities
by successive governments has also resulted in a situation in which
students of these universities were never certain as to the number of
years they would spend for their degrees.
Unfortunately, the emergence of private universities does not seem to
be raising academic standards given their penchant for indiscriminate
award of degrees that are not worth the papers upon which they are
printed.
Indeed, the award of first class and second class upper division
degrees to just about anybody, which is fast becoming a trend in many of
these private universities, brings to question the credibility of the
degrees and the institutions that award them. For instance, 140
graduates of the Covenant University, Ogun State, were recently awarded
first class degrees while 720 graduates received second class upper
division. Similarly, the
Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, also in Ogun
State, graduated 1,359 students, of which 52 bagged first class honours,
with 1,059 graduates making second class upper division. It is
noteworthy that before now, a first class degree from our university is
considered a rare honour to bestow upon a graduate whose intellect is
beyond reproach. These days, some of the graduates who parade first
class degrees, especially from the private universities, are of doubtful
academic pedigree.
This is already telling in the job markets. According to the Nigerian
National Petroleum Company (NNPC), many of the “so-called first class
and second class (upper) graduates” who participated in the company’s
recent job interview failed to justify their certificate classifications
as 80 per cent of them scored less than 20 per cent in the aptitude
tests. Also not long ago the Nigeria Police revealed that many first
degree holders who came for its recruitment tests performed rather
woefully.
A number of reasons have been adduced in explaining the shameless
conferment of first and second class upper division degrees to graduates
that do not measure up to the expected standard. One such reason is the
astronomical tuition fees charged by the private universities. When
parents are lured to pay huge sums with the promise that their children
would receive the best of university education, they would expect
nothing other than “excellence” which in this case is a first class
degree or minimum of second class upper division.
Another reason, which flows from the first, is that in the bid to
position their products for jobs, the private universities are in an
unhealthy competition to produce higher number of first class degrees in
order to justify being the “best” among equals. The Vice-Chancellor,
Federal University of Technology, Akure, Ondo State, Prof. Adebiyi
Daramola, actually believes this to be the main reason for the
indiscriminate award of first class degrees to graduating students by
the private universities in the country. He said it is nothing but “a
marketing strategy” adopted by the authorities of those private
universities to woo wealthy individuals looking for institutions that
would make their children first class graduates. But this, according to
Daramola is counterproductive as “many employers of labour would not
touch these graduates with a long pole because academic standards have
been compromised by the authorities of these private universities.”
We concur with Daramola’s position even as we believe that there is an
urgent need to put a halt to the ugly trend. We therefore call on the
Federal Ministry of Education, the National Universities Commission
(NUC) and the Committee of Vice Chancellors (CVC) to take a serious look
at the rate at which first class degrees are being “manufactured” by
the nation’s private universities.
Culled from ThisDay News
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