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The ASUU Strike – Why Nigeria Should Strike for Primary & Secondary Education, Over Tertiary Education

The ASUU Strike – Why Nigeria Should Strike for Primary & Secondary Education, Over Tertiary Education

Many have wanted to know my perspective on the ongoing ASUU (Academic Staff Union of Universities) strike in Nigeria. The fact is this: I am not a fan of ASUU when it comes to strikes. In a piece last year, I explained that our problem is not really university education. I made a case that Nigeria “needs a conference on how to fund education in the 21st century”. For all the agitations from tertiary education (universities and polytechnics), no one is representing primary and secondary educational systems to make them better. Interestingly, the latter is where we need improvement, urgently.

I am a big advocate of quality education, not just at the university level but also at primary and secondary levels. Nigeria needs one. I enjoyed my time in Federal University of Technology Owerri, despite having to go to class at 4am for a lecture starting at 10am, to “colonise” a seat in the front. ASUU demand makes sense – more funding could have solved that problem. However, I have also noticed that it was not just about funding when I made it into U.S. It was more of an efficient utilization of capital and factors of production. Yet, we can talk about those even for a university. Most U.S. university leaders are professional managers who are well experienced in managing large organizations. That a crop scientist professor has published many papers does not qualify him or her to be running a university when he/she cannot read a simple balance sheet statement.

I respect our professors; many taught me. But here, I am not a fan! ASUU has used advocacy and voodoo statistics to rig Nigeria for the privilege few (I belong to that few). This is a country where millions of kids cannot get decent primary education, and yet it has money to subsidize tertiary education.

I largely attended FUTO free and if you went to a federal university in Nigeria, government subsidized your education. Yet, that same government does not have money for primary education which naturally should be free and compulsory at high quality. Also, the secondary education has become anything goes. But come to tertiary education, ASUU wants to make it GREAT. That is a good vision as we want a great university system; but wish is not all that it takes for things to happen.

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The problem is this: when we subsidize few thousands in universities, we deny millions opportunities to attend primary schools. Some states still think that paying a primary school teacher $50 per month is excessively unaffordable. Check well – the professors earn above $1,500 monthly (I get it, purchasing parity plays here. Do not compare with U.S. and Europe).

source: reliefweb

Simply, the failure of our primary and secondary educational systems is one of the main reasons why Nigeria remains underdeveloped with skyrocketing unemployment where mass illiteracy is common. The fundamental rights of many kids across Nigeria, according to United Nations – the right to basic education – have been trampled.  While we want great universities, we cannot forget where the priorities should be.

I will support ASUU when it is fair to include primary and secondary education in its advocacy. Interestingly, primary and secondary school teachers do not strike easily despite the extremely challenging working conditions they operate. ASUU is not Nigeria’s problem. Our major problem today is that we do not have functioning primary and secondary educational systems.

China has 99% primary education enrollment with less than 10% university attainment. They put all the good money in primary education. America does the same where primary and secondary are largely free. But in Nigeria, we flip it, taking care of few to the detriment of many. Why should a professor be paid $2,000 per month when a primary school teacher cannot even get $50 monthly? The most important education is primary education. Yet, from state to federal levels, Nigeria continues to pump more money into universities, leaving primary and secondary severely underfunded.

We need a comprehensive funding strategy in Nigeria. And government needs to engage with our professors with respect. You cannot sign a document and then run away from it. No matter how you look at it, this is a problem government has created. Our professors have the rights to pursue avenues to get more funding, as they would like to compete academically with others across the globe. But at the end, it is the government that should balance these issues: ASUU should come below primary education.

But I must say that the government must be honest on how it handles our professors. You cannot sign a document with full awareness that you would not implement it. That is degrading and insulting. Everyone has a role to play here because at the end, only the students suffer. Where you know you do not have money, stop opening new public universities. Rather, make it easier for the private ones to meet the demands of what you have in mind, while supervising them for quality. Nigeria, by now, should not be closing universities on strike. The fact that we continue to close universities is a shame. It needs to stop

Source: NOI Polls

Plotting the Future of Education in Nigeria

Primary education should be free and compulsory in Nigeria, and must be high quality. Even as we inject more funding to improve it, we should make secondary education nearly free, making it accessible to our citizens. University education which remains the center of all agitations should be funded but must not be the main priority: we need to take care of the millions before we focus on the privileged few. Yes, tertiary education should come last in the funding priorities in Nigeria.

As federal government scales access to tertiary education even as budget dwindles, strikes will become the new normal. Simply, tertiary education will not improve in Nigeria over the next two decades unless our economic system changes. Yes, the same government that does not have funding is the same that launched and added more than 20 new tertiary institutions in the last decade. As that happens, do not expect quality to improve. Interestingly, unlike before when government used to have money, today, it has none. So, even strikes will not change much, permanently.

I have suggested some options for the government to consider:

  • Revamp the tax system to make it more attractive for private sector to support universities.

The Nigerian tax system is not designed to support philanthropy. That is why we do not have a vibrant one. It does not mean that a nation must be rich first before its tax system can be engineered to stimulate philanthropy. ASUU can lead on that, through Tax Reform, and make it possible for individuals and companies to put money in the schools and get tax benefits. Sure, ASUU members may be busy, but that should not stop them from helping the government to revamp our tax codes to drive innovation

  • Establish Education Loan Scheme that is linked to BVN (bank verification number) where people that receive government funding must be asked to pay back. The private sector should manage it in partnership with the government. In this scheme, provide academic scholarships to the most academically qualified in the nation. There are people that do not need to be in universities but attend anyway because its nearly free.
  • Give universities FULL autonomy. Yes, let them pay themselves whatever they want to pay themselves but they have to source the money by themselves. With competitions, they would come at parity on quality, pricing and value.

All Together

Every generation of university students has seen continuous decline in quality. The reason is thus: the model we run is not sustainable and as more people aspire to attend universities, what used to work will crumble. The golden years where university students lived like kings and queens in UNN, UI, Ife and ABU cannot be sustained today. The present cohort of students would be better than those coming in ten years under the same model, unless Nigeria fixes it. Unfortunately, our economy has not expanded to inject more funding in critical sectors of the economy.

ASUU funding model is outdated and it is time they realize that no strike can change that. It costs about $55,000 to attend Harvard in a year. If you think you can strike to get that quality, you have not started. And if you think students can pay $500 and get that quality, you are not real. Nigeria needs a working model – the one advocated by ASUU is an expired one.

LinkedIn Comment on this Feed

You just wrote today like someone possessed by a Higher Being, because average Nigerians rarely speak the truth, and also struggle to handle the truth when told to them.

You mentioned full autonomy, unfortunately nothing in Nigeria is autonomous; the States still depend on Federal, universities are even dependent on NUC and politicians, the Police is suffering the same.

No independence of mind, body, idea or anything, in this country; everything is convoluted and contrived.

The same false narrative makes governments to promise what they cannot do, because truths and falsehoods are similar in this clime. We want to fund lifestyles we cannot afford, and that’s why nothing works anyway.

We always fight for the privileged minority, just look around Nigeria and see where we usually spend money; all about wealthy and privileged minority.

People who shouldn’t have business with university education are going there, and we want to send more people and fund their waste of time and resources; strange land.

Anyway Nigerians are specialists in fighting the wrong battles, and that’s why we don’t produce sustainable winners; always a short term thing, and then we go back to whining and complaining.


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4 THOUGHTS ON The ASUU Strike – Why Nigeria Should Strike for Primary & Secondary Education, Over Tertiary Education

  1. I remember with nostalgia those days in FUTO where u will have to colonise a seat at d front row to receive lectures. I remember standing by d window side to listen to ur lecturer taking class.
    But lemme say dt ASUU struggle has change most of ds situations highlighted herein. While there is need for ASUU to restrategise the government must also be sincere with d general public.
    Yes primary and secondary education has been greatly affected but suffice to say dt d bulks stillcomes to d government table.
    In all a government dt destroys her education sector will not not have a future. ASUU struggle have yielded results in d past but a need to restrategise is sacrosanct.
    A good write up my fellow FUTOITE.

    My best regards

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