Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,159,550 members, 7,840,316 topics. Date: Saturday, 25 May 2024 at 09:11 PM

WHY NIGERIA'S EDUCATION POLICIES MUST EMBRACE TECHNOLOGY - Education - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Education / WHY NIGERIA'S EDUCATION POLICIES MUST EMBRACE TECHNOLOGY (287 Views)

Sanwo-olu Advises Teachers To Embrace Technology / Embrace Technology And Leave Trash For Vision Scape / Interswitch Spak Science Competition To Resuscitate Nigeria’s Education System (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

WHY NIGERIA'S EDUCATION POLICIES MUST EMBRACE TECHNOLOGY by TheEdvocate: 3:32pm On Nov 28, 2017
"We mustn’t be stuck in the way we think about education, we must move on, because all over the world, most people are learning good and evil on the Internet. We must adapt whatever we want to learn to all of this. We must recognize that most young people are looking at these devices almost 24 hours of the day. We must take advantage of that because in the years to come, emphasis on classroom and formal sitting down learning is going to diminish." - VICE PRESIDENT, Professor Yemi Osinbajo



The value of information is in its capacity to birth transformation. And education has been – and still is – a means of achieving this. On its wings were born the metamorphosis of man; from Stone Age through to the Technology Age characterised by innovation and knowledge. But for the future relevance of education in the scheme of things – especially with the emergence of the Internet of Things – it must engage technology and embrace global best practices.

If the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in education - the guarantee of inclusive and equitable quality education and the promotion of lifelong learning opportunities for all – is to be achieved in Nigeria, our education policy must be imbued with the effective utilization of technology in the learning process; and teachers and other players in the education sector must embrace these best practices.

William B. Yatse once said, ‘education is not the filling of a pail, but the lighting of a fire.’

As the times are changing quickly and the world is thrusting swiftly, we need no soothsayer to tell us the future is technology, and whatever or whoever desires to live to fulfilment of this age must embrace technology. This is the reason proactive leaders with foresight have ditched traditional education systems for a dynamic, innovative and collaborative system – blended learning – that prepares and equips the younger generation for the future.

Nigeria, a country that has over fifty percent of its population as youths must realize the future – which is here – of the nation is hundred percent the youths. Countries are already setting example in this regard: UAE, Kuwait, and Taiwan are leading the park in the engagement of technology in the classroom. Finland has shown the world that the traditional education system is not only obsolete but also ineffective for today’s world. This has been further established by their higher ratings ahead of United States of America. In 2009 according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development report, they ranked sixth in Maths, second in Science and third in Reading while U.S. students ranked 30th, 23rd and 17th, respectively, of the 65 tested countries.

And in the United Arab Emirates for instance, there are facilities for students to sign up to specialized online class forums with video capacity, allowing them to team up on ideas and discuss self – study projects remotely. Students can also connect with tutors face-to-face at allocated times using these facilities. Thus, their students graduate as highly-skilled workers adaptable to new and evolving technologies.

For the 21st century education to be successful, we must engender what Mark Nicholas highlighted as imperatives in his book, ‘Teaching for Learning’: increase in the capacity of learning institutions to cater for more students cum the ability to cater for them effectively; adaptation of knowledge imparted to the realities of life; removal of hindrances in accessing knowledge, and flexible learning styles to accommodate peculiarities of the students; a competitive mind-set in the education sector that creates alternative choices and more convenience for the students – students should determine what, when, where and how they learn; and finally, personal touch – interaction among the students and between individual tutor and student.

Again, it is imperative to note that care must be taken in the adaptation of these principles in Nigeria. There is often a tendency for the bastardization and crippling of policies and systems that are successful in other climes when copied and pasted without proper adaptation. A case in point is the implementation of continuous assessment in Nigerian institutions of learning. Though not a bad idea, it was soon reduced to mid semester tests, and the whole gamut of the learning process coalesced into the passing of examination rather than the acquisition of life skills and labour demanding competencies to lead a successful life in a competitive global free economy.

Nonetheless, neither the adaptation of these global best practices nor the imperatives for 21st century education is negotiable, if Nigeria desires to be relevant in the global economy by 2020 and if we are to command any respect in the fierce competitive knowledge economy, our education policy should as a matter of urgency be reviewed to incorporate this blissful marriage of education and technology.

WRITTEN BY: THE EDVOCATE


Read the full speech of the VICE PRESIDENT here https://blog.brainstormr.com/education-vice-president-press-release

(1) (Reply)

Affordable 2017 Admission Into Top Universities In The Philippines Asia / New Microsoft Data Warehouse Certification 70-463 Dumps PDF Killtest / Uniport Direct Entry Admission List 2017/2018 Released

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 25
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.