Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,737 members, 7,809,827 topics. Date: Friday, 26 April 2024 at 03:36 PM

ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning - Education - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Education / ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning (1055 Views)

UK Universities Disagree With Government’s Ban On Foreign Students’ Families / Polls: VCs, ASUU Disagree As FG Shuts Universities / Strike: FG, ASUU Disagree On Payment Platform (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by sinkhole: 8:13am On Apr 20, 2020
Following the call by the Honorable Minister of Education to VCs, Provosts and Rectors of tertiary education institutions to recommence their aborted academic sessions as a result of COVID-19 pandemic online, ASUU wishes to appraise Nigerians of the challenges involved in the implementation of the Ministerial directive.

It is important to break what E-learning involves down to its constituents bolts and nuts. This is necessary in order not to leave anyone in doubt that the Honorable Minister is either engaged in political gimmickry or that he is not fully informed of the situation in the sector over which he presides. To this end, it is imperative to make the following categorical declarations:

1. The Minister needs to understand that E-learning is not the same as computer vending and supplies. It is not as simple as computerization, supplying of computers and accessories, or simply connecting institutions to the internet.

2. The production of power points slides and accessing MOOCS of overseas university is not E-learning.

3. Online learning is a type of E-learning that depends entirely on internet-based resources and support system. E-learning requires certain behavioural changes and regulatory adjustments in order to make it work for the learner. It cannot be established by mere Ministerial directive and bureaucratic fiat but through careful and detailed planning, funding and training by those involved. None of these have been done in Nigeria.

4. There is no Nigerian University today that is operating any form or model of E-learning because of poor internet access, high bandwidth costs and irregular power supply. On what infrastructure does the Minister expect the online delivery to run?

5. Over the years governments, in collaboration with some corrupt Vice Chancellors have dumped smart boards on Universities which are now largely used as marker boards because they are not internet enabled and have no electricity to power them.

6. Faculties in universities have become generator farms with attendant noise pollution in an attempt to maintain some degree of services. What does the Minister expect to happen to change the entrenched degenerative situation?

7. Online learning depends critically on an effective library system, with online resources and seamless access from across the globe. No Nigerian Library, including the National Library has a semblance of a kindergarten library in serious countries.

8. Online learning can only be effective where there is effective learner support online. For such support to be sustainable both learners and facilitators must have seamless access to the internet, and must be attuned to the new environment and culture of learning. This means that requisite training must have been done.

9. Learning content must be available in a format amenable to self-learning. This requires skilled design through collaborative efforts by specialists over time. MOOCS have been touted as replacement for well-designed content that is suited to the characteristics of the learner and adapted to the local context. We shouldn’t be fooled.

10. If the objectives is learning and the focus is on the learner, preliminary studies ought to have been done to determine the learner characteristics and the diversities of the realities across the federation before modelling any approach to E-learning. The Minister is not properly educated to understand that online learning is much more than copying MOOCS and making power point.

11. Internet access is variable across geo-political regions, as well as linguistic and cultural parameters are highly different. One size fits all approach is ludicrous. Moreover, sustainable technologies should be the factor in determining the approach to E-learning not the excitement from improperly digested information from too much education tourism.

12. Nigeria today runs a rudimentary distance education system through a National Open University and approved dual-mode institutions that have distance learning centers. The approach to distance education by these institutions is at best characterized as blended learning, weighing more in the direction of face to face interaction. Some of these institutions are basically disguised part-time programs.

13. The distance learning operations are fraught with inequities due to the fact that they are set up primarily as fund raising platforms for IGR by their respective institutions.

14. There is no single University in Nigeria today that operates a mix-mode system. This is when students have option to take courses online or face to face. To seek to transit therefore to online delivery will amount to taking a plunge. We believe that as usual, contractors have cornered the government and have seen a business opportunity. While civil servants are once more using COVID-19 as a reason to defraud government.

15. The Nigerian university system had been defrauded for many years by federal agencies who dump substandard computers in universities from time to time at the end of the year, to justify last minute plundering of national resources in the name of supporting E-learning.

16. With the poverty levels in Nigeria today, we are not told how the online learning will be financed. Lecturers are already burdened by the fact that they have to finance the tools of their work from their salaries. There is no other profession where employees are required to pay for the cost of the tools of their work. On the average, a lecturer spends between twenty thousand naira and forty-thousand naira on data monthly, another twenty-thousand to buy fuel for generators. This is besides the fact that he bears the cost of purchasing a lap top for his work and contributing towards keeping indigent students in school.

The Academic Staff Union of Universities wishes to call on Nigerians not to be deceived by the sudden love for online learning. The hounds have smelt an avenue to plunder our national resources once more. At such a time of serious emergency, when any right thinking person should be reflecting, we can see once again that they want to make money from the suffering of the poor masses.

ASUU-UI Publicity Committee.
For more information, contact: (Convener) 08034700393, (Secretary) 08033685734

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by Intechnigeria(m): 8:27am On Apr 20, 2020
Online learning is the future though
Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by sinkhole: 8:43am On Apr 20, 2020
Intechnigeria:
Online learning is the future though
When properly done?

1 Like

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by Intechnigeria(m): 9:32am On Apr 20, 2020
sinkhole:
When properly done?

Yes when properly done.

ASUU is denying reality because the want previous money.

BUT
Everything has a start, we can start some online classes whether uploaded so students can download in this crucial period - it doesn't have to be live.

That's why we provided opportunity to check results @ www.intech.org.ng

So scratch cards can easily be bought online.

1 Like

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by Nukilia: 11:18am On Apr 20, 2020
What a backward nation! grin cheesy cheesy ASUU is getting scared...

Let federal government supply all the necessary equipment needed for this e-learning to fly in our public universities, it will end up in the drain... undecided

1 Like

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by qanda: 11:39am On Apr 20, 2020
Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by HigherEd: 1:35pm On Apr 20, 2020
ASUU and excuses. Covenant, Landmark, Bowen all began elearning and heaven did not fall.

1 Like

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by CodeTemplar: 2:37pm On Apr 20, 2020
If I talk now they may say I am agent of private system.
If lack of infrastructure is a problem, can ASUU kindly show us how the schools spend their huge allocation? For you to demand more, you must be able to account for what you are getting. The minister too should learn to stop dishing out directives like Buhari.

1 Like

Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by digital2018: 2:42pm On Apr 20, 2020
Abeg ASUU don't talk too much. Nigeria is the only country where everything is politics. COVID -19 have opened their eyes.
Re: ASUU Disagree With Minister Of Education On E-learning by Whois(m): 3:27pm On Apr 20, 2020
who ASUU epp

(1) (Reply)

UNILAG: Ivory tower or tower of babel? / What Is The Origin And Meaning Of The Word MANYA / WAEC Announces Date To Release WASSCE Results

(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. 23
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.