Phones › Re: Phone Engineers On Nairaland Willing To Assist You - Part II by santos247(m): 8:49pm On Sep 06, 2019 |
I bought a fairly used Samsung Galaxy TAb 2 (Mini) for my child. It loked perfect and working fine and then I formatted it to erase the old users documents and games. It was after this i noticed it had Android 4.0. I tried to do software update, but it is not working. I cant get to upgrade it to 6.0 or any of the latest Android OS. Can anybody help me please 
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Education › Re: Crises Rocks Federal University Oye Ekiti by santos247(op): 9:35pm On Apr 30, 2019 |
These discoveries are reasons why Nigerian academia has become a joke ! |
Education › Crises Rocks Federal University Oye Ekiti by santos247(op): 3:23pm On Apr 30, 2019 |
Students are protesting. Management is weak and compromised. When will Nigeria ever get it right ? INVESTIGATION: Many crises tearing apart Federal University Oye-Ekiti (2) IN the first part of this report, Yekeen AKINWALE who has been following the crises at Federal University Oye-Ekiti, in Ekiti State chronicled the events leading to the collapse of peaceful relations between the management of the university and leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). In this second part, he examines the controversial State of FUOYE Report, the allegations and counter-allegations surrounding the report. The ICIR reports that the contents of the report were so damning that the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, queried the management of the university. The chairman of ASUU at the university, Akinyemi Omonijo, who spearheaded the writing of the report was suspended indefinitely without pay by the aggrieved university management. Just like the case of Opoola, ASUU is also not happy about the appointment of a professor— Abayomi Sunday Fasina— who joined the university from Ekiti State University. The academic union believed that Fasina, formerly a lecturer at the Department of Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences at Ekiti State University, was recruited fraudulently into the university. “Professor Fasina came to the university in the year 2015 as a sabbatical staff from Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti and became a tenured staff without returning to his previous university before he became a tenured staff of FUOYE in the year 2017,” the union said. To the union, Fasina’s appointment was an example of employment racketeering going on unchecked in the university because as it said that “ the university’s Vice-Chancellor, Kayode Soremekun nominated him to be the Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the university in the same year 2017 that he converted to tenure staff.” His appointment was despite a recommendation contained in the decision extract of the Faculty of Agriculture Appointments and Promotions Committee (FAAG A and PC) dated March 23, 2017, obtained by The ICIR . The FAAG Committee recommended that the applicant (Fasina) must re-prepare his CV to include a list of publishers against his publications in chronological order and that his application should not have been submitted as an internal memorandum. “He ought to apply from Ekiti State University, Ado Ekiti where he is a confirmed Professor,” the committee said in the document. The Faculty of Agriculture Appointments and Promotions Committee found him (Fasina) appointable subject to interview to clarify issues related to publications vis a viz FUOYE Guidelines for Appointments and Promotions. But the recommendations, it was gathered, were not followed in appointing him, which makes the academic Union consider his appointment as irregular. “It is important to let you know that university management did not ask him to comply with both the observations and recommendations of FAAG before he was appointed as Professor and Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University,” ASUU said. The Deputy Vice-Chancellor was also alleged to have collected double salaries from both the Federal University and Ekiti State University. This was between October 2016 and February 2017 when he submitted a letter of resumption of duty back to the Ekiti State University in September 2016. Investigations by The ICIR, however, revealed that Fasina received salaries as a lecturer at Ekiti State University and Federal University Oye Ekiti between October 2016 and February 2017. After the expiration of his sabbatical leave at FUOYE, he had received a salary to the tune of N2, 916,840.32 from the university. Investigations revealed that while he had returned to EKSU at the end of his sabbatical leave, payment of his salary by FOUYE management as a professor on sabbatical leave continued from October 2016 to February 2017 on CONUASS7/10. His pay slip from the month of September 2016 to February 2017 sighted by The ICIR showed his designation as a professor (sabbatical). This infraction for which nothing has been done is similar to why a senior lecturer in the Department of Physical Sciences at Redeemer’s University, John Falade Alaba, was dismissed by the management of the university on August 20, 2018. A letter of his dismissal was published in the January 14, 2019 edition of the weekly bulletin of the National Universities Commission (NUC). Falade was relieved of his appointment at the University after it was established that he was on full employment in Redeemer’s University and also on full-time employment at the University of Ilorin, and on sabbatical leave at Landmark University, Omu-Aran, Kwara State. The management said the act was contrary to the regulations governing the appointment of staff in the university. Read full report here: https://www.icirnigeria.org/investigation-many-crises-tearing-apart-federal-university-oye-ekiti-2/Terrible scandals everywhere ! |
Travel › Re: General South Africa Visa Enquiries by santos247(m): 10:19am On Apr 09, 2019 |
Has anyone ever appealed a visitor visa rejection in Lagos ?
how long did it take ? |
Travel › Re: General South Africa Visa Enquiries by santos247(m): 6:10pm On Apr 08, 2019 |
visitor visa was rejected due to insufficient funds.
bank acct had abt 350k. husband support had 1.1million naira . husband has PR.
why is SA doing this ? |
Politics › What Really Happened In Rivers ? by santos247(op): 12:30pm On Mar 15, 2019 |
I have read lots of commentaries on the rivers state governorship elections. Most of them are disjointed and leaves me wondering what really happened. Has the popularity of Nyesom Wike waned in rivers? Did the last election reflect the popular will of River state residents? Who and Who is behind the AAC that is giving APC and PDP a nightmare in Rivers ?
Given a free and fair playground, what will likely happen is the previous election is cancelled and a fresh election ordered ? What is the tentative result so far declared in Rivers ?? |
Politics › Re: Kalejaiye SAN Restored As A Lawyer And Senior Advocate. by santos247(m): 12:27pm On Mar 15, 2019 |
any link to the supreme court judgement? |
Politics › Re: Emergency Relationship Counselor By Prof. Pius Adesanmi. by santos247(m): 5:48pm On Mar 11, 2019 |
may your soul rest in peace Prof Pius Adesanmi. we will sorely miss you !! |
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Education › Re: Opeyemi Enoch Solves 156-Year-Old Maths Problem, Gets $1M by santos247(m): 8:52pm On Dec 18, 2018 |
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Literature › Plagiarism Check With Turnitin: Reference Plus Grammar Check by santos247(op): 10:07am On Dec 01, 2018 |
Do you have an academic manuscript, project or thesis that require full plagiarism check plus grammar checking ? I have access to licensed turnitin and would do a good job. The scope is beyond the free versions available online. No word limit ! Similarity index, sources of all reference source appearing in the document. Grammar corrections, etc. Message shallomtoyou at yahoo dot cum. For a token, get ahead !!! |
Literature › Re: The Bang Rule Pdf File Pls by santos247(m): 10:24pm On Nov 25, 2018 |
I'll love to have it too. shallomtoyou@yahoo.com. |
Education › Re: ASUU Is A Problem Of The Nigerian University System - Prof. Ochonnu by santos247(m): 8:11pm On Nov 07, 2018 |
This is the document containing ASUU demands. ASUU is even challenging government to audit previous fund releases. if we have a serious government there wouldn't have been any need for this strike.
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Education › Re: ASUU Is A Problem Of The Nigerian University System - Prof. Ochonnu by santos247(m): 8:05pm On Nov 07, 2018 |
HigherEd: Nigerians do not like the truth; they prefer self-comforting narratives. Since doing a short update on the just-declared ASUU strike yesterday, many who are suckers for ASUU’s propaganda have continued to spew the predictable ASUU talking points without much critical reflection on them. My American hosts say that the definition of stupidity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different outcome. That is what ASUU has been doing in the last 15 years or thereabouts. The golden age of the ASUU struggle ended about 20 years ago. For the past fifteen years or so, the union has been struggling to redefine itself and find a new identity but has ended up simply reinventing the proverbial wheel even when the challenges of today’s university system call for a different toolkit than periodic strikes that worked in the 1980s and 1990s but that are increasingly less productive and are even counterproductive. Here are the problems with ASUU’s lazy, unimaginative resort to strikes every five years.
The current strike is not about a plan by the federal government to introduce fees and student loans. That is just ASUU propaganda, designed to curry sympathy with parents, students, and the general public. If you believe it, you’ll believe anything. The strike, of which ASUU has been warning for at least a year, is about the government’s non-implementation of the revised 2009 agreement — revised because it was renegotiated in 2013 after a prolonged strike. But as with other recent strikes, ASUU leaders said that they’re on strike because of “poor funding,” a vague, misleading, recurring, and overused propaganda in ASUU’s rhetorical repertoire. Much of what they’re fighting for are actually their own benefits (nothing wrong with that, but why not be honest about it?).
But realizing that a public skeptical of their struggle will not support the strike if it is couched strictly in terms of their earlier agreement with the Federal Government or in terms of earned but unpaid allowances, ASUU leaders recycled, as they’ve always done, the hackneyed narrative of poor funding. For additional emotional appeal, they decided to highlight an old, largely discredited federal government proposal — a mere proposal — about the introduction of tuition fees and the establishment of education banks.
ASUU Strikes have become counterproductive in several ways. The government usually waits it out until ASUU is desperate for a deal — any deal — because of financial hardship occasioned by several months of its members going unpaid, and because of pressure from parents and students, who, in recent years, have turned decisively against ASUU, influencing public opinion that now sees ASUU honchos as selfish, money-grabbing activists who do not have the interest of students at heart. Whether this is fair to ASUU or not is not the point. The point, rather, is that a wise, self-reflective, and self-critical body of activists tries not to overplay its hand or lose the support of its constituency or the public. A wise trade or professional union knows when to fight and when not to, and knows when a particular method of struggle has exhausted its effectiveness, its lifespan, and has begun to yield diminishing returns. ASUU’s laziness prevents it from making this realization. As things stand, the government has mastered the game, playing ASUU leaders like a set of drums.
But ASUU leaders are willing participants in the theatre. ASUU people themselves are complicit in the cyclical ritual of strikes, negotiations, agreements, and more strikes. They always willfully enter into agreements that are dubious. The agreements are fantastical, aspirational promissory notes that the federal government cannot realistically deliver because the only way it can do so is either for political office holders to give up their perks or abandon their own political promises and patronage networks and channel the resources previously dedicated to those endeavors to ASUU. That would be political suicide, which political leaders and appointees will not commit. Federal government negotiators know this, as does ASUU. Thus, these agreements and the negotiations that precede them are choreographed rituals meant largely to save face for both sides and to dignify what essentially is a bribe in the form of paid backlogs of “earned allowances” and an agreement to buy another five or so years before resuming the charade once again.
The agreements have thus become little more than documentary testaments to ASUU’s periodic egotistical efforts to reassert its visibility, importance, and ability to flex its power by shutting down universities. That’s why they produce less and less results. Speaking of diminishing returns, apart from the payment of salary backlogs and earned allowances as well as “agreements” on old and new promises — promises that are at best half-fulfilled — what positive outcome have these recent strikes yielded? I use “recent” advisedly because in the early days of ASUU strikes were an effective and hugely successful mechanism for bringing attention and funding to the many problems of the university system.
ASUU’s initial struggle was successful. The system had collapsed and needed to be resuscitated. ASUU strikes in the 1990s, which I fully supported as an undergraduate, succeeded in raising salaries and allowances and attracting massive funding to universities. Today, TETFUND is awash in billions of naira that it disburses to universities for capital projects — the building of lecture halls, labs, hostels, offices, and other physical structures. These are the fruits of ASUU’s initial struggles. From not earning enough to take them home, lecturers began to earn comfortable middleclass salaries. Much of that early gain and the subsequent increases in salaries and allowances in the 2000s consolidated university lectures in the Nigerian Middle Class. I recall seeing bankers, civil servants, and parastatal workers resign to take up appointments with universities in the 2000s. I personally know a couple of people who did so. Part of the attraction was that university lecturers began to out-earn many workers with equivalent degrees and experiences in the public and private sectors.
Inflation may have eroded some of those gains, but the Nigerian lecturer still earns more than civil servants. The starting pay of a lecturer is significantly higher than that of a civil servant. Some professors earn as much as N500,000 monthly, and some teach at multiple institutions and earn twice or trice that. An undergraduate classmate of mine who has served in one of the paramilitary organs of the Nigerian state and has risen through the ranks is contemplating quitting to go into academia after earning a PhD. Why? He would be better paid and he would be better fulfilled, he said.
The point here is that Nigerian lecturers are not poorly paid, certainly not as poorly paid as they want Nigerians to believe. At any rate, since when is the academy a place to get paid? People get into academia for the love of ideas, to live the life of the mind. They don’t go into it to make money. If money is your motivation, you should go to the private sector, run for office in Nigeria, or become a corrupt bureaucrat. You cannot function in the academy, with all its epistemological benefits, and then envy or use corrupt or non-corrupt people in lucrative sectors as references for your own aspirations. I routinely teach undergraduates whose starting salaries eclipse mine. One of the students went to work for Google and her pay package dwarfed mine. Another went on to law school and thereafter got a job with a law firm in Washington DC that paid him more than I earned. This is normal. It’s not just in Nigeria that academics are paid less than people with equivalent pedigrees in non-academic workplaces. Academia has many non-monetary rewards, including flexibility and fulfilment. That makes up for any monetary deficits.
So many strikes have occurred in the last 15 years or so that no one who attended a public university in this period can say they were not affected by at least one. And yet, the fundamental problems of universities — poor instruction, poor research, poor supervision and mentorship, ethical violations, sexual harassment and exploitation of students, and poor intellectual life — have persisted and worsened, discrediting the wisdom and logic of strikes as effective weapons for improving the quality of higher education. Academic standards have fallen drastically even as more money poured into universities for infrastructure and as lecturers and non-academic staff salaries and allowances increased. Nigerian academics have become less internationally competitive, and their products, the students they teach and graduate, have become more shortchanged and less educated, never mind the fact that the number of first class degrees has risen (story for another update). In some ways, then, it seems as though ASUU and the university system became victims of the union’s early success.
This negative correlation between improved funding and deteriorating standards is worrisome but hardly surprising. This is because as ASUU struggled to get the government to invest more in infrastructure and compensation, the body never asked anything of itself, of its members. All this while, even as TETFUND and other intervention agencies emerged to fund higher education, lecturers remained unaccountable and thus they remained stagnant in their craft and even regressed. They didn’t have to give anything or improve their attitude, mindset, or approach to their jobs in return for all the gains and benefits they reaped from their struggle.
As a result, poor teaching continued; lecturers continued to skip classes even as their personal economies significantly improved and some of them even became caught up in extracurricular pecuniary and career pursuits outside the university; poor or non-existent supervision and mentorship of postgraduate students continued; lecturers continued to teach from outdated, dog-eared lecture notes from the 1970s; lecturers continued to publish poorly researched papers or not to publish at all; lecturers, in fact, began to game the new NUC publications metrics by patronizing pay-to-publish predatory journals in India and Pakistan, and by self-publishing, and by publishing in incestuous venues such as departmental journals, making mockery of the academic research process; sexual harassment of students continued; monetary demands on students continued; and more catastrophically, plagiarism became the unspoken norm among Nigerian academics.
Improved access to online journals and resources, enabled in part by increased funding of universities (the very thing they claimed to desire and which ostensibly their struggle was about), ironically made lecturers lazy, causing them to simply copy or reproduce without attribution, steal and pass off entire works, or unethically appropriate works published by others elsewhere. If plagiarism has surged among undergraduate and graduate students, it is because their lecturers themselves either do not know the ethos of academic citation and plagiarism avoidance or are too lazy to care. In this way, bad habits are transmitted from teachers to students, perpetuating a cycle of poor ethics and academic fraud.
As infrastructure and compensation improved in Nigerian universities, Vice Chancellors transformed into tin-gods requiring adulation, submission, and absolute loyalty rather than acting as catalysts for academic agendas and reform. VCs, with the active connivance of university boards, became contractors and receivers of kickbacks on contracts, hence the obsession with building physical structures, leading to the neglect of academic and research standards. Buoyed by power and the control of ever-growing federal monetary allocations, Vice Chancellors could distribute patronage and largesse as they wished. More distressingly, VCs, like political leaders in the larger governmental system, realized that they could give out jobs and began to recruit incompetent, unqualified people who had no business in the academy, into lecturing positions. Today’s poor graduates are partly attributable to the influx of these incompetent recruits into the academy. You cannot impart what you yourself do not know. To obtain anything based on scholarly productivity and commitment to pedagogy and research became impossible. Only those who sucked up to VCs were rewarded. Merit, hard work, and ethical discipline left the space of the university, replaced by a crass politics of patronage that mirrored the messy, corrupt politics of the larger Nigerian political arena.
I reiterate: all these occurred in the context of much improved conditions — what one might describe as ASUU’s earlier success. The irony is that this success has led to a fixation on the erroneous notion that the problem of university education in Nigeria centers on infrastructure funding and improvement to salaries and allowances, even though universities are not about physical buildings but rather about what goes on in those buildings and in the minds of students and academics.
The corollary of this obsession with building grandiose physical structures is a neglect of the aforementioned problems that have a direct bearing on academic standards. Which is why we’re producing poorer and poorer graduates even as universities are building fancier and fancier structures on their campuses. I should know about the degeneration in standards because I have first class degree holders and even some academics writing to me for one reason or the other or sharing their work with me, and I’ve noticed that their works are poorly conceived, error-ridden, poorly researched, and poorly-written. Some in the humanities and qualitative social sciences cannot even string grammatically correct sentences together and have no basic understanding of research or analysis.
Today, when we say a VC’s tenure was a success or such and such was a successful VC, we’re talking about how many physical structures were built during their time. We’re not talking about how he or she improved the quality and quantity of research output, or how they improved teaching standards, or how they created a vibrant intellectual culture devoid of ethical abuses, or how they helped produce graduates who are internationally competitive, are self-motivated, and are intellectually curious.
Herein lies the problem. ASUU’s initial success ironically killed whatever was left of research culture or spirit of critical inquiry in Nigerian universities. Today, as we speak, TETFUND has N3 billion naira in research funds that have not been accessed. In a story published in Guardian newspaper on February 14, 2018 titled, “TETfund’s N3 Billion Research Funds Yet to be Accessed, Says NUC,” the university regulatory agency lamented that the funds were sitting idle because Nigerian academics had not applied for research funds or because the proposals they submitted were too poor to be funded.
Take some time to digest this irony. At a time when ASUU is ostensibly fighting for “better funding” of universities, TETFUND is complaining that academics are not applying for this pool of research money that was created partly in response to their perennial demand for funding. Is it that the Nigerian academics are not aware of this fund? No. They know about it, but they’re too lazy to craft a compelling research proposal let alone follow through with a rigorous research agenda that such research awards require.
It's not entirely the academics’ fault; the current ASUU-enabled system does not require them to be innovative researchers. They can survive in the system by being mediocre. They’re content with getting by with writing mediocre, derivative papers that do not require actual research but are adequate to get them promoted to the next rank. They can build "successful" academic careers and rise to become professors without winning research grants or conducting serious, original research.
Then when they become professors, they stop performing academic duties, conducting research, teaching, or mentoring altogether and start seeking opportunities for wealth accumulation or status enhancement outside the academy.
Research culture is dead in Nigerian universities, and it is not because of inadequate funding, as the unaccessed N3 billion TETFUND research fund and the existence of other intervention funds demonstrate. Rather, it is ironically because lecturers are not required by ASUU-FG agreements to satisfy a rigorous research or teaching requirement for promotion, and because their salaries and allowances are not tied to their teaching or research efficacy but are instead determined by the periodic strikes of ASUU and the salary structures that result from them.
If lecturer A, who is hard working, fecund, and prolific earns the same ASUU/FG-stipulated salary as the incompetent, lazy, and unproductive lecturer B who is on the same rank as him, what is the incentive for lecturer A to continue to sustain or increase his research and teaching excellence or for lecturer B to try to become like lecturer A? How can a 21st century university system not at least implement a system of merit pay beyond or in addition to set base pay to incentivize and reward research and teaching excellence? Broach this simple, commonsensical idea and face the wrath of ASUU.
From successfully fighting for improvements to university education in the 1980s and 1990s, ASUU has become an underwriter, protector, catalyst, and incubator of mediocrity in the Nigerian university system. ASUU has become part of the problem.
http://saharareporters.com/2018/11/06/ASUU-problem-nigerian-university-system-moses-e-ochonu |
Education › Re: ASUU Is A Problem Of The Nigerian University System - Prof. Ochonnu by santos247(m): 8:04pm On Nov 07, 2018 |
HigherEd: Nigerians do not like the truth; they prefer self-comforting narratives. Since doing a short update on the just-declared ASUU strike yesterday, many who are suckers for ASUU’s propaganda have continued to spew the predictable ASUU talking points without much critical reflection on them. My American hosts say that the definition of stupidity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different outcome. That is what ASUU has been doing in the last 15 years or thereabouts. The golden age of the ASUU struggle ended about 20 years ago. For the past fifteen years or so, the union has been struggling to redefine itself and find a new identity but has ended up simply reinventing the proverbial wheel even when the challenges of today’s university system call for a different toolkit than periodic strikes that worked in the 1980s and 1990s but that are increasingly less productive and are even counterproductive. Here are the problems with ASUU’s lazy, unimaginative resort to strikes every five years.
The current strike is not about a plan by the federal government to introduce fees and student loans. That is just ASUU propaganda, designed to curry sympathy with parents, students, and the general public. If you believe it, you’ll believe anything. The strike, of which ASUU has been warning for at least a year, is about the government’s non-implementation of the revised 2009 agreement — revised because it was renegotiated in 2013 after a prolonged strike. But as with other recent strikes, ASUU leaders said that they’re on strike because of “poor funding,” a vague, misleading, recurring, and overused propaganda in ASUU’s rhetorical repertoire. Much of what they’re fighting for are actually their own benefits (nothing wrong with that, but why not be honest about it?).
But realizing that a public skeptical of their struggle will not support the strike if it is couched strictly in terms of their earlier agreement with the Federal Government or in terms of earned but unpaid allowances, ASUU leaders recycled, as they’ve always done, the hackneyed narrative of poor funding. For additional emotional appeal, they decided to highlight an old, largely discredited federal government proposal — a mere proposal — about the introduction of tuition fees and the establishment of education banks.
ASUU Strikes have become counterproductive in several ways. The government usually waits it out until ASUU is desperate for a deal — any deal — because of financial hardship occasioned by several months of its members going unpaid, and because of pressure from parents and students, who, in recent years, have turned decisively against ASUU, influencing public opinion that now sees ASUU honchos as selfish, money-grabbing activists who do not have the interest of students at heart. Whether this is fair to ASUU or not is not the point. The point, rather, is that a wise, self-reflective, and self-critical body of activists tries not to overplay its hand or lose the support of its constituency or the public. A wise trade or professional union knows when to fight and when not to, and knows when a particular method of struggle has exhausted its effectiveness, its lifespan, and has begun to yield diminishing returns. ASUU’s laziness prevents it from making this realization. As things stand, the government has mastered the game, playing ASUU leaders like a set of drums.
But ASUU leaders are willing participants in the theatre. ASUU people themselves are complicit in the cyclical ritual of strikes, negotiations, agreements, and more strikes. They always willfully enter into agreements that are dubious. The agreements are fantastical, aspirational promissory notes that the federal government cannot realistically deliver because the only way it can do so is either for political office holders to give up their perks or abandon their own political promises and patronage networks and channel the resources previously dedicated to those endeavors to ASUU. That would be political suicide, which political leaders and appointees will not commit. Federal government negotiators know this, as does ASUU. Thus, these agreements and the negotiations that precede them are choreographed rituals meant largely to save face for both sides and to dignify what essentially is a bribe in the form of paid backlogs of “earned allowances” and an agreement to buy another five or so years before resuming the charade once again.
The agreements have thus become little more than documentary testaments to ASUU’s periodic egotistical efforts to reassert its visibility, importance, and ability to flex its power by shutting down universities. That’s why they produce less and less results. Speaking of diminishing returns, apart from the payment of salary backlogs and earned allowances as well as “agreements” on old and new promises — promises that are at best half-fulfilled — what positive outcome have these recent strikes yielded? I use “recent” advisedly because in the early days of ASUU strikes were an effective and hugely successful mechanism for bringing attention and funding to the many problems of the university system.
ASUU’s initial struggle was successful. The system had collapsed and needed to be resuscitated. ASUU strikes in the 1990s, which I fully supported as an undergraduate, succeeded in raising salaries and allowances and attracting massive funding to universities. Today, TETFUND is awash in billions of naira that it disburses to universities for capital projects — the building of lecture halls, labs, hostels, offices, and other physical structures. These are the fruits of ASUU’s initial struggles. From not earning enough to take them home, lecturers began to earn comfortable middleclass salaries. Much of that early gain and the subsequent increases in salaries and allowances in the 2000s consolidated university lectures in the Nigerian Middle Class. I recall seeing bankers, civil servants, and parastatal workers resign to take up appointments with universities in the 2000s. I personally know a couple of people who did so. Part of the attraction was that university lecturers began to out-earn many workers with equivalent degrees and experiences in the public and private sectors.
Inflation may have eroded some of those gains, but the Nigerian lecturer still earns more than civil servants. The starting pay of a lecturer is significantly higher than that of a civil servant. Some professors earn as much as N500,000 monthly, and some teach at multiple institutions and earn twice or trice that. An undergraduate classmate of mine who has served in one of the paramilitary organs of the Nigerian state and has risen through the ranks is contemplating quitting to go into academia after earning a PhD. Why? He would be better paid and he would be better fulfilled, he said.
The point here is that Nigerian lecturers are not poorly paid, certainly not as poorly paid as they want Nigerians to believe. At any rate, since when is the academy a place to get paid? People get into academia for the love of ideas, to live the life of the mind. They don’t go into it to make money. If money is your motivation, you should go to the private sector, run for office in Nigeria, or become a corrupt bureaucrat. You cannot function in the academy, with all its epistemological benefits, and then envy or use corrupt or non-corrupt people in lucrative sectors as references for your own aspirations. I routinely teach undergraduates whose starting salaries eclipse mine. One of the students went to work for Google and her pay package dwarfed mine. Another went on to law school and thereafter got a job with a law firm in Washington DC that paid him more than I earned. This is normal. It’s not just in Nigeria that academics are paid less than people with equivalent pedigrees in non-academic workplaces. Academia has many non-monetary rewards, including flexibility and fulfilment. That makes up for any monetary deficits.
So many strikes have occurred in the last 15 years or so that no one who attended a public university in this period can say they were not affected by at least one. And yet, the fundamental problems of universities — poor instruction, poor research, poor supervision and mentorship, ethical violations, sexual harassment and exploitation of students, and poor intellectual life — have persisted and worsened, discrediting the wisdom and logic of strikes as effective weapons for improving the quality of higher education. Academic standards have fallen drastically even as more money poured into universities for infrastructure and as lecturers and non-academic staff salaries and allowances increased. Nigerian academics have become less internationally competitive, and their products, the students they teach and graduate, have become more shortchanged and less educated, never mind the fact that the number of first class degrees has risen (story for another update). In some ways, then, it seems as though ASUU and the university system became victims of the union’s early success.
This negative correlation between improved funding and deteriorating standards is worrisome but hardly surprising. This is because as ASUU struggled to get the government to invest more in infrastructure and compensation, the body never asked anything of itself, of its members. All this while, even as TETFUND and other intervention agencies emerged to fund higher education, lecturers remained unaccountable and thus they remained stagnant in their craft and even regressed. They didn’t have to give anything or improve their attitude, mindset, or approach to their jobs in return for all the gains and benefits they reaped from their struggle.
As a result, poor teaching continued; lecturers continued to skip classes even as their personal economies significantly improved and some of them even became caught up in extracurricular pecuniary and career pursuits outside the university; poor or non-existent supervision and mentorship of postgraduate students continued; lecturers continued to teach from outdated, dog-eared lecture notes from the 1970s; lecturers continued to publish poorly researched papers or not to publish at all; lecturers, in fact, began to game the new NUC publications metrics by patronizing pay-to-publish predatory journals in India and Pakistan, and by self-publishing, and by publishing in incestuous venues such as departmental journals, making mockery of the academic research process; sexual harassment of students continued; monetary demands on students continued; and more catastrophically, plagiarism became the unspoken norm among Nigerian academics.
Improved access to online journals and resources, enabled in part by increased funding of universities (the very thing they claimed to desire and which ostensibly their struggle was about), ironically made lecturers lazy, causing them to simply copy or reproduce without attribution, steal and pass off entire works, or unethically appropriate works published by others elsewhere. If plagiarism has surged among undergraduate and graduate students, it is because their lecturers themselves either do not know the ethos of academic citation and plagiarism avoidance or are too lazy to care. In this way, bad habits are transmitted from teachers to students, perpetuating a cycle of poor ethics and academic fraud.
As infrastructure and compensation improved in Nigerian universities, Vice Chancellors transformed into tin-gods requiring adulation, submission, and absolute loyalty rather than acting as catalysts for academic agendas and reform. VCs, with the active connivance of university boards, became contractors and receivers of kickbacks on contracts, hence the obsession with building physical structures, leading to the neglect of academic and research standards. Buoyed by power and the control of ever-growing federal monetary allocations, Vice Chancellors could distribute patronage and largesse as they wished. More distressingly, VCs, like political leaders in the larger governmental system, realized that they could give out jobs and began to recruit incompetent, unqualified people who had no business in the academy, into lecturing positions. Today’s poor graduates are partly attributable to the influx of these incompetent recruits into the academy. You cannot impart what you yourself do not know. To obtain anything based on scholarly productivity and commitment to pedagogy and research became impossible. Only those who sucked up to VCs were rewarded. Merit, hard work, and ethical discipline left the space of the university, replaced by a crass politics of patronage that mirrored the messy, corrupt politics of the larger Nigerian political arena.
I reiterate: all these occurred in the context of much improved conditions — what one might describe as ASUU’s earlier success. The irony is that this success has led to a fixation on the erroneous notion that the problem of university education in Nigeria centers on infrastructure funding and improvement to salaries and allowances, even though universities are not about physical buildings but rather about what goes on in those buildings and in the minds of students and academics.
The corollary of this obsession with building grandiose physical structures is a neglect of the aforementioned problems that have a direct bearing on academic standards. Which is why we’re producing poorer and poorer graduates even as universities are building fancier and fancier structures on their campuses. I should know about the degeneration in standards because I have first class degree holders and even some academics writing to me for one reason or the other or sharing their work with me, and I’ve noticed that their works are poorly conceived, error-ridden, poorly researched, and poorly-written. Some in the humanities and qualitative social sciences cannot even string grammatically correct sentences together and have no basic understanding of research or analysis.
Today, when we say a VC’s tenure was a success or such and such was a successful VC, we’re talking about how many physical structures were built during their time. We’re not talking about how he or she improved the quality and quantity of research output, or how they improved teaching standards, or how they created a vibrant intellectual culture devoid of ethical abuses, or how they helped produce graduates who are internationally competitive, are self-motivated, and are intellectually curious.
Herein lies the problem. ASUU’s initial success ironically killed whatever was left of research culture or spirit of critical inquiry in Nigerian universities. Today, as we speak, TETFUND has N3 billion naira in research funds that have not been accessed. In a story published in Guardian newspaper on February 14, 2018 titled, “TETfund’s N3 Billion Research Funds Yet to be Accessed, Says NUC,” the university regulatory agency lamented that the funds were sitting idle because Nigerian academics had not applied for research funds or because the proposals they submitted were too poor to be funded.
Take some time to digest this irony. At a time when ASUU is ostensibly fighting for “better funding” of universities, TETFUND is complaining that academics are not applying for this pool of research money that was created partly in response to their perennial demand for funding. Is it that the Nigerian academics are not aware of this fund? No. They know about it, but they’re too lazy to craft a compelling research proposal let alone follow through with a rigorous research agenda that such research awards require.
It's not entirely the academics’ fault; the current ASUU-enabled system does not require them to be innovative researchers. They can survive in the system by being mediocre. They’re content with getting by with writing mediocre, derivative papers that do not require actual research but are adequate to get them promoted to the next rank. They can build "successful" academic careers and rise to become professors without winning research grants or conducting serious, original research.
Then when they become professors, they stop performing academic duties, conducting research, teaching, or mentoring altogether and start seeking opportunities for wealth accumulation or status enhancement outside the academy.
Research culture is dead in Nigerian universities, and it is not because of inadequate funding, as the unaccessed N3 billion TETFUND research fund and the existence of other intervention funds demonstrate. Rather, it is ironically because lecturers are not required by ASUU-FG agreements to satisfy a rigorous research or teaching requirement for promotion, and because their salaries and allowances are not tied to their teaching or research efficacy but are instead determined by the periodic strikes of ASUU and the salary structures that result from them.
If lecturer A, who is hard working, fecund, and prolific earns the same ASUU/FG-stipulated salary as the incompetent, lazy, and unproductive lecturer B who is on the same rank as him, what is the incentive for lecturer A to continue to sustain or increase his research and teaching excellence or for lecturer B to try to become like lecturer A? How can a 21st century university system not at least implement a system of merit pay beyond or in addition to set base pay to incentivize and reward research and teaching excellence? Broach this simple, commonsensical idea and face the wrath of ASUU.
From successfully fighting for improvements to university education in the 1980s and 1990s, ASUU has become an underwriter, protector, catalyst, and incubator of mediocrity in the Nigerian university system. ASUU has become part of the problem.
http://saharareporters.com/2018/11/06/ASUU-problem-nigerian-university-system-moses-e-ochonu One, no university in South Africa, not University of Witwatersrand is 100% funded by industry. that is a lie. a blantant lie. As a PhD candidate myself, I know what DST,NRF, DAFF and many other government departments committee to funding research and professorial chair in South Africa. aside that, Govt funds all undergraduate students,whose parents earn less than 300,000 rand per annum. fully !. 2. Money released to universities is not managed by ASUU. VC, PRO-Chancellors and other governing council members are the greatest beneficiaries. a store keeper, bursar, or chief accountant is 20% more powerful and enriched than any dean of faculty or other lecturer in the system. 3. ASUU demands are about better funding and better accountability for funds spent. 4. in the long term, govt must re organise the entire system, including putting academics on their toes to deliver better quality research. but the issue of university management must be fully addressed if we want to move forward !!! |
Travel › Re: Family Relocation Abroad! Mature Advice /input Requested! by santos247(m): 12:26pm On Oct 03, 2018 |
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Travel › Re: Family Relocation Abroad! Mature Advice /input Requested! by santos247(m): 8:28am On Oct 03, 2018 |
Hey guys, this thread is so educative. Op, I am in your shoes. At 36, Lecturing in Nigeria with 2 kids 5,3 and a wife,34. my GROSS salary is barely 1.7M per annum. It will take another 4-6 years waiting for promotion before that earning can reach 3Million pa. My thoughts ? Relocation ! My fears? Being able to start up in a new location. not necessarily the big earning jobs but won't want to wash plate or do gateman. Studied Agriculture and have a PhD already. I dread the extreme cold in Canada but won't mind enduring for the sake of my kids and their future. Those in Canada, please what Jobs opportunities can someone like me fit into... Not much has been said about Australia here...How far with that area ?? |
Jobs/Vacancies › Freelance Writer Needed by santos247(op): 8:46pm On Aug 13, 2018 |
Do you have the capacity for academic writing and can help students with term papers, dissertations and assignments. Do you have a B. A, B. Sc, MSc. In Educational Managemnt, G and C, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology? All submissions will be check for plagiarism and the pay can be negotiated. Those with MSc are better suited for these jobs. You can earn some money by working from home wirh your laptop and data on your phone. Send me a mail to shallomtoyou at yahoo dot come. I will provide my contacts and official email to onky serious frelancer for better communication. |
Education › Academic Research Assistant by santos247(op): 7:03pm On May 22, 2018 |
I have skills of academic research writing and statistical analysis using SAS 2010. Do you need any help with project proposal, term paper, assignment or thesis writing, proofreading or proposal development. Contact me.
MOD, PLS help place this in the correct section if it shouldnt be here. |
Education › Re: JAMB: Striking Non-academic Staff Threatens To Disrupt 2018 UTME by santos247(m): 9:45am On Mar 08, 2018 |
To you, what i will eat should determine what i should suggest as a solution to Nigeria's problem. While i would not fully subscribe to massive retrenchment, i think their productivity must be stirred up. Those who will not be productive should retire especjally those who have stayed long in the system. Whats the point keeping a 50yr old lab technologist who would not even obey directives from a young lecturer on what to do in the lab. They come late and some even sell wares on campus. We must be ready to fix this nation or we will keep producing badly cooked graduates. Those dead wood professors in particular must be made productive or forced to retire!!! luminouz: Really ? I hope u know these are fathers n mothers who have kids to take care of....if ur parents are NASU,NAAT n SSANU.....u go change this ur yeye tone o...after hunger has rewired your brain |
Education › Re: JAMB: Striking Non-academic Staff Threatens To Disrupt 2018 UTME by santos247(m): 8:32am On Mar 08, 2018 |
Your comment is so spot on. NASU, SSANU AND NAAT have shown how relevant and irrelevanr they can be in sustaining the Universities in especially y Federal and State universities. Downsizing is necessary. For academic staff, the requirements for promotion or continue membership of a department needs to be reveiwed. All professors must continue to be evaluated and those sho are not research active must be forced to retire. Govt should start rating them. Only those with the highest academic rating should be allowed to retire at 70. Others who cant measure up should retire at 65 even if they are research active. When you institutionalise performance to continued employment, people perform. If NAAT, NASU, SSANU withdraws their members due to strike and JAMB decidez to hire outsiders to conduct UTME, how is that a problem. Is JAMB exam part of their core duties? These non academic staff are not serious!!! emmasege: Registrar and Bursar are management staff just like Vice chancellors who don't join strike action. Academic staff in most universities have since taken over laboratory practicals. Remember there are usually junior lecturers assigned to oversee such practicals even when the technologists are around.
NASU, SSANU and NAAT have just told the nation how less important they are in the university setting. And I think it's time government considered downsizing them.
Just like some 'expired' academics, most of these non-academics are too old for the job and not relevant in the 21st century. In a nation where human population and number of unemployed are ever rising, it makes no sense that professors will retire @ the age of 70 and non-academics at 65. Not when many of these professors stopped being research-active in their 40s or 50s.
The entire university sector needs a complete overhaul and the retirement age of university staff needs a review, if our universities will get it right and young and brilliant ones will be in the ivory towers. |
Romance › Re: My Church Sister Has Turned Me To Her ATM Even Though I Am Married by santos247(m): 8:06pm On Feb 28, 2018 |
Stop meeting those needs. She will naturally withdraw. Or arrange a distractor for her.... |
Investment › Re: What Can I Do With 5million Naira by santos247(op): 8:52pm On Feb 20, 2018 |
Thanks to everyone who replied.
In the multitude of wisdom, there is safety. You guys have given insight into areas i can research.
Am grateful |
Investment › Re: What Can I Do With 5million Naira by santos247(op): 8:50pm On Feb 20, 2018 |
greatnaija01: Cryptocurrency is a fast rising global trend and with 100k you can make 10million in 6months. I am a living proof. then use your 4.9 million left to build a school hostel or something like transportation business that would bring u cash MONTHLY or DAILY respectively.
you can also try to import products from aliexpress. There are free tutorials on it here in Nairaland just search and learn and test it or go to youtube and see the free tutorials by nigerians on good quality importation. then use 500k to do it and sell your imported goods on JUMIA or KONGA from the comfort of your home. I do these too.
Bless u bro.
Thanks for all the advises. God bless you |
Investment › What Can I Do With 5million Naira by santos247(op): 12:54pm On Feb 20, 2018 |
I just relocated from the mifdle east and my total savings is N5Million naira. What genuine investment opportunities can i go into. I am not used to taking very big risks but I need to settle down on a bussiness now. I am willing to start with a portion of the capital and expand once i have acquired enough experience in the field. I wont fall for scams so keep them off if you cannot help my ministry... Lol
Thanks |
Phones › Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge For Sale by santos247(op): 5:15pm On Jun 26, 2017 |
i have a fairly new samsung galaxy s6 edge for sale 64GB . has a small crack on the left side of the screen but phone is working perfectly. Phone is 5months old. Make me a reasonable offer and ill consider. My asking price is N80K
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Romance › Re: Why Is It Always Difficult To Withdraw when you are about Cu.mming? by santos247(m): 10:12pm On Mar 11, 2017 |
when i was cumming to this thrrea, i knew it was going to be dry. So i cumm before i approach d thread |
Christianity Etc › Re: Apostle Suleman Exposed His Private Part To Stephanie Otobo - Keyamo Chamber by santos247(m): 9:31pm On Mar 10, 2017 |
Please, what does Keyamo wants to achieve? Justice for Otobo ?? What Justice?? Is she demanding some payment ?? Preganancy?? Why dont they wait and carry out a DNA test?? Seek court order demanding that the pastor take responsibility.
If their attempt is to shame and denigrate Apostle Suleiman, they are are bound to fail. Not because Nigerians dont like scandal, but its becoming a dry scandal. Rememebr the Yoruba adage that he that kills an elephant with just a cap in hand would only be praised once, the 2nd attempt, you will be termed a mass murderer.
Keyamo better spell out his intent. We wont forget the Mr Fryo saga he was embroiled with over the death of Chief Bola Ige. Seems this Keyamo guy wants to be popular by fire by force. that SAN will elude him the way he is going !!!!!!!!!!!!! |
Agriculture › Re: Prices Of Feed Ingredients by santos247(m): 12:28pm On Mar 10, 2017 |
ialso need those prices, preferably in naira per kg. Anbody with detailed information ??
Maize Millet Sorghum Wheat Wheat bran Cassava peel Palm oil Soybean meal Groundnute cake Fish meal Cotton seed cake Palm kernel cake full fat soya Molasses Cassava Monocalcium Phosphate Dicalcium phosphate Bone meal Oyster Shell Limestone (Calcium Carbonate) Salt (NaCl) DL-Methionine Lysine Vitamin Premix Aflatoxin binder Phytase enzyme |
Politics › Re: What Is The Contribution Of Five South East States And At What % by santos247(m): 9:22am On Jan 02, 2017*. Modified: 2:16pm On Jan 02, 2017 |
Diaspora remittances from drug trade in Maylasia, Indonesia, Pakistn,Brazil etc...
What else do you expect ??
Is there any award for FTC?? am expecting mine oo |
Romance › 2016 Vocabulary Updates by santos247(op): 1:13pm On Dec 20, 2016 |
As we count down to the end of 2016. Shall we do a re-cap of new vocabularies we learnt during the year.... Here are the latest i an remember.....
The money spended was well spended....Solomon Dalung, Dec 2016 My wife belongs to 'The Other room".......Pa Buhari, Sept 2016
Please add as much as you can remember and lets re-kindle the activities that made 2016 a memorable one |
Crime › Re: Photonews: 7 Years Old Boy Burnt To Death In Lagos. See Why by santos247(m): 4:10pm On Nov 16, 2016 |
This is beyond inhumane..its even beyond beastiality, for animals are hardly cruel to their own species. There are lot of venomous bloodthirsty aliens going around as human beings in Nigeria. |