Students taking lectures sitting on the floor |
I
wanted to write about the African student but I decided to write this one first
since “charity they say begins at home”.
Being
a student in Nigeria is the most herculean task I know.
You first start from the kindergarten, then spend three years in the nursery
school, then six years in both primary and secondary schools, then another
four, five or six years in the university, depending on your course and of course
you can leave out the years when the teachers would go on strike due to one
issue or the other with the government.
That’s
a complete total of at least twenty years if you didn’t repeat any class along
the line.
At
first, not everyone cares about your grades in the early stages until you get
to primary one, that’s when everyone starts expecting you to be among the top
in your class.
The
higher your go, the greater the pressure for success and that goes on and on
till you graduate but it doesn’t even stop there.
The
Nigerian student suffers a lot in silence mostly because their opinions are
either called stupid or disregarded.
Not
just the student that suffer but also his parents too, because of the hell they
have to go through to make sure that their child gets a sound education.
Both the government and most teachers, lecturers and so on
doesn’t even care.
When
I say that Nigeria is a country where you can comfortably say that a family
that can afford to put their child through a complete educational system is
comfortable I mean that literally.
To
raise a Nigerian student costs a lot and the funny thing is that the income which
the parents who are raising these children get every month is not even enough
for a complete set of text books.
Another
thing is that after the parents must have labored day and night to get the
necessary fees required to put their child through school, then come the
teachers, lecturers and so on who try to make their money from the students.
Students sitting on tires while writing exams |
I
can easily tell you that the only reason why 99% of Nigerian students try as
much as they can to get a degree is just to make sure that they are guaranteed
a brighter future with good job and money, no one cares about the knowledge,
not even the lecturers.
For
instance, some people study computer engineering for five years and once they
have acquired their certificate, they still go back to roadside technicians to
learn their craft or they go and pay a heavy sum of money at computer schools
to learn programming languages.
Many
students go to school so as to get the certificate and once they get it, they
then either get jobs that have nothing to do with their area of specialization
or start doing business
In
fact, the guy that opened one of my bank accounts for me studied industrial
chemistry in the university, what the hell is he doing as a worker in the bank?
I
can give you a list of many of these kind of scenarios but that would get
boring at a point.
The
part that annoys me most is the part where everyone is expected to top their
class in every subject, especially in the secondary schools.
When
I was in the secondary school or high school as some would call it, I took
interest in some subjects and did even care about the rest, I just wanted the
knowledge.
I
wasn’t top of the class but when it comes to certain subjects I don’t joke, I
loved physics, geography, economics, mathematics, English language, technical
drawing, igbo language (vernacular) etc. I cared less about subjects like
chemistry, English literature, government, biology etc.
I
wasn’t the best in theory but practical were like candy to me. I loved seeing
the things written on textbooks being done, it makes me feel awesome.
But
then the teachers and parents’ only cares about the one that tops the class. I
wasn’t bad in that aspect too, I was among the first ten in the class but for
some reason it isn’t that big of a deal to me, I just enjoyed the subjects I
liked and failed the ones I hated.
Now on one occasion,
I came first position In Igbo language (vernacular) in my class and when the teacher whose subject I had excelled in came into the class to teach I was really tired and slept off during the lectures.When the teacher noticed, she did punish me by asking me to kneel down throughout the remaining part of the lecture.
When she finished, she decided to call out the first three students in her subject in the previous term and commend them.
She called out the guy that came third position, then the one that came second position, then when she called my name as the guy that came first position, I stood up from my kneeling position to answer and she was as surprised as hell.She had thought that the best guy in her subject was the guy who took overall first position in the class and that was her favourite student.
Instead this woman giving me words of commendation and advice she said and I quote “it is not possible, you can’t be the best in my subject please keep kneeling down you useless boy”. She then went on to commend the other two guys.
This
is an example of what the Nigerian student goes through, even the teachers have
favorite students and I can assure you that this factor also comes into
consideration when they grade their students.
I
have witnessed it lots of times and it’s almost a tradition in Nigerian
schools.
Students trying to study despite lack of electricity |
In the tertiary institutions,
Students are forced to buy unnecessary textbooks by their lecturers,
Students are asked to pay a lot of money for practical that have already been covered by the school fees,Students are asked to pay for workbooks which they never get and for handouts which they never need to read.Students are asked to pay a fee or fail a course or get a lower grade than what they merited,
Students who fails a particular course can go and meet their lecturers and pay them off with cash or sex for better grades.Students who tries to date a girl marked by a lecturer magically gets an awaiting result or an F in the lecturer’s course.
The
tertiary institutions are the worst because most students who succeeds there either taught themselves or paid heavily for good grades.
I
have witnessed a situation where a lecturer only attended his class once and
the only thing he gave the students was his course outline and he didn’t show
his face again until the exams were over and he gets paid for his lectures.
On
another occasion another lecturer comes to class every day and teaches and on
the exam day he gives his students entirely different things from his course
outline and also different from what he taught and then after the exams, he
positioned the course rep in front of the exam hall to take names of students
who wants to pay him for better grades.
The
Nigerian students has to deal with all these and yet be expected to graduate
with the best result ever and also be expected to be the best in his field.
Well
the thing is that many of us do actually make great achievements even after all
the obstacles and that is why am proud of us, THE NIGERIAN STUDENTS..
I
don’t think that anybody can be as strong as the Nigerian Student and I don’t think
that there are many countries whose students can endure the pain a Nigerian student
endures, just to get educated.
So
to the Nigerian students all over the country PharoahSays more grease to your
elbows, also do not let the obstacles stop you from achieving your goals, try
as much as your can to get the knowledge, because the certificate would get
dusty and old one day but the knowledge won’t.
In
the long run, you’d know that the knowledge is what really matters, don’t wait
for your lecturers, go out there and do your research, get the knowledge and don’t
just think about getting a nice job, think bigger.
Be
the one to give the jobs!!!
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