●It’s License For
Mediocrity —Kolo, Olukoju ●Could Have Detrimental
Effect On Quality Of Graduates
Aggrieved Nigerians are
still demanding reasons for the ridiculous lowering of this year’s cut-off mark
approved by the Joint Admissions And Matriculation Board (JAMB) and
stakeholders for admission into tertiary institutions in the country.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
In
the latest round, academics/administrators insist the development was amounts
to granting official licenses to schools to crash standards in tertiary
institutions, while others deplore the development, saying it would affect the
country’s corporate brand as a nation, as well as further worsen Nigerian
universities international ranking.
Specifically,
former vice chancellor of Niger State-owned Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBB)
University, Lapai, Niger State, Prof. Ibrahim Adamu Kolo, said since standards
at all levels of education system are already deplorable, the crashing of
cut-off marks is not defensible from educational assessment and evaluation
perspectives, neither is there any empirical justification for the action. It
only empowers tertiary institutions to have a field day admitting barely
educated candidates, and makes mockery of the statutory responsibility of JAMB
as the safety net for ensuring quality university and tertiary education.
He
said: “Remember that 120 is just 30 per cent – a fail level cut off mark. It is
worst for other tertiary institutions, especially colleges of education that
are supposed to produce quality teachers, and yet which are now empowered to
admit poor candidates with as poor as 100 (25 per cent) under the guise of
‘opening up the space.’ The reality is that a license has just been granted for
worsening the already deplorable standard of admission requirements and poor
quality of tertiary education in the country.”
Kolo,
added: “I really have never heard of countries lowering cut-off marks to such
arbitrarily failed levels. I only hope JAMB is not playing to the gallery for
those who are making a case for the irrelevance of the body because the
situation has already sent signals to the international tertiary education system
that there is a basis to disregard degrees and certificates from Nigeria as
being unworthy of their categorisations.”
For
former vice chancellor of Caleb University, Prof. Ayodeji Olukoju, with the new
cut-off mark, “quality is being sacrificed on the altar of expediency, and that
is very sad. We are encouraging mediocrity and lowering standards.”
Olukoju,
Fellow, Nigerian Academy of Letters (NAL) continued: “My position is that
tertiary education, especially at the university level, is for the talented tenth.
This might sound elitist and condescending, but no country ever became great
without creaming off the best to create an aristocracy of talent. Only the deep
can call to the deep in a world of global competition.
“Others
outside of the top class can find their career fulfillment at other levels of
education and sectors, or develop themselves through distance learning at their
own pace, while still contributing to the economy. This new policy creates the
misleading impression that universities are remedial education centres, to
bring weak and unqualified candidates up to university standards. In my
opinion, universities are places where the untapped potential of good students
are developed to achieve excellence.”
On
the fate of Nigerian certificates in the international community, he said,
“Nigerians excel once they leave our shores but they have to scale humiliating
hurdles. Their certificates face a credibility crisis because of how we manage
our domestic affairs. I imagine that our certificates will come under greater
scrutiny, but the good candidates will still excel. But such a denigrating
treatment will further erode our corporate brand as a nation.”
Vice
Chancellor, Redeemer’s University, Ede, Osun State, Prof. Debo Adeyewa, is of
the view that the ugly development has the potential to worsen the position of
Nigerian universities in global ranking.
According
to him: “Low entry marks could have a detrimental effect on the quality of our
graduates. Research in the past has shown that the best performing group, in
terms of consistency in performance during undergraduate period is the group in
the range, 180-240. The other ranges 240 – 280, 280 – 320, and 320 and above
are not as consistent in terms of performance during undergraduate study
period. The study did not even consider scores lower than 180 because it was
unthinkable.
“A
low cut-off mark (120, which is 30 per cent of total score) of a university
would eventually affect the quality of its products and such a university
cannot be respected in the comity of universities. This could further lower our
standing in the ranking of global universities. I strongly believe that no
university should go below 180, which corresponds to 45 per cent of the total
mark obtainable (400) in the Unified Tertiary and Matriculation Examination
(UTME).
Immediate
past vice chancellor of Federal University, Oye-Ekiti, Professor Isaac Uzoma
Asuzu, wants candidates to be admitted into tertiary institutions to score a
minimum of 50 per cent in university matriculation examinations, which
translates to 200 out of a total of 400. This he said is because, “when
students of low academic standing are admitted into institutions, they cannot
follow up with lectures and end up cheating in order to pass. If they manage to
go through the system by dubious means, they end up as poor quality graduates
that cannot fit into the nation’s work force.”
Asuzu, said: “There seems to be confusion in our educational system. We tend to move one step forward and three steps backward due to our ever-changing policies. These changes portray us before the entire world as confused. Each university used to determine the modality for admitting students before the advent of JAMB. It is on record that the quality of graduates produced at that time was quite high. Our graduates were admitted into universities in Europe and America without going through pre-qualifying examinations. The standard was lowered when UTME became the sole mode for admission into tertiary institutions, not because UTME was in itself bad, but because students devised various methods of cheating in the examinations. This led to the hybrid of UTME and screening tests, which frankly, improved the quality of students admitted and the quality of graduates produced.
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