Teachers are the first set of people who give a child a sense of self
or validation outside of the home. If they are successful at imparting
their knowledge and building a child’s confidence in his or her
abilities, or in encouraging a child to pursue certain skills or even
dreams, then they would have had a positive impact on that child’s life.
Unfortunately, too few Nigerian teachers fall into this category of
individuals who are driven by a sense of purpose, a desire to leave
children, if not the world, better than they found them. How could our
Nigerian teachers have this sense of responsibility, in a country that
cares so little for them, where salaries are negligible if paid at all?
There is probably no other profession in our country today that is as
undervalued as that of teaching. However, if the majority of people in
Nigeria had access to quality education (especially at the primary
school level) our country would be markedly different.
Teaching, like almost everything else in Nigeria, has become an
all-comers affair where people with neither the qualifications nor the
abilities find themselves as they search for something to occupy their
time till something better comes along. File: A teacher and her pupils
They cope with the poor salaries and their overall humble
circumstance, in some cases by taking out their frustrations on their
pupils or by entering into some immoral arrangements with parents.
Situations whereby teachers accept “gifts” from parents in order to
guarantee a child’s success are not unheard of.
The educator, like the journalist, is available for purchase and the
society itself is a garage sale where everything can be bought at a
discount, even those people or things who were once the backbone of the
social order.
Backbone of the social order
So, if today our country and it’s people seem mostly corrupt and
aimless, we must go back to our classrooms to figure out how we can help
teachers retrieve their enthusiasm and to see their job as a calling
rather than a dead end.
Teaching in the 21st century is about engaging an audience, bringing a
subject to life and challenging even the most apathetic student to
think critically and see the world differently rather than rehashing old
debates or stereotypes.
I am afraid that no amount of reform can magically change the
Nigerian teacher into something he hasn’t been trained or even himself
been taught to be, by other teachers, as a young person. The social
protection programme coordinated by Maryam Uwais (SA to the President on
social protection) includes provisions for the hiring of 500,000 new
teachers, which is all well and good, but I personally would like to
know what yardstick will be used to measure these new recruits.
Will government be hiring more of the same tired individuals, whose
broken spirits, assaulted by an unjust society, can only but produce
more angry cynics like themselves? Or will we search for young people
who hopefully, are not so tainted by the system and can conceive that
their job is to be change-makers themselves by raising future citizens?
Also, what methods will these new teachers use? Will they encourage
students to think outside of the box and fall in love with their
subjects, or will the classroom simply be a place of routine, missed
opportunities and boredom?
When will we reform Nigerian education as a whole? What impact do we
believe teachers should have on students? What sort of people do we
believe this society needs: yes-men and ethno-religious bigots or
inquisitive non-conformists who can re-assess the status quo?
What will be the new norms of the Nigerian society and how are
educators, the police and journalists being prepped to teach, enforce
and communicate them? How do we go about training our teachers to find a
raison d’ĂȘtre beyond simply preparing students for the workforce? Can
education in Nigeria be about socio-cultural development and preparing
our youth not just for work but for life and active citizenship? With
our current crop of teachers I would have to answer a resounding no.
The same issue as in the civil service then comes about: if those who
have imbibed the old, nefarious ways which have gotten us nowhere
cannot evolve and embrace new ways of thinking, what do we do with them?
It is the same in the police force: what does one do with the
overweight, drunk policeman who has subsisted on bribery and corruption
his entire life? What do we do with anyone really, in this new
dispensation that cannot change?
I think, first of all, the option must be given to them. But those
who cannot embrace critical thinking, creativity, being socially
conscious and the notion of relationships based on more than a common
language, religion or village, will eventually be left behind.
Sadly, more than half our population is still in the throws of
illogical propaganda (occasionally causing them to defend or excuse
ignoble acts) so we cannot, ultimately, abandon them. So there must be
an urgent rescue mission or programme to tackle adult education, skills
and corresponding values.
“Intelligence plus character, that is the goal of true education”,
Martin Luther King Jr. once said. We cannot rebuild the Nigerian
character without first of all restoring dignity to teachers and
restructuring their training. Militants
They’re back. Like the pirates who once traversed the Atlantic, they
have no loyalty to country. Their only affinity is to the would be Niger
Deltan cause to which they have brought nothing beyond destruction
(after all by destroying oil pipelines and infrastructure it is their
own region’s livelihood which is most directly at stake).
The likes of Tompolo etc. according to recent allegations were
enriched by the past government, with no benefits to the common man of
the Niger Delta. So when will said common man in the creeks, living from
hand to mouth, stop hiding and defending the people who are the cause
of the region’s poverty? Tompolo
As for those turning the security forces’ response to their acts of
domestic terror, into an ethnic witch-hunt, they should know that if
they were law abiding citizens, they would have nothing to fear.
After all, neither you nor I reading this are wanted by the state. I
hope that the people of the south-south and south-east stop abiding by
the destructive tendencies of some of their leaders who couch their
followership in ethnic terms to distract from their failures. The
citizens of Otuoke should be the most prosperous in Nigeria, if it were
true that a leader from your community would be the most inclined to
take care of you. Nigerians, wake up to the manipulation and impossible
greed at play. You are the only victims.
Extradition treaty
A MUTUAL Legal Assistance agreement was signed in Dubai last week
between Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates to enable the repatriation
of looted funds for development and the prosecution of corrupt Nigerians
who saw Dubai as a safe haven.
There are billions of dollars, the proceeds of fraud, at stake. Bravo, Buhari, your country thanks you.
Governor Okorocha
I’m quite baffled by the sacking of 3,000 Imo state workers, even
after the Presidency released bail out funds for the governors to pay
civil servants. Many of our governors are poor leaders or managers,
incapable of seeking out creative solutions to problems. *Okorocha
They hire droves of civil servants in a populist move to provide
quick employment till they can no longer afford to pay them, rather than
seek to develop the state’s assets so that citizens do not need to look
to government for sustenance.
I’ll admit that regrettably, Nigeria’s civil service has not been
equipped to function in the modern world so sometimes, letting go of
positions, which are inessential or redundant is a tough but necessary
call.
But did the governor let go of some of his aides? Or once again, is
the average Nigerian expected to pay for the excesses and mistakes of
the political elite?
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