By Sunday Saanu
THERE is no doubting the fact that one of the major problems responsible for Nigeria’s perceived backwardness is what the pundits call policy somersault. Simply put, policy somersault entails frequent changes in administrative frameworks and procedures of governmental matrix, often resulting in taking two steps forwards and ten others backward. The nation is thereby portrayed as a rolling stone that gathers no moss. The moment a new government is inaugurated one can be so certain that there will be an absolute or partial discontinuity of some policies, many of which may have hitherto yielded positive results.
Much as one will like to admire creativity and innovativeness on the part of our newly elected governors, appointed ministers and heads of parastatals , the damage that some of them do cause, often in a misguided attempt to initiate new policies, is unimaginable. With incessant policy somersaults, we are almost like the clowns in a circus show.
In consonance with the social metaphor in which “new lords bring about new laws”, some of these newly appointed players unwittingly draw the nation back with the manner they arrogantly cancel time-tested policies and introduce fresh ones. They abandon on-going projects, initiated by their predecessors and originate new ones which they may not even be able to complete before the expiration of their tenure. But how can a nation develop with this kind of attitude? The multiplier effect can only be glimpsed by those who are socially discerning and sociologically perceptive.
Obviously, this is the kind of scenario that is playing out in the education sector where the Minister, Mallam Adamu Adamu, last year announced the cancellation of Post- Unified Matriculation Examination Post-(UTME) test, conducted by all tertiary institutions of learning, as a quality-assurance mechanism. Mallam Adamu argued that the universities were using the Post-UTME test to extort money from candidates and also subjecting them to multiple examinations.
Consequently, the minister directed that the combination of school certificate examination results and the performance at the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB)-conducted examination should be used as requisites for admission. The minister’s position generated heated debate, thereby polarizing education stakeholders, with the majority insisting that Post-UTME test should be maintained. Eventually, the minister had his way. The 2016 admission exercise was carried out without the ritual of Post-UTME test , but not without its overwhelming hiccups!.
However, the perceived demerits of the new admission policy precipitate this write-up with a view to subtly and humbly urge the minister and his supporters to have a second look. Perhaps, a little background to the introduction of Post-UTME test is relevant here. The idea of Post-UTME test was mooted in 2003/2004 academic session in the University of Ibadan, (UI) during the senate’s consideration of both final year and non-final year students. The credit goes to the retired Prof. Afolabi Bamgboye who noticed that some of the students who were asked to withdraw from the university on account of poor performance, gained admission with high scores from JAMB.
Prof. Bamgboye , an erstwhile Deputy Vice Chancellor (Administration) who called the attention of the university’s senate to his curious observation later questioned the credibility of JAMB -conducted examination results, wondering why a candidate who scored 300 marks at JAMB could not defend his purported academic wizardry in the university even right from the first year! There and then, a decision was taken that quality-assurance mechanism be put in place, hence, the beginning of Post-UTME test as an additional huddle before gaining admission.
Interestingly, the Post-UTME test had run for almost 13 years before the current minister reversed the modus operandi. However, the new method which was used last year, which may still be used this year, apparently places much premium on good performances at both school certificate examination level and the JAMB . For instance, the system says five “A1” at West African Examination Council (WAEC) result amount to 40 percent. Again any candidate, according to the new system, who scores 230 and above at JAMB gets 60 percent. The addition of the two performance determines the candidate’s admission status!.
Clearly, the emphasis is on “A1” irrespective of how you got it at WAEC and a superlative score from JAMB. With good money, can that be too difficult to obtain using Nigerian factor? Bad enough, the new admission policy has just created a big business for the operators of “Miracle Centres” as desperate candidates will now find solace in patronizing “miracle centres” where mercenaries will be employed to get “A1” in five subjects. Given the past experiences, it is possible to manipulate one’s way both at WAEC and JAMB and then secure admission fraudulently at the expense of hard working and brilliant candidates! Sadly, we are back to where we were before the advent of post-UTME test.
Asked to assess last year’s admission exercise with the new policy, the Ul Admissions Officer, Mrs Morenike Afolabi said” we had a tough time coping with a large number of candidates. Some candidates fraudulently filled in high grades for themselves to gain undue advantage . But we got them later. We know that come next admission exercise, people will come with nine “A1” , but water will always find its level with time. Even if they gain admission fraudulently, by the time they get to 200 level, they will be asked to withdraw if they can’t cope. But they would have wasted spaces meant for genuine students”. Mrs Afolabi further stated “ it is the post-UTME test that really determines the capability of students, but since this is the policy of the government, we are helpless. Government is the proprietor of the school, however, they want it, is what we will do. Once they see the shortcomings of this present policy glaringly, I am sure they will modify it.”.
Saanu is with Directorate of Public Communication, University of Ibadan.
Poignantly, majority of candidates who missed last admission in UI would have been admitted if they sat for the Post-UTME test. But because they did not have many “As” at WAEC level, and also their scores at JAMB was just a little above 200, – the combination of which did not add up to 50 percent, they were rejected. However, if some of them still want to apply to UI, they may have to go and resit for WAEC or its equivalent and ensure they get “As” in almost all the subjects. That is one of the implications of this policy. To me, a dishonest quest for “A1” at all costs, certainly does not bode well for our academic development. This policy, obviously, is against the children of the poor who have no money to hire mercenaries to write examinations for them, but rely solely on their intellectual power.
As a nation, we cannot be regularly operating on the shifting grounds of expediency and expect to be taken seriously. By cancelling Post-UTME test and replacing it with this current system that is seeking “A1” by all means, we seem to have fallen from the sublime to the ridiculous. We neither can run with peak velocity nor compete internationally with this kind of flip-flop policy. Post-UTME test cancellation is nothing but pure damp squib. No meaningful development can ever be achieved when the national polices on education are constantly tailored towards wild and unsetting oscillations. It is never too late for the government to listen to this whisper before it turns to screaming. This current admission policy is unprogressive and mediocre.
This is not the time for government to play possum to the deficiencies of the policies. To make the situation doubly depressing, candidates were also forced to pay the sum of Two Thousand, Five hundred Naira, the amount higher than what they paid for the conduct of post UTME test that was cancelled. This is unfair and unjust.
If this current admission policy is sustained, it will certainly deny many candidates of their universities education dream. Or how can we ask a candidate who had had “Bs” and “ Cs” to go and re-sit for WAEC and ensure he gets “As” so that he can compete favourably? Must we force every candidate to have “ As” ? Already, there is rumble and grumble of suppressed anger and frustration in the land, government should not add fuel to the waiting inferno. Education is equalization of all men. No man should be denied the right. No man should be frustrated in Nigeria to seek education in Togo, Gambia, or Chad.
Those who are not too obtuse to grasp the negative implications of this current admission policy must rise to prevail on our policy makers to have a rethink. The current admission policy is inherently fraud-susceptible. It is an adventure into the unknown. As a matter of fact, It is a darkness that must be dispelled. Only a return to the post- UTME test can restore sanity, transparency and honesty and justice as well as level-playing ground to our admission policy. Post-UTME test is not a burden, rather, it is a quality-assurance mechanism separating chaffs from the substance. It confirms the intellectual originality of the candidates . In UI, it has led to the production of more first-class graduates and reduction in the rate at which students withdraw from the University as a result of poor academic performance.
Saanu is with Directorate of Public Communication, University of Ibadaan.