Sunday, May 31, 2015

RE: USA Africa Dialogue Series - SUNDAY MUSINGS: “Purpose-Driven Education”: Statement as a Discussant at the APC Policy Forum (by Bolaji Aluko)

May be.

Is there also not the possibility that "our failure to grow as a nation" is a choice? A people may be capable of thinking critically and refuse to do so.

 

oa

 

From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Okechukwu Ukaga
Sent: Sunday, May 31, 2015 1:36 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - SUNDAY MUSINGS: "Purpose-Driven Education": Statement as a Discussant at the APC Policy Forum (by Bolaji Aluko)

 

Dear Folu,
I suspect you wanted to write "our failure to grow as a nation could be DIRECTLY related to our failure to think critically..."
Regards,
Okey

On May 31, 2015 12:26 PM, "Folu Ogundimu" <ogundimu3@gmail.com> wrote:

Adeshina's critique is spot-on. Overemphasizing STEM as a national education policy approach risks turning Nigeria into a country of robotic workers. You cannot aspire to the status of a self-sustaining democracy without having a comprehensive educational policy that prioritizes the arts, humanities, and social sciences as much as you give priority to the STEM disciplines. 

 

Our failure to grow as a nation could be inversely related to our failure to think critically about our miserable condition. Societies that have come furthest on the human development index and that have achieved the most cumulation of their economy and scientific progress have done so by privileging the study and appreciation of the arts and humanities in early education. And by giving as much emphasis to the study of the social sciences as they do the STEM in post-primary education, they have been able to continuously modernize and re-invent their societies. This is how they have built more resilient and stable democracies. 

 

I don't see Nigeria growing as a sustainable democracy as long as we continue to fail to appreciate that which makes us understand the quality of our humanity. The critical insight we lack comes from the collapse of a quality education. To redeem ourselves, we need not just produce a country of robots but a country of critical thinkers who know something about their own history and learn to appreciate their own arts, culture, and religion as opposed to the present slavish worship of western and eastern culture and religion. 

 

So, given all this, I find my good friend, VC Aluko's statement to the APC forum quite disappointing. I know he is capable of modifying his proposal. Given his access to the important voices in the policy formulation process, he owes us a duty to carry a more inclusive and better thought out proposal on this important issue. 

 

F. 

Sent from my iPhone


On May 31, 2015, at 9:53 AM, 'Adeshina Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:

I won't say Prof. Aluko's conception of a "purpose-driven education" for Nigeria is disappointing. I will prefer to say it is highly surprising (leaving sufficient room for ignorance on my part). Apart from all the good recommendations in the paper,I genuinely worry about the bold endorsement of the STEM educational policy and the continued advocacy of an educational system that is "truly science-and-technology based,  broadly-conceived, starting very early in our educational system with curricular emphasis on mathematics, English and civic studies,  all steeped in technology-assisted teaching and learning, coupled with staff training, re-training, and credible quality assessment that has continuous student and staff testing components." What does a 'truly sxience- and technology-based education' mean? What further role does 'broadly-conceived' play in defining it?

 

As if to make the issue clearer, Prof. Aluko also recommends a  "greater emphasis should be on doubling to quintupling to increasing admissions by an order-of-magnitude increase, with the ratio mix of students being 70-30 science/technology-based students rather than humanities/social science." This isn't different from the policy thrust of the National Policy on Education and its lopsided recommendations which essentially undermine the role of the humanities and the social sciences (HSS) in national development. 

 

Why this STEM-based approach rather than a more holistic STEAMSS (science, technology, engineering, arts, mathematics and the social sciences)? Even the National Sxience Foundation of the United States has a broader definition of the STEM disciplines to include the social sciences. How "purpose-driven" is an educational policy in Nigeria which relegates the HSS to a minimal ratio in educational and development matters? Why do we keep buying into some global policy frameworks without an attempt to learn or unlearn their failures and inappropriateness for our national circumstances? (In this regard, what is the difference between the Washington Consensus and STEM?) Do we need purpose-driven education or holistic education? 

 

More fundamental: What educational philosophy should drive Nigeria's national development? 

 

 

Adeshina Afolayan

 

 

 

 

 Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android


From:"Mobolaji Aluko" <alukome@gmail.com>
Date:Sun, 31 May, 2015 at 11:33 am
Subject:USA Africa Dialogue Series - SUNDAY MUSINGS: "Purpose-Driven Education": Statement as a Discussant at the APC Policy Forum (by Bolaji Aluko)

 

____________________________________________________________________ 

 

 

"Purpose-Driven Education": Statement as a Discussant at the APC Policy Forum

 

By

 

Professor Mobolaji E. Aluko

Vice-Chancellor, Federal University Otuoke, Bayelsa State

 

Transcorp-Hilton Hotel, Abuja-FCT

May 21, 2015

 

 

 

I bring you greetings from Otuoke, where, despite present political realities, we expect fair and respectful treatment from the incoming administration.  Moving on quickly, I am particularly pleased to make a contribution as a discussant here in this session titled "Achieving Holistic and Sustainable Reforms in the Education Sector".

 

I took notes as former Minister Mr. Bolaji Abdullahi made his presentation, and I am pleased to note his key points of inter-generational education challenges, his astute differentiation between enrollment, school attendance and real functional education, his call for outcomes-based evaluation of students at each level of education, and the absolutely essential need for training, re-training and incentivization of teachers,

In making my own contributions, I would like to emphasize that under a Change environment, I would hope that we will emphasize what I term "qualitative, purpose-driven education" of ALL citizens, from cradle to grave, for pre-K children to adults.  By purpose, I emphasize first individual development, then national citizenship, but most importantly national development SPECIFIC to Nigeria, but that will at the same time make the country to be globally competitive. If we are to be really serious about national development, our education must be truly science-and-technology based,  broadly-conceived, starting very early in our educational system with curricular emphasis on mathematics, English and civic studies,  all steeped in technology-assisted teaching and learning, coupled with staff training, re-training, and credible quality assessment that has continuous student and staff testing components.     

 

Our education pipeline is as vulnerable as our oil and gas pipelines, and therefore we must address and set specific targets about what happens to "graduates" from each of the levels of our educational system. APC's manifesto commitment "to the eventual eradication of illiteracy by guaranteeing and enforcing nine (9) years of compulsory basic education to every Nigerian child, as the minimum level of formal education" [see http://www.nigerianmuse.com/20150531025819zg/change/apc-manifesto-a-new-party-for-a-new-nigeria/]  is laudable, but it must be complemented with emphasis on maximum advancement and/or employment prospects of our young and older adults as they exit at different levels (or education ramps).  We cannot afford to continue to produce discontented graduates at dead-ends at each education levels. We again note here that APC's manifesto   has a target of 75% for "transition rate from primary to secondary schools" by 2019.  

 

This ambition for qualitative, purpose-driven education requires money – to finance food, books and equipment for students, staff training as well as teaching, learning, living and recreational facilities.  APC's manifesto of tripling "education spending over the next ten years, from current 8.5% to 24.5%" (presumably near the mythical UN number of 26%)  is mathematically correct only if the total money available triples…imagine if that money shrinks by more than a third, and suddenly 24.5% becomes less than 8.5%!   What is needed is a TRUE computation of what quantum of money is needed to train students at each level, and to ask parents (through school fees), community, government (through merit- an needs-based scholarships, grants and loans) and the organized private sector (with education tax fund and tax incentives) to commit their contributions sacrificially.  School fees should not be taboo.    We need honest, efficient, effective and data-driven funding and expenditure on education to succeed, with courageous action by APC sorely needed to plug corruption-induced financial leaks that pervade Nigeria's governance, and take away resources where they are most needed.

 

Local governments should truly be empowered to handle public primary education, which is really the most important level of our education pipeline; school-friendliness, proper staff training and friendly facilities are essential here.  State governments should be empowered to take on secondary education, with greater encouragement for return to boarding schools and sectarian private ownership, with full understanding that there will be some graduates exiting at this stage who could be going into the work-force.  At the late-stage tertiary level, private (but qualitative) institutions should continue to be encouraged, but  rather than have MORE public institutions, greater emphasis should be on doubling to quintupling to increasing admissions by an order-of-magnitude increase, with the ratio mix of students being 70-30 science/technology-based students rather than humanities/social science.  Increasing access, enhancing quality, requiring regional focus, observing international standards and ensuring low-, middle- and high-level skills graduates that can work together right from the classroom must be clear objectives placed in the fore of all tertiary institutions. The public and private regulators and funders of the education industry – the federal and state ministries, commissions and boards, from NUC to NBTE, from UBEC to TetFUND, from NUT to ASUU, etc -   must be put into heightened spotlight, to ensure a less incestuous relationship between the regulators and the regulated, and to ensure corruption-free, efficient and effective funding and sacrificial advocacy.

 

In closing, I have entered into the records a table below (Table 1: Purpose-Driven Education for Change: A Framework for Preliminary Discussions) that summarizes the contributions above, as well as a related diagram (Figure 1: Politics of Change and its Rings Around the President) that places the incoming President in a spider-web of issues that separate him from the Nigerian citizen, a maze through which he must cut for true CHANGE to occur and to succeed, including in the education sector.  His personal example, the use of the presidential bully pulpit to elevate education, particularly of the girl-child, to link it with personal, citizenship and national development, and not only to rail but to act against corruption, to name a few issues, will be heavily scrutinized in the days and years to come.

 

I thank you for listening.

 

Bolaji Aluko

May 21, 2015

____________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

TABLE 1:  "PURPOSE-DRIVEN EDUCATION FOR CHANGE"  – A FRAMEWORK FOR PRELIMINARY DISCUSSIONS


(By Prof. Bolaji Aluko)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BUZZ WORDS

 

 

EDUCATION LEVELS

1

Education for Development

 

 

 

Age (UN)

Age+

2

Qualitative Education for All

 

1

Pre-Kindergaten

0-3

0-3

3

Education for Personal & Citizenship Development

 

2

Kindergaten

3-6

3-6

4

STEEM (Science, Technology, English, Engineering and Mathematics) Emphasis

 

3

Primary

7-12

7-17

5

Free, Mandatory Education to Secondary Level

 

4

Secondary

13-18

13-21

6

Subsidized Tertiary Education

 

5

Tertiary

19-29

19-33

7

Life-long Learning

 

6

Adult

>30

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

REGULATORS

 

 

ISSUES

1

Federal Ministry of Education

 

1

Students

 

2

State Ministries of Education

 

2

Academic Staff

 

3

Local Government Departments

 

3

Non-Academic Staff

 

4

Commissions

 

4

Curriculum

 

5

Boards

 

5

Teaching and Learning Facilities

 

6

Other Ministries, Departments & Agencies

 

6

Living and Recreational Facilities

 

7

Professional Bodies (Including Staff Unions)

 

7

Governance

 

 

 

 

8

Financing

 

 

OTHER CONSIDERATIONS

 

9

Community Involvement

 

1

International (Standards, Aid, Export, etc.)

 

10

Quality, Monitoring, Assessment & Accreditation

 

 

 

 

11

Post-Graduation Opportunities (Pipeline and Employment)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

____________________________________________________________________

 

 

 

 

FIGURE 1:  The Poltics of Change and its Rings Around the President

 

 

 

 

 

____________________________________________________________________

 

 

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