The First Class degrees galore By Reuben Abati
The Daily Trust newspaper has published an interesting feature story (May 15), on the sudden surge in the number of First Class degrees being churned out by Nigerian universities. Daily Trust reports that its investigation reveals that in the last five years, 16 Nigerian universities have produced a total of 3, 499 first class graduates.Between 2011 and 2016, 12 of these universities produced 2, 822 First Class graduates, and it seems this First Class galore is a growing fashion particularly among the private universities.
This trend should
ordinarily be a good thing: if Nigeria can manage to produce more First
Class intellects, this should reflect on the long run on the country’s
business, social, economic and cultural life. We would have more Ph.Ds
hopefully, and so produce more qualified, research academics, especially
now that close to 60% of Nigerian university lecturers do not have a
Ph.D. The more brilliant persons a country’s education system is able to
produce, the better, such persons can indeed make a significant
difference and drive the leadership process on all fronts.
The only problem is
that this growing trend needs to be interrogated. Previously, a First
Class degree, the equivalent of a Distinction, was something quite rare,
awarded by Departments after very careful consideration. I am not too
sure that the entire Faculty of Arts of the University of Ibadan would
have awarded up to 3,000 First Class degrees in the entire history of
that Faculty. University departments talked about a First Class as if
it was a comet. When students got a 2:1, they were the real lords of the
Department, and even then a 2:1 was never given out in bus-loads.
I recall the story of a
former colleague at the University of Calabar who was denied a First
Class in those days, because he slapped a young lecturer, who had just
been recruited and who did not know that this particular student was the
star of the department and his Faculty. It was our final exam. He was
summoned to appear before a disciplinary panel and told matter-of-factly
that university degrees were awarded on the basis of character and
learning. Check: it was always character before learning.
He made the First
Class grade, but they gave him a 2:1. He was later appointed a Graduate
Assistant though. He was also recommended for a Commonwealth Scholarship
and sent to Cambridge for graduate studies. He would later prove to be a
true First Class Brain. It was also the practice in those days for
lecturers to remind brilliant students of the achievements of those who
had obtained First Class degrees. Because they were not too many, a
First Class graduate served for many years as a role model for
succeeding generations.
It was also the case
that there were more First Class graduates in the Sciences, Engineering
and the Applied Sciences. The Humanities produced fewer First Class
graduates. Some of our lecturers used to ask: “What do you want to write
that will earn you a First Class? You must be really exceptional to
know all the answers in literature, history or philosophy?” Those were
the days when a Professor would start a class and frighten you with the
information that the last student who scored an A grade in the course
was a certain Professor so and so who ‘sat in this same class 30 years
ago!’ If you must get an A, you’d have to prove to me that you are
smarter than him”.
University authorities
created such big myths around a First Class degree that many students
just didn’t want to kill themselves trying to get one, only to be
disappointed at the end of the day. The students who tried were not
necessarily popular. They were labeled “Triangular Students”,
“Bookworm”, “Effiko”, or “Akukwo”. Students in the 2:1 category felt
more relaxed, many of them could even be as good as the First Class
students, but just didn’t bother to apply themselves hard enough. The
2:2 students were easily the most popular. They would proudly tell you
“they wanted to pass through the university and also allow the
university to pass through them.” Maybe they were right.
In later life, many
2:2 graduates still ended up with Ph.Ds and even became Professors, or
captains of industry. We also had those students in the Third Class and
Pass categories: we referred to them jokingly as the “let my people go,
no-future-ambition crowd”. If you ended up with a First Class, your
colleagues congratulated and admired you, but they didn’t feel like they
had failed in any way. The Nigerian education system in those days was
so good every graduate left the campus confident that he or she had
been well-equipped. First Class graduates by the way did not enjoy any
special privileges. There were employment opportunities in the country.
Companies came to the schools and the youth corps camps to recruit
prospective staff, and many “let my people go” graduates also got jobs
and opportunities as soon as they graduated!
So much has changed.
It looks like there is now a greater emphasis on people getting better
paper grades, and with the way our universities are churning out the
First Class grades, very soon, there will be a First Class graduate on
every street corner. One justification given for this is that the
population of students in Nigerian universities and the number of
courses, have increased. With 153 universities, we should logically, so
the argument goes, expect more First Class graduates. It is also
possible that university students in Nigeria today are smarter than the
ones before them.
Except that the quality
of their grades is at variance with the quality of their skills or the
environment that is producing them. No one will argue that the quality
of our universities, both private and public, is poor, for instance.
Where are the outstanding scholars in our universities who are breeding
First Class graduates? Where are the First Class universities churning
out high grades?
Within the same period
that Nigerian universities produced more than 3, 000 First Class
graduates, only one Nigerian university –the University of Ibadan- was
ranked among the world’s top 800 universities, number 601 as at
September 2015. In the older Nigerian system that I described, Nigerian
universities boasted of world-class intellectuals, with some of them
ranking among the very best in their fields. There were top research
libraries and laboratories in our universities and the environment was
conducive for intellectual pursuit.
Obafemi Awolowo
University, known then as the University of Ife, was considered the most
beautiful campus in Africa! Tourists visited our universities to visit
either the zoos or take pictures. The animals in the zoos have been
sold or eaten, the libraries are old, with a few now digitalized, the
laboratories are either non-existent or they lack equipment. The
university authorities complain of poor funding; the lecturers do not
always get their salaries and research grants.
The idea of the
university is in trouble. These days, Nigerian academics become
Professors with “scholarly, research essays” published in departmental
journals or in journals published by their friends in other departments
and printed in Somolu or Dubai. There are Professors who have never
published an article in a leading international journal or conducted any
significant research. A National Universities Commission official
quoted by the Daily Trust tried to justify the First Class galore
in Nigerian universities by saying NUC is not aware of anybody buying
First Class degrees and that “our system is one of the best.” I hope
that is not the mind-set of the NUC.
Could it be that the
examinations have become too easy or that the teachers have become less
rigorous in setting standards? It is sad to hear for example, that
students in the Humanities, and Management and Social Sciences in some
universities now sit only for multiple-choice examinations at the end of
the semester, because they are so many and the lecturers can’t mark
exam papers?
Our education system
is far behind the rest of the world. Are we dealing with a problem of
grade inflation? Any degree at all, is useless without the skills and
competence to justify it. Private universities in Nigeria are reportedly
more notorious for giving out high grades as a marketing strategy to
attract rich parents to patronize them. A First Class or 2:1 degree may
get you a job, and provide you an advantage in the face of the
unemployment crisis in the country, but what will keep you on the job is
something far more than the paper you hold: talent, skills, competence,
creativity, people and communication skills and the ability to work
with a team to achieve results. Many employers of labour in Nigeria,
have had to retrain new recruits because they are often confronted with
graduates with good grades, who can neither write nor think, or who may
have learnt whatever they know through simulation or alternative
methods. This is the real, worrisome trend, and it only gets worse: the
evidence can be seen, increasingly, in the low quality of public
debate, the public and private sectors and our cultural life.
Many professional
associations try to raise the bar by setting rigorous standards for
membership qualification, but of what use is a university system that
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