The Growth,
When, about 20 years ago, signboards announcing Heritage University
sprang up around Kaduna, many thought the founders were setting the
stage for the emergence of private university education in Nigeria,
especially in the disadvantaged areas. Today, even the faded remnants of
those signboards cannot be found. The much heralded Heritage University
never took off.
Nigeria’s 170 million people have a grand total of 156 universities,
when we should have at least two or three thousand. This explains why
only 10% of the 1.7 million candidates that sat for UTME last month will
secure admission. Clearly, there is a huge gap between the number of
candidates and available spaces – a gap that government is unable or
unwilling to close.
In the southern states, private groups and individuals took on the
challenge by establishing private universities, many of which have
produced several batches of graduates. But in the already educationally
disadvantaged north, the groups and individuals with the financial and
political muscle to establish or support the growth of private
universities are, as usual, “missing in action”.
Of Nigeria’s 156 universities, 51 are private, but only 10 are in the
north. If those allied to religious or special interest groups are
removed, American University of Nigeria, Yola, and Baze University,
Abuja, may emerge as the only northern owned and accredited private
universities.
To put the situation in proper perspective, Kano state, with its
population of over 10 million people, has no private university; indeed,
the entire North-west zone, comprising Kano, Katsina, Jigawa, Kaduna,
Sokoto, Kebbi and Zamfara, with a population of about 40 million people,
does not have a single private university. While there may be concerns
that given the high cost of private education and the inadequacy of
qualified teaching staff, if it would be rational to establish more
private universities in Nigeria; the answer is yes.
True, few families can afford private universities, but they have
many advantages; the cost of training students abroad is very high –
reaching upwards of millions of naira per student per annum – monies
that could create jobs and stimulate economic growth. Also, many
families have found to their cost that sending children to schools
abroad may not necessarily produce the better students in terms of
qualification or moral development – many students sent abroad ended up
victims of alcoholism or drug addiction. Having private universities
here will help parents monitor their children’s development in person,
not through vague progress reports from foreign schools.
Currently, the 10 private universities in the north are: Al-Hikmah
University, Ilorin, founded in 2005; African University of Science and
Technology, Abuja (2007); American University of Nigeria, Yola (2003);
Baze University, Abuja (2011); Bingham University, New Karu, Nasarawa
state (2005); Katsina University, Katsina (2005); Nigerian-Turkish Nile
University (2009); Salem University, Lokoja (2007); University of Mkar,
Benue state (2005) and Wukari Jubilee University, Wukari, Taraba state
(2005).
At the moment, countries like Ghana, South Africa, Malaysia, India,
Cyprus, UK and the US are draining Nigeria of hundreds of billions of
naira per annum from Nigerian students studying there. According to the
U.S. Embassy Educational Advising Center, Nigeria sends more students to
the United States than any other country in sub-Saharan Africa, with
over 6,500 students studying at over 733 institutions. There are 71,000
Nigerian students in Ghana, costing Nigeria N160 billion; the federal
government spent more than N900 million to sponsor 150 students abroad
in 2011, nearly 10 per cent of the 14.14 billion allocated to Nigerian
universities.
In the same year, there were 17,585 Nigerians studying in UK
universities. A report in 2010 shows that Nigeria fuels the UK education
sector to the tune of N246 billion; over 60 per cent of the 2012
education allocation. It is estimated that by 2015, there will be about
30,000 Nigerian students in the UK – about seven per cent of the total
UK university population.
Given that the costs of private universities may be beyond many,
there are alternatives to private universities in the form of community
colleges. A community college is a public institution of higher
education and is characterized by a two-year curriculum that leads to
either a bachelor’s degree or prepares students to transfer to a regular
degree programme. The transfer programme parallels the first two years
of a four-year degree programme while degree programme generally
prepares students for direct entrance into an occupation.
Community colleges usually have low tuition, are established locally
and have relatively easy entrance requirements. If we are to give hope
and a sense of belonging to the millions of youth across Nigeria that
currently lack education, no real-life skills and no job prospects,
every senatorial zone should strive to establish a community college,
paid for from public and private resources.
As for the ‘big’ men, granted, not all of them can establish private
universities, but those with the means should support existing ones by
creating educational endowments or initiating scholarship schemes to
help bright but indigent students to attend the few existing private
universities, while also exploring ways of creating and supporting
community colleges. Nigeria cannot afford to lose another generation of
young people.
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