Opinion and Analysis
By BUSINESS DAILY
The stoppage of certain courses, including
engineering and law, from being taught in some universities has put the
higher education sector under the spotlight.
It has revealed the need to audit the courses currently
being offered by universities on the basis of whether they are
accredited and meet the expected quality in terms of instruction,
curriculum, staffing, materials and research.
There is a supervision lacuna in the way
universities are rushing ahead and starting to offer courses without
consulting with the relevant professional bodies or even seeking to meet
their own regulations on quality instruction.
You now have some varsities offering medical
degrees even without teaching hospitals. The trend is costing parents
and students money, time and even their entire livelihoods.
You now have students who have completed and
graduated in some courses only to be told that the same had not been
accredited by the relevant authorities.
While some of the graduates were expecting to be
absorbed into the job market, they have found themselves in a situation
where they have to retrain, or go into menial jobs as if they had no
papers yet they have spent years and money in training.
But the main blame it to be placed on the hands of
the university authorities who fail to take heed of the warnings issued
to them. They should be held accountable.
There are now universities scattered all over the
country, but one must ask whether such institutions are even able to
attract lecturers and other workers to keep them running.
The deterioration in the management of public
universities has been taking place for just over a decade now, but can
be traced more squarely with the onset of the parallel degree programmes
where even those holding minimum qualifications found their way to the
universities.
The institutions appear to be driven by their
intention to make money. They introduce as many courses as possible
without regard to their ability to teach them properly.
There are many cases where you have classes with
hundreds of students, but they have only one lecturer who is expected to
mark the tests as well as their term papers in a competent manner.
Even invigilating a class of 600 students during
exams becomes an arduous task that will probably leave room for many
students to cheat.
At the end of the day, one must wonder what quality of graduates will be produced in such an environment.
Private universities that have the necessary class
materials, do research and insist on quality teaching are therefore
occupying the enviable position of being able to produce graduates who
are better prepared for the job market.
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