POVERTY ERADICATION, NEW EDUCATIONAL ORIENTATION & SCHOOL FOR LIFE
On the 9th of December this year, I was at the Gregory
University Uturu( GUU)Abia State at the 2nd Convocation Ceremony of the young
tertiary institution. I listened to several academic speeches but was
thoroughly impressed by the Convocation lecture delivered by His Excellency
Edward D. Singhatey, Vice-President of the ECOWAS Commission. His speech on '
Poverty eradication through capacity building and socio-economic empowerment'
resonated so much with me, perhaps because this has become my life's work. In
our foundation- SOFEE, and much of the other work we do, our primary focus is
on economic empowerment based on capability and capacity enhancement.
But whereas our
interventions have been focused mainly at post-formal education points- young
graduates, young businessmen & entrepreneurs or those transiting from paid
employment to self-employment, HE Edward Singhatey seems to propose a more
radical approach to dealing with this issue. Hear him-" We fervently
believe that what students in impoverished regions need are not more academic
skills, but rather Life Skills that enable them improve their financial
prospects and well being. These include financial literacy and entrepreneurial
skills; health maintenance and management skills; and administrative
capabilities, such as teamwork, problem solving and project management" In
other words, If we truly want to eradicate poverty in Africa, then the
interventions have to begin at primary and secondary school levels and proceed
through the Universities and Polytechnics. To buttress his point, he quoted a
UNESCO 2015 statistics that showed for example that Niger Republic was 2nd
among the top 10 performers on primary school enrollment in Africa, yet Niger
remains one of the poorest countries in Africa.
Ambassador Singhatey went further to
assert" Emphasis should shift the goal of schooling from the strict achievement of standard
learning outcomes, but towards making a positive impact on the economic and social-well being of students
and their communities. This model requires significant change in content and
pedagogy". This model he code named " school for life". He
recommends that Entrepreneurship and Health modules should be mandatory
curriculum at every level of education and then that student- centered learning
methods should be used that require students to work in groups to solve complex
problems and manage projects on their own, so that they can build important
life skills.
To support this
proposition for a rethink of our educational orientation which is not entirely
novel, but which has not gotten enough traction in much of Africa, he quoted a
few educational philosophers. Two excite me. Paulo Freire said" There is
no such thing as neutral education process. Education either functions as an
instrument which is used to facilitate the integration of generations into the
logic of the present system and bring about conformity to it, or it becomes the
'practice of freedom', the means by which men and women deal critically with
reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their
world" Today in Africa, much of our education is to achieve conformity to
the existing system, not to liberate the people to transform their world.
Little wonder we have a growing army of the unemployed educated.
Marc J. Epstein, a
distinguished research professor of Management at Rice University, working
together with Kristi Yuthas, a Swigert Endowed information systems management
Chair at Portland State University pointed out; " For too long, governments
and organizations investing in developing-world education have operated under
the unquestioned assumption that improved test scores were clear evidence that
their investments have paid off. But if as we argue here, mastery of the basic
primary school curriculum is not the best means for improving life chances and
alleviating poverty in developing countries, that model is broken. Investing in
interventions that produce the highest test scores is no longer a valid
approach for allocating scarce educational dollars or the scarce time available
for the development of young minds. It is time to seek out the interventions
that lead to the greatest social and economic impact for the poor"
I can not help but
agree with Ambassador Singathey, Paulo Freire, Marc Epstein and Kristi
Yuthas that we need to rethink education
delivery in Africa. For example, It is true that the traditional definition of
school quality in the developing world is based on content mastery. But we agree
that using traditional schooling approaches during the few precious years most
children will spend in schools leads to wasted resources and forgone
opportunities for many individuals and communities. Therefore, governmental
agencies and organizations that support and promote quality education for all
children must move beyond traditional models to help children develop
knowledge, skills and attitudes that are relevant to their lives and that can
lift them out of poverty.
Ambassador Singathey
concluded his wonderful speech with this:" I also know that one private
University, on whose ground I stand- the Gregory University Uturu, is
graduating scholars who are sufficiently grounded in ethics and
entrepreneurship. Thank God for a newer beginning and a grand shinning light
and academic showing" And to that I say Amen while I add my prayer that
the Governments of Nigeria responsible for education and other private
educational institutions must rethink our educational orientation and begin to
teach life skills to all students at the earliest opportunity. This is the call
for this season. I know that something is being done at the tertiary level
today but the call is to make this ' school of life' a cradle to the grave
orientation that will ensure that many are quickly empowered at the earliest opportunity
to be job and wealth creators. That is the paradigm that will help break the
poverty cycle in most of Africa.
Mazi Sam I. Ohuabunwa OFR
sam@starteamconsult.com
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