Read
an insightful and interesting write-up I got today from PUNCH; which takes a critical
look at the recent ‘school fees hike’ demonstrations in OAU, LASU and UNIPORT,
and tries to proffer solution to the
problem, to prevent a future occurrence of such an anomaly. Find it after this
cut…
LAST
month, students of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, protested hike in fees.
Last week, Lagos State University, LASU, students started picketing the
Governor’s Office and disrupting traffic in parts of Lagos. University of Port
Harcourt students, this week, protested hike in fees. There are other muted
cases.
Tuition
fees in Ile-Ife were increased from N17, 000 to N100, 000, excluding an
acceptance fee of N20, 000 for new students. In LASU, the hike was from N25,
000 to N348,750. Students and their guardians have managed the burden, which is
comparable to fees in some private universities. Lagos State Government argues
that LASU must be upgraded to an excellent centre of learning. It explained
government spent more than N50 billion on LASU in the last five years.
Number
of students admitted into LASU is dropping, a reaction to the fees and
perennial crisis that engulfs the university. Enrollment dropped 5,917 (2009)
to 4,311 (2010). After the 2011 hike in fees, only 1,951 (39.79 per cent) of
the 4,903 candidates offered admission enrolled. The figure shrank to 1,119 in
2013.
The
university was shut down twice in three years, following students and staff
protests over different issues.
A
government committee recommended that the fees be reduced to N65, 500 for new
students and N46, 500 for existing students. Government has, however, agreed to
reduce the fees by as much as 60 percent.
Education
is a right. University education in state-owned institutions should not be
priced beyond the reach of ordinary Nigerians. Decision-makers tend to think
everyone is in similar circumstances as they. It is ironic that governments pay
N18, 000 as monthly minimum wage, but expect students to pay economic fees.
Where would their parents get the money?
Public
universities should not compete with private universities for fees. They are
the option for those who cannot afford high fees private universities charge.
Most
students are from poor homes. Some have withdrawn from school over fees.
Governments neglect the role of education in lifting families out of crushing
poverty. The argument of policy makers, most of who enjoyed free education, is
that education is not cheap anywhere.
We
agree, but the solution does not lie in increasing fees. In other climes
government provides grants, bursaries and various stipends to cushion the
burden on parents. It is not the same here. Also more prudent use of resources
would yield results that would save our youth from a futile future.
If
our governments cannot provide free education, they should at least provide
affordable education to liberate society from the shackles of ignorance.
Source: PUNCH

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