Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2011


How about legalizing examination malpractice?
If you are surprised at the oddity of this topic, then I can surmise that you are not familiar with the new trend of legalization making wave in the country. I see hope for ‘some’ students in Nigeria since, as reported by Daily Trust and many other media houses across the nation, our ‘dear’ Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, has come up with a ‘reasonable’ solution to human trafficking in the country by asking the House to consider legalizing prostitution in the country and his standing was covertly seconded in some ways by the Senate President, David Mark, when he overtly stated that eradicating the ‘profession’ – prostitution, have become somewhat unfeasible, and that in Abuja, commercial sex workers have organised themselves into an organization and are well represented by legal practitioners. At least students can start lobbying for the motion to legalize examination malpractice.

In other words, if the motion to legalize prostitution could be moved, I believe concerned students will want to know why motions cannot be moved to legalize examination malpractice in the country. Since the only excuse given for this repugnant move by the Deputy Senate President was the fact eradicating prostitution has become unattainable. Students, lecturers and stakeholders will agree that wiping out the menace of examination malpractice in the country is somehow unachievable. Boards like JAMB, WAEC, NECO, NABTEB, e.t.c., though will not publicly consent with this notion; they know well that all their efforts to eradicate this malady have become futile. They have hence stopped talking about eradicating it, but reducing it.

For a second, I imagine the period when students in Nigerian tertiary institution will carry more than their normal Students’ Identity Card. Picture a time when students will carry another ID card that reads “Licensed to Cheat.” Envisage a period when students will be expelled not because they were involved in examination malpractice, but because they do not have licenses to practice it. Visualise a situation when students will be expelled not because examination malpractice is a crime, but because they were carrying expired licenses. Imagine a time when students will queue up in the newly formed Examination Malpractice ‘Licensing Bureau’ in the same proportion they queue up for Academic Registration. Students with penchant for engaging in examination malpractice are now not without hopes. Going by the Senate President and his Deputy’s stand on prostitution, it appears all students in the country have to do to get legal backing for examination malpractice is to take the social vice to the level of human trafficking to gain recognition from the likes of Deputy Senate President Ekweremadu.

If the words from the mouths of our noble Senate President and his Deputy are anything to go about, then there is a whole bunch of other legislations awaiting the House. At least, it is common knowledge that corruption in the high places had been legalized, even though unwritten, since 1999. Questions can thus be asked if the recent scourge of ex-governors’ arrest and trials by EFCC is due to the fact that they do not possess the so-called license to steal public funds or because some unseen hands had revoked their license?

It is only in our dear nation that thieves do not only have the prerogative to accuse other thieves, but they have undeniable rights to charge them for the same crime they also are guilty of. Anyone that can see beyond the facade can see that our politicians not only carry a placard of “Licensed to Lie” but also an ID card that reads “Licensed to Siphon Public Funds.”

A popular Yoruba adage says if we intend to scratch our body by the rate of the itches, we will scratch off our skin. If Ike Ekweremadu and his cohorts think any menace that appears unsolvable should be legalized, very soon, we will have national bodies like National Association of Armed Robbers, United Terrorists Front, Nigerian Association of Prostitutes, to mention but a few. And not only that, tertiary institutions should seek accreditation for departments like; Department of Prostitutions, Department of Armed & Robbery, Department of Terrorism, Department of Advance Corrupt Practices, and the likes; all of them presumably lumped under one faculty umbrella, say Faculty of Social Vices.
We all cannot remain blind to the fact that what is bad is bad. If people of political hierarchy like our ‘beloved’ senators cannot think of a better way to curb social ills than to legalize it, then where is the way forward for us? If we lose faith in those that suppose to make laws that’ll move us forward, where then are we going? We cannot run away from the truth just because it stares at us.

As Martin Luther King Jr. said in his famous “I have a dream” speech, “... in the process of gaining our rightful places, we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds.” We should always remember that whatever we seek out of life will be justified not in whether we ended up with it but in how we ended up with it. Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for propriety by drinking from the cup of immorality.

Clement Adebayo Oloyede is a student of Department of Mass Communication, Bayero University, Kano. 08069196498, franklydammy@gmail.com

Saturday, July 23, 2011


... NOT JUST  SUCCESS, BUT UTMOST  SUCCESS
George Orwell, author of Animal Farm, despite saying 'All animals are equal but some are more equal than others' in the aforementioned novel also gave a somewhat conflicting postulation in another when he said 'We all have equal right to be unequal'. The salient point in these assertions is that whichever way you see it, we are all equal and we all have equal rights to be more successful. And those that become more successful than others only attain this height by learning to utilise their potentialities than others. It is factual that getting to the top is easy after you get through the crowd at the bottom. Don’t be deceived, there is a thick line distinguishing success from utmost success. And for the record, utmost success is not Utopian.

Paraphrasing Charles Kendall Adams, no one ever attains very eminent success by doing what is expected of him; it is the amount and excellence of what is over and above the required that determines the greatness of utmost distinction. Most people erroneously believe the expectation of lecturers in the forthcoming examinations is for us to give them what folks fondly call GIGO - Garbage In Garbage Out. Well, when all we can do as students is doing only what is expected of us, then all we'll have is partial success.

But if we can go beyond the extra-ordinary; make personal researches coupled with what we were taught, without trying to assert our level of intelligence and ridiculing the lecturer's own method of teaching; the outcome of this effort is not just success, but utmost success – success that can withstand the test of time, success that ‘cramming’ alone cannot give. For what shall we say then, after finishing a session with First Class or 2nd Class Upper, we cannot defend this result neither can we impart this (knowledge) unto others; this will be worse than failure.

Let me conclude by wishing everyone of us what we wish for ourselves in these examinations and the examination of life in general. Henry Hazlitt posits that "A strong passion for anything will ensure its success, for the desire of the end will point out the means.” My thought about everyone in this institution – age, sex, ethnic or religious differences notwithstanding is captured in the last stanza of my poem 'Her Open Secrets':

Even when her dreamed 5.00 seems improbable,
She keeps saying it is achievable.
Someone scoffed, "This lady is imaginary."
I replied, "In B.U.K. it's nothing but reality."

Saturday, July 9, 2011


ON THE RAGE ON CAMPUS – POP-CORN

Recently, a friend of mine (T-elti), posted on her 2go status this caption: “A virus is widely spreading in BUK new campus. Guess what?” I have to admit, with shame it took me a while to guess right the name of this virus. At last I got it! In my own English: “Pop-cornilisation” – the new form of socialisation on campus.

Let me register my surprise and contempt at the level this socialisation has eaten deep into the skin of most students. And I should quickly point out that my argument is not against the pop-corn itself nor its maker, but at the way students on this campus have turn the development into a thing of disgrace and shame on our  level of education.

I stand to be corrected on my suppositions here, but I remember clearly without any atom of doubt whatsoever that one of the morals imparted in us in our Health Education classes from our primary school level is “code of conduct on the road” of which eating while on the road (walking or driving) was seriously frowned at. It’s now a common frenzy to see students everywhere on campus eating pop-corn while walking. And some have taken this repugnant act to their various classes. My amazement was concealed a little when I saw guys in this act, judging from our carefree attitude; but I was stupefied beyond doubt to realise that our ladies, known for their propriety, are now a partner in this amoral act. This virulent disease is ignominious and its rate of spreading is alarming.

T-elti asked me a question which I am now asking all serious minded students: “What happened to the teachings on thou shall not eat while on the road?”  We as future leaders should be pace-setters of morality not destroyers of established morality.

I should make my standing clear to avoid misconceptions. This write-up, as some shallow minded people cannot but point out, is not an envious write-up against the maker of this said pop-corn. As a matter of fact if given the right, I’ll vote for the maker as the entrepreneur of the year. That being said however, morality shouldn’t give way for westernization in the guise of modernisation; eating on the road is a bad habit which should be frowned upon by all parties involve.

Let us join our hands together to fight this epidemic (eating on the road) before it spreads beyond our control.