Education

`Japa`: V-Cs, lecturers, others worry as lecturers abandon universities

Supreme Desk
12 Dec 2023 9:29 AM GMT
`Japa`: V-Cs, lecturers, others worry as lecturers abandon universities
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According to him, Nigerian academics are the worst paid globally, a development that has driven lecturers out of the country in mass proportions.

Some Vice-Chancellors (V-C) of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and other stakeholders expressed concern on Tuesday over the decline in the number of lecturers in the nation’s universities.

The university education stakeholders bared their minds in interviews with the newsmen.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu recently approved the implementation of 35 per cent and 23 per cent of salary increment for staff of all federal tertiary institutions。

In a letter issued on Sept. 14, the CEO of the Salaries, Income, and Wages Commission, Mr. Ekpo Nta, said the Federal Government had released a circular on the implementation of the adjusted salary structure.

The letter was addressed to the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman.

But this seems to have come late, as recent media reports indicate that about 50 percent of lecturers have resigned from the various universities, while more are reportedly warming up.

We have crisis on our hands—V-Cs

The V-C of Ilorin, Prof. Wahab Egbewole, blamed the dearth of lecturers on the employment embargo by the Federal Government.

He, therefore, pleaded with the Federal Government to lift the embargo to enable the universities to bridge the gap.

The gap was caused by a number of factors, including lecturers seeking greener pastures at home and abroad, retirement, and death.

He urged the authorities to provide the universities with an enabling environment that would discourage brain drain.

Prof. Alewo Johnson-Akubo, Vice-Chancellor, Salem University Lokoja, described the shortage of lecturers as very unfortunate.

He said that though universities in the past tried to manage the situation through sabbaticals, now such arrangements have become difficult as the number of lecturers continues to shrink.

In Yobe, Dr. Muhammad Lawan, the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Academic Yobe State University, advised the resuscitation of the culture of absorbing first-class graduates as lecturers.

Another measure, according to Lawan, that could help is to expand the existing universities instead of establishing new ones.

Also speaking, Prof. Olayemi Akinwumi, the V-C of the Federal University Lokoja (FUL), said virtually all lecturers in the countries are overstretched as a result of the shortage of lecturers.

“Each time I see what my lecturers are going through to cope with the work load, I feel it for them.

“We used to have lecturers from other universities on sabbatical, but IPPIS (the unified payment platform) doesn’t allow that anymore.

“Sabbatical is a university culture where, as a lecturer, you are given the opportunity to go to another university and lecture.

“Again, the visiting lecturers were very helpful in areas or departments where you don’t have enough lecturers. But because of poor funding on the part of the government and IPPIS, it’s no longer tenable.

“I can tell you now that this is not the best time for us, the vice chancellors.

“This is because, as V-C, you have no power to employ a single cleaner, not to mention a lecturer. You have to go to Abuja and start begging before you can have one,” he said.

The V-C urged proper funding of the universities and abolishing the removal of universities from the IPPIS platform, adding that “we (the universities) shouldn’t be subjected to civil service rules’’.

The quality of degrees is in jeopardy—ASUU

University lecturers, who bear the brunt of the exit of their colleagues, are also worried by the impact of this on their workload and academic standards.

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) at the Federal University of Lafia (FULafia) says the shortage of lecturers in Nigerian universities is affecting the standard and quality of education negatively.

“It is a fact that many lecturers have left the university system in Nigeria. This exodus is defined by the poor working conditions existing in universities.

“The universities are coping largely because the few existing lecturers are being over burdened with excess work load that is academic

“And in most departments, lecturers are made to teach large classes and more courses to be able to keep the courses running.

“It is common to find a lecturer teaching at all levels of a department with very poor facilities and very poor working conditions,” said Dr Sunday Oraye, the Chairman, ASUU FULafia

The ASUU chairman said that this has put undue pressure on their health, leading to high mortality rates amongst lecturers at the university.

“During the last NEC meeting of the union held at Kaduna State University in November, over 100 lecturers were reported to have died between August and November 2023 alone,” he said

In Adamawa, Dr. El-Maude Gambo, the ASUU chairman at Modibbo Adama University (MAU), Yola, urged for 30 percent budgetary allocation to education.

He said this would engender the provision of facilities that would discourage lecturers from seeking greener pastures.

Dr. Oluwagbemiga Adeleye, the chairman of ASUU, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB), blamed the shortage of lecturers on government policies and the bad economy.

“When there is a ban, you won’t be able to replace lecturers who are no longer in the system.

“Another reason causing the shortage is the negative economic impact on the citizens, and it still boils down to government policies.

“The terrible economic situation we have faced has made some lecturers seek greener pastures elsewhere around the world, and that is what we call the ‘Japa’ syndrome,” he said.

The FUNAAB ASUU chairman called on the government to be more responsible in taking care of not only academic staff but all university members of staff.

Lecturers cry out

The Head of Department, Guidance and Counselling, University of Ibadan, Prof. Oyesoji Aremu, says the history of the migration of lecturers from Nigeria is repeating itself.

“In the 1980s, there was a similar scenario. Then it was called brain drain, but currently, it is called ‘japa’.

“The ‘Japa’ syndrome, which has been on for a while now, has brought nightmares to the Nigerian university system.

“This is because of the high migration of lecturers to Europe, America, Asia, and even some African countries,” he said.

He blamed the situation on a number of factors, adding, “First among these is the working environment in many universities in Nigeria, which has dampened the morale of many academics.

“Another factor is poor remuneration, which is abysmally inhuman and disturbing,” Aremu said.

According to him, Nigerian academics are the worst paid globally, a development that has driven lecturers out of the country in mass proportions.

“While there are others, the two above are very crucial to the issue of a shortage of lecturers.

“The consequences of these are tellingly disturbing for the university system in Nigeria,” Aremu said.

Dr. Idris Badiru, Senior Lecturer, Department of Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, University of Ibadan, said the gravity of the shortage varied from one discipline to the next.

“Everything has to get to Abuja before anything is done, and the coping mechanisms are both institutional and individual.

“At the institutional level, the workload allocated to the available academic staff has simply increased, which means more responsibilities for the individual staff.

“At the individual level, the academic will only do his best and leave the rest.

“If there is enough intrinsic motivation, the academic may start altering his work/life balance to deny his family the quality time that is due to them,” Badiru said.

Dr. Onatolani Hassan, Lecturer, Department of Business Education, Tai Solarin University of Education (TASUED), Ijebu-Ode, identified poor welfare and poor working conditions as some factors responsible for the menace.

“Most lecturers are travelling out of the country in pursuit of greener pastures. The salaries have not been increased for a long time.

“The inflation rate is in double digits, eating deep into the income of lecturers, which had remained static while expenses are increasing on a daily basis.

“Lecturers are now funding their own research; no more grants from expected quarters. There is a heavy workload for the few lecturers you have on hand.

“The government has not employed in the past 10 to 15 years, while professors are retiring.

“There are vacancies, but the university management cannot recruit. There is a heavy workload on the lecturers that are on the ground,” he said.

Hassan called on the government to increase funding for tertiary institutions to alleviate the situation.

Ibrahim Kachala, a lecturer in the Department of Political Science at the University of Maiduguri, said that the last eight years of the previous administration had wreaked havoc on the university system.

Kachala said that government policies and a nonchalant attitude towards public university education in Nigeria had affected the development of tertiary education in the country.

He said this situation would worsen in 2024, when most of the professors employed in the 1970s would exit the system.

Mr. Usman Abdallah, of the department of mass communications, said a lack of government funding had made the university unsuitable for learning and research.

Another lecturer, Sheriff Bamus, urged private organisations to be mandated to utilise the universities for their research and development (R&D).

“As it is done in other cultures, businesses and private organisations should be mandated to utilise the universities for their R&D requirements as part of their corporate social responsibilities.

Dr. Adeola Olatunji, Senior Lecturer, Department of Sociology, University of Lagos, says the shortage of manpower is having a negative impact on teaching, research, and community service.

This, he said, has made lecturers overburdened with class work as the student population continues to climb.

“I, therefore, call on the Federal Government to lift the embargo on recruitment for universities to address the widening gap,” he said.

According to him, with the provision of an enabling environment through improved remuneration and adequate facilities in the nation’s universities, fewer Nigerians will travel out for greener pastures.

Dr. Ibrahim Nasir, Senior Lecturer, Department of Political Science, Prince Abubakar Audu University, Ayingba, Kogi, said that universities were coping with a shortage of lecturers’ through improvisation.

“To say that there is a shortage of lecturers at the Nigerian University is an understatement.

“This is evident in the lecturer-to-student ratio in all the universities. In most cases, you have a ratio of one lecturer to over 2,050 students.

“The main reason for this shortage of lecturers in the university system is usually poor remuneration. The take-home salary is grossly inadequate compared to what is obtainable globally.

“We improvise by lumping classes together, where you will have large numbers of students to teach at a time in a class.

“This means where you are supposed to have four or five lecturers, you will have only one lecturer taking care of them," he said.

According to him, lecturers also deploy the grouping system where they have batches A, B, and C.

“In this case, you have to fix extra lectures to see how you can finish a course outline within the shortest possible time.

“Even at that, you have to struggle and even go into the weekend to see how you can meet up.

“These are some of the measures we undertake to bridge the gap in universities. The shortage of lecture halls also added to our stress,” he said.

Others React

Meanwhile, Mr. Yinka Folarin, National Vice President, Committee for the Defence of Human Rights (CDHR), said the shortage of lecturers had in no small measure impacted negatively on the nation’s education system.

Folarin said that the situation had affected the quality of graduates in Nigeria’s university system.

“It interprets retrogressively the premium paid to education and the strong deficit status of our commitment to education advancement in Nigeria. No country seeking progress manipulates its education sector,” he said.

The CDHR official urged governments to prioritise timely recruitment and replacement of lecturers on retirement or relocation for greener pastures.

A former V-C of the University of Ibadan, Prof. Idowu Olayinka, reckoned that government policies had made recruitment in public universities nearly impossible since 2015.

The problem, he said, was compounded by the introduction of the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information System (IPPIS) into the operations of federal universities.

He said that leading universities in other parts of the world enjoyed autonomy and flexibility to attract the best minds from any part of the world.

“With the implementation of the IPPIS, the V-C can no longer use his or her good office to engage new faculty without seeking permission from all manner of ministries, departments, and agencies in Abuja.

“It would seem that there is an undisclosed grand design to strangulate and frustrate federal universities in particular and all the public universities in general,” Olayinka said.

A parent, Mrs. Funmilola Adebayo, said that if a holistic approach was not applied in addressing the challenge, products of the university system would parade questionable certificates.

“We are heading in a direction where a shortage of lecturers will result in anybody coming into the profession to impact any kind of knowledge on the students,” she said.

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