New Telegraph

Still On Age Limit, WAEC And NECO Controversy

On the raging controversy of 18-years or nothing less before admission into the country’s institution of higher learning, the authorities have a mountain to climb if the groundswell of public opinion is anything to go by.

The policy is not new; it has been in our statute books for God-knows-when. But like many things in Nigeria, its implementation was abandoned decades back. Its latest presentation by the Minister of Education was, therefore, not the enactment of a new or novel legislation.

The message could, however, have been better packaged and its implementation less hasty and hazy but, truth be told, the policy appears the right way to go. Why rush kids into institutions of higher learning?

Why are graduate kids unable to differentiate their right hand from their left? Ask employers of labour what they face with our present crop of graduates! Letting them mature a little bit more is what operates in many other parts of the world.

So, the task now is how to go about it here in a seamless and orderly manner. It cannot be rushed. It can also not be decreed. We must all reason together. Today, I printed a few of the rejoinders to last week’s “New education policy: Another fiasco loading?”

This is a running story; therefore, the discussion must continue. What is involved is the future of our children and our children are not just the leaders of tomorrow, they are, more importantly, our future.

“A house that is built on a poor foundation must collapse. Our founding fathers, especially in the defunct Western Region, took their time to prepare for the free and compulsory primary school education that took off in 1955.

As the free primary schools took off, secondary modern schools, grade III teacher training colleges, farm settlements and vocational training institutions were simultaneously established.

The products of the primary schools who could not make it directly to secondary schools could go to the modern schools. Provisions were made for the products of secondary modern schools to go to the grade III teacher training colleges or the vocational training institutes or join the secondary school in Form II.

Many eggheads in our higher institutions today, who might not have had the opportunity to go to school at all, are testimonies to the thinking capacity of the founding fathers.

Today, we wake up to find the policies of yesterday jettisoned. This is destructive and destabilizing. We must have a working plan that we should follow steadily for some time.

Changing policies and plans abruptly can be likened onto shifting the goal post in the middle of a football game.  Pa EK Odeleye.

Nigeria! Who is going to deliver us from “jump before you leap” syndrome? Good policies but bad or wrong implementation; policies that cannot stand the test of time because of poor planning and execution! 

Are our policy makers doing all this to gain public attention or doing Nigerians any good? Why do we always put the cart before the horse, with policies being announced without any implementation strategy on ground. – Olaoye julius

“A” Level, technical colleges for two years or going for apprenticeship can be introduced to the education system. Policies can be introduced in a couple of years; not immediately.  –Olufunmilayo

The implementation of this policy ought to be delayed for at least six sessions, starting from the 2024/25 session, to accommodate those in primary and secondary schools. So, by June 2031, no student writing WASSCE will be less than 18 years of age. Olufemi

This policy must not stand. It is backward . The age limit to write WAEC and gain admission into the university is unacceptable.

This is not the problem that is affecting good governance. If a 12-year-old girl can be married to a 70-year-old man, what stops a 13-year-old from writing WAEC and gaining admission into the university?

The government must reverse the backward policy now so that young, enterprising and brilliant students will not be affected. The social effect of this policy on the country will be disastrous. Nigeria can not afford to lag behind the developing world.

In this present-day when a five-year-old Nigeria-born girl won the best drummer award with a prize money of about $1million in the United States of America!Dr. Amos Olusola Olagunju

We are citizens of two nations but natives of neither. We make use of British and American systems of education but do not appropriately apply their methods. The new education policies are not new but outdated.

In the developed countries, various approaches are adopted to allow for flexibility. There are educational programs for young children run by teams of experts, specially designed curriculums are in use to make learners achieve set targets rapdly.

So, by such programs, children in their teens could complete their first and second degrees and move on to terminal degrees. In the USA, similarly, candidates in their various compositions are allowed to take matrix exams; once most of them pass, they are qualified for admissions into the university whose matrix exam they passed.

That, here in Nigeria, our children skip classes is normal, once they are able to pass common entrance exams or any others… There were among my teachers in secondary school those who traveled abroad with their Grade 11 teachers certificates, spent three years and got their first and second degrees.

Here in Nigeria, it is impossible for Grade 11 teachers to have their first and second degrees in three years. Here in Nigeria, for students to study computer science and information systems, they must be good in science-related subjects: our citizens travel abroad to study computer-related courses without a good background in science-related subjects.

Opportunities for advancement abound abroad while having jobs to keep life going; here, our children do not have access to such opportunities.  – Oludoye.

This is the typical Nigerian government’s way of doing things. My children, as my family’s policy, did six years of primary and secondary school and were six years old before starting primary school. So, they entered the university at 18 years or thereabout. So 18 years has an advantage – maturity – but to make it a policy beats my imagination! – Bola Olowo

God bless you,brother, for this masterpiece. You have spoken the mind of many parents. How, for heaven’s sake, do I tell my daughter who will be 15 years next year while writing her WASCE that the government of the day says she must clock 18 before writing the papers?

So, is it a crime now in Nigeria that she and others in her shoes all over Nigeria are very brilliant? These brilliant students should go home and wait till they attain the prescribed age?

I can’t simply comprehend it! Remember, this was how Minister Jubril Aminu/ Babangida, in the middle of the match changed the goalposts in 1987 regarding the academic calendar for HSC candidates.

Instead of May/June of 1988, those of us affected by the policy had to write our final papers in November/ December. That was how I and others lost one academic calendar as we had to stay at home awaiting our results.

Those of us who came out successfully got admission for the 1989/1990 academic session as opposed to 1988/1989 that we had prepared for when we gained admission to study for HSC in 1986. I attended the then Oyo State College of Arts and Science (OSCAS), Ile-Ife.That was before the creation of Osun State.

And to think that millions of Southerners will be more affected makes it even suspect. – Idowu Lanre Alabi

The people in power will just wake up and start introducing policies that are not favourable, and they want Nigerians to adhere to them immediately.

This is not helping us as a nation. The funny thing is that they send their children abroad at 15, 16 and 17 years of age to start university there! – Pastor Austin Igharoro”.

From the above we can see that more enlightenment needs to be done by the relevant authorities. More time to adjust by everyone concerned is also needed.

When parents keep their children at home before they attain the age of six, what will such children be doing? The government must be interested in this and not heap the responsibility on parents alone.

A buffer zone in the name of Ä levels”should also be made available so that students who have made the “O”Level papers before 18 can move up there rather than piner away at home. These are details that must be worked out before this policy can be implemented to the satisfaction of all.

LAST WORD: Town is not smiling at all! While lingering fuel scarcity scattered everywhere, the increase in the pump price of fuel has silenced everyone.

The Minister of State for Petroleum tried to exculpate the president while pushing the NNPC under the guillotine; he must think that Nigerians are dunces!

But I do not blame him; he is just an appointee, not minding how highly he may regard himself. The man we voted for and who owes us an explanation that we can take to the bank is the president, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

It is on his desk, and not the NNPC’s, that the buck stops. So, over to you, Mr. President! We, your electors, want to hear from you on this matter!

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