An educationist, Prof Busari Shaamsuddeen Akande has deduced that safe environment, required skills for industries and quality supply of electricity are some of the many reasons young Nigerians and their parents are still looking towards Ghana and Togo for higher education despite high costs.
Akande, Secretary of Council of the American Chartered
Institute of Management and Leadership, based in the State of Kentucky, USA,
spoke in an interview with DAILY POST in Calabar on Sunday.
“These smaller, neighbouring countries produce young
graduates with the required skills to support key industries.
“In Togo or Republic of Benin, there is no issue of strike.
There is quality supply of electricity, safe environment, peaceful
co-existence, tailor made specialisation of university courses.”
In his opinion, Akande said the massive size of a country
does not matter when it comes to educational success.
According to him, when a country is small, it can recover
faster, develop faster and make all the innovative changes faster.
He said higher institutions ought to be specialised so that
students come out well skilled and specialised in their chosen fields.
“Not where graduates of law from the University of
Agriculture and School of Legal Studies produce mass communicators.
“In Benin Republic, you have a university of management
strictly for management sciences.”
Akande proffered ways the country can attract investors into
the educational sector to make universities less reliant on the government.
He emphasised the quality of learning, the expansion of
higher education through alternative financing mechanisms, paying attention to
early childhood development and early reading, as some of the ways that can
appeal to investors.
“The country can create awareness of culture, engage good
teachers/instructors and make the educational sector accountable by promoting
autonomy,” he said.