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“He (Senator Adeyeye) is saying what some of us without loyalty to ASUU have been saying---that some of the demands and expectations of ASUU are simply unreasonable, even outrageous when juxtaposed with academic cultures all over the world… Sometimes I wonder what some of these demands and expectations are modeled on. ”
It is heartening to know that the Senator has something to say about the “ demands and expectations” of a tiny, tiny, select, leechy minority of Nigerians- legislators and other public officials whose demands and expectations are equally “outrageous ( or even worse) when juxtaposed with public service cultures all over the world “ and are met without fail? Many Nigerians and I sometimes wonder what some of those demands and expectations all of which are regularly met out of government budgets, regardless of budgetary constraints and stresses are modeled on.
oa
oa
From: usaafric...@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafric...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Moses Ebe Ochonu
Sent: Monday, October 28, 2013 11:49 AM
To: USAAfricaDialogue
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Senator Adeyeye responds to ASUU
Okay o, di show don start o. I'm happy that our progressive friend, Senator Sola Adeyeye has waded into this matter with commonsensical, constructive suggestions and reasoned critiques of the ASUU position.
I know Professor Adeyeye personally, and he cannot be branded an establishment person or a hater of ASUU. He is calling it as he sees it. He is saying what some of us without loyalty to ASUU have been saying---that some of the demands and expectations of ASUU are simply unreasonable, even outrageous when juxtaposed with academic cultures all over the world. Sometimes I wonder what some of these demands and expectations are modelled on. I know we like to copy things from other climes and cite academic conventions from the West as gold standards of compensation, but most of the remunerative demands and innovations that ASUU has pushed and continues to push are alien to American, British, Canadian, and other Western academic systems.
I agree with Senator Adeyeye "that the implacable demands by ASUU are fueled by resentment at the cult of obscene privileges which Nigerian politicians have become." However, this comparison is misleading and misguided, for as Senator Adeyeye stated, "our task [as academics] is to curb needless privileges rather than add to them"
I hope that Dr. Ajiboye will take Senator Adeyeye up on his challenge to debate the ASUU-FG problem on prime time Television. It would go a long way to enlighten the public and cut through the all the sophistry.
Has the Senator ceased to be an academic? He calls himself professor does he not? He should start by exemplifying his righteousness with the corrupt elite group that he apparently is part of should he not? When and how often have you heard or read that he preached/preaches to his colleagues and other leeches in government on their profligate practice of public governance and betrayal of trust? Why has he chosen to start with ASUU? “They” traditionally pick soft targets/victims do they not? Thank goodness ASUU is not a too-soft one. The Igbo say that true beauty starts from the inside. Righteousness should too.
Who is to say that the National Assembly does not have a higher annual budgetary allocation than Nigeria’s tertiary education sector does, if all the Assembly’s members’ cryptic financial steals are properly booked and reported? Why does the National Assembly not insist that all in government keep all transactions’ books properly and sanction violators? The Senator knows that that government cannot afford to keep an agreement it entered freely with ASUU, signed without duress, and announced to the Nigerian public. He does not seem to know however, that Nigeria cannot afford the cost and nature of government that he has been proudly part of. Is this ignorance of his one of convenient choice? We know of course that awareness and knowledge can be conveniently a’la carte for perfunctory politicians.
For some friends and supporters, Adeyeye can do no wrong. He cannot be a subject of legitimate commentary and other discourse even though it is his choice to be a Senator. He is now a career legislator. I do not know the man. I would not change anything though if I did. I still do not understand that he finds the company that he is in, one he should be part of if he is the man that some people say that he is. Whether or not he was always duly elected to the high office of legislator is a conversation for another time. Everyone knows about selections for elections in Nigeria.
MO may have read my post but may not have fully understood it. I question Adeyeye’s posturing on the ASUU challenge which strikes me as roundly hypocritical. He sits there as a Senator, drawing compensation that he knows he and his colleagues have not earned, and are therefore undeserving of. He has lived and worked overseas. He must be presumed to be not oblivious of the imperatives of and compulsion for efficient budgetary allocation and utilization of public funds, especially in a developing country. He knows that the resources expended on him and his colleagues for little or useless work can be better employed in the true service of the Nigerian people. He still finds it in good conscience and taste to criticize concerned fellow citizens who at a high personal cost to themselves and their families, have undertaken to fight a good, public interest fight that he is better than most Nigerians, positioned to fight but has meekly fought at best. All he seems to be willing to do is talk sometimes about waste in government. What about some action from him? Has anyone thought for a moment about what might may continue to happen to higher education funding in Nigeria, if ASUU had not brought this overdue subject to the front burner again? Adeyeye and his colleagues would remain seated in Abuja, soaking in and sedated by corruption and waste, plundering Nigeria’s abundant resources on themselves, families, friends, and frivolous causes.
Like Adeyeye, many Nigerians have their children studying outside Nigeria. Unlike him, these Nigerians and I demand that the Nigerian government recognizes that the proper and competitive funding of public education in Nigeria is a higher priority than the undeserved and imprudent compensation of legislators and other public officials, and does what needs to be done. Adeyeye talks about what he calls resentment driving ASUU members determination to change government’s public education policy. What in the woods is wrong with legitimate resentment? Resentment is sometimes justified. If Adeyeye is right, ASUU members’ resentment is better than warranted. Enough of holier-than- thou posturing. Talk is cheap. Action is it. Let progressive change begin.
"He knows that the resources expended on him and his colleagues for little or useless work can be better employed in the true service of the Nigerian people. He still finds it in good conscience and taste to criticize concerned fellow citizens who at a high personal cost to themselves and their families, have undertaken to fight a good, public interest fight that he is better than most Nigerians, positioned to fight but has meekly fought at best."
This is a classic case of barking up the wrong tree. Next, you'll be blaming Adeyeye for not solving Boko Haram, election rigging, corruption, inter-communal crisis, oil bunkering, and other challenges facing Nigeria. Are you suggesting that being a Senator robs him of his citizenship right to criticize ASUU or any other body he does not agree with? What can Adeyeye, as a lone Senator, do to single handedly solve the compensation culture of the national assembly? Beyond refusing to personally take what he does not feel he deserves and protesting on the floor and in the media---both of which he has routinely done--what else could he do? Please suggest the actions that Senator Adeyeye should have taken other than what he is doing? Perhaps you have a more radical physical or violent action in mind, or a resignation. Please do tell us. And, again, you lie blatantly when you suggest that Adeyeye "has meekly fought at best" the waste, corruption, and bloated compensation of the national assembly and the other branches of government. No, sir, he has been in the trenches, fighting the system from within, disrupting legislative sessions, screaming, and even joining external protesters. I presume that he has only slowed down because of age--the man is no spring chicken, you know. Adeyeye has earned his stripe, and he has the street cred and the moral pedestal to criticize both ASUU and the FG, which he is doing. More power to him!
"All he seems to be willing to do is talk sometimes about waste in government. What about some action from him?"
Repeating the same fallacy over and over will not make it true. Do a little research on Adeyeye in the Fourth Republic and see that, contrary to your statement above, he hasn't simply stopped at the level of talking about waste in government; he has taken action aplenty. You probably would do more if you were in his position but you haven't told us what you'd do differently, so like most of your points this critique, too, is hanging.
"Has anyone thought for a moment about what might may continue to happen to higher education funding in Nigeria, if ASUU had not brought this overdue subject to the front burner again? Adeyeye and his colleagues would remain seated in Abuja, soaking in and sedated by corruption and waste, plundering Nigeria’s abundant resources on themselves, families, friends, and frivolous causes."
Again, other Senators may fit the description here, but not Senator Adeyeye. For goodness sake is it not possible for a person to be in a corrupt institution and not partake in it--to guard one's personal integrity? I hope this is not a case of projection.
"Like Adeyeye, many Nigerians have their children studying outside Nigeria. Unlike him, these Nigerians and I demand that the Nigerian government recognizes that the proper and competitive funding of public education in Nigeria is a higher priority than the undeserved and imprudent compensation of legislators and other public officials, and does what needs to be done. Adeyeye talks about what he calls resentment driving ASUU members determination to change government’s public education policy. What in the woods is wrong with legitimate resentment? Resentment is sometimes justified. If Adeyeye is right, ASUU members’ resentment is better than warranted. Enough of holier-than- thou posturing. Talk is cheap. Action is it. Let progressive change begin."
For goodness sake the man is no angel (none of us is), but give him credit for 1) leaving the US academy and getting into the filthy firmament of Nigerian politics, and 2) rejecting or donating the obscene compensation of the institution in which he is serving, and 3) criticizing, protesting, and exposing the corruption and shady businesses of his colleagues when he sees them.
Being a Senator does not mean ceasing to be a concerned citizen who is free to criticize the shenanigans of a union that many reasonable people, including a few former ASUU officials, now say has become part of the problem of higher education in Nigeria.
When are these people from abroad who know so much about what must be done in Nigerian institutions going to go to Nigeria to lecture in Nigerian public universities and work in other Nigerian institutions?Please, please, please, we need heroes in the front line.Nigeria has many theorists, many intelligent people.We need leaders.Leadership by example.They dont have to be in govt.We have the examples of Soyinka, Fela and Beko Ransome -Kuti , Gani Fawehinmi etcIs it not possible to go in leave from those wonderful places like the US and so some work in Nigeria, in a Nigerian university, among the struggling masses, not in fat cat govt jobs, giving a good example?I have interacted online with some Nigerian social critics whose discourse drips with contempt for Nigeria and these people dont impress me at all.Even in the little online kingdoms they manage they are no better than what they rail against in the name of being social critics of the mother country.Please help us through active service in Nigeria.The theoretical postulations are valuable but we need more than that.We need active leadership.We need heroes.thankstoyin
MO
You seem to me to be well practiced in the art of calling people names when you disagree with them. I am not. You must be one of a tiny few who would remotely adjudge that it is cowardly of me to take the strident public position that I have, against Adeyeye’s public statements on the ASUU challenge. The claims you make about Adeyeye have so far not persuaded me to change my mind about the rectitude of the man’s position on the ASUU challenge. You speak for the man without any authority as far as I know. I appreciate that choice is yours to make. You have continued to make claims about the man based on newspaper reports and other unverifiable sources of questionable legitimacy. You expected one and all to accept your claims as factual truths because you peddle them. You seem to know the man better than the man knows himself. I have no problem with that.
Yes, Obasanjo did fight corruption as president of Nigeria. He campaigned against it. He proclaimed against it. Is there however, incontrovertible evidence that he was not corrupt as president? How many Nigerians believe that he was not corrupt as president? Do you believe I dare to ask you that the man was not corrupt, and in some cases more corrupt than some, he caused to be hounded by government security agents and criminally prosecuted in court? Do you believe that he has ceased to advance or benefit from corrupt practices now that he is out of office, I dare to ask you? The man was and remains one of the more vociferous public critics of corruption in Nigeria. Hypocrisy is real in Nigeria’s politics. Is Adeyeye’s position on the ASUU challenge hypocritical to me? I believe that it is. What is your problem with that? Is it no longer my choice to believe as I choose to after evaluation of the verifiable information available to me?
I choose to participate in public conversations very carefully. When I do, I take my participation seriously. I listen to all arguments. I do not change my mind because of brief or lengthy forum postings. I do not change my mind because I am called names. I do not change my mind because a forum bully is out and about. I change my mind because I am persuade by verifiable and factual arguments made civilly. I also know when participation in a conversation is a wasteful employment of conversers’ time and my mind.
You seem to me to be mostly interested in bullying people you disagree with regardless of the available facts. You drive to win even when it is not important to. Why else would you call people you disagree with names? Many people know that a position taken in fury is seldom informed by reason. They know that a case is not more persuasive because it is emotion and passion laden. My hope is that Adeyeye gets to be aware of my position on the public statements credited to him on the ASUU challenge. If he does, he might try to truly understand the reasons for my disagreement with him and then alter or maintain his position as he deems justifiable necessary. Let me make your day today. You have won. Let there be peace. Thank you.
oa
Moses, if it is cowardly to "attack the integrity of a man who is not on this forum" simply because he is not on this forum, then we have. No business here. We should only talk about and "attack" only those who are on this forum so they could defend themselves.
The last time I checked, a few members of ASUU and NOT ASUU are on this forum. Since ASUU or any of its official spokesperson is not on this forum to defend it, doesn't it follow that we should stop "aattacking the integrity of a union who is not on the forum?
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2012 January CVC Letter to FME
Haba, Bolaji,Coming from you, that is disappointing. I am trying to help. I asked for data, precise data, in return you showed me a letter in which were scrawled numbers. At your goading or urging I tried my best to analyze the information and told you that no one on this playground can draw conclusions based on the letter, And I took the time to explain to you why, with my imported education training in the matter. Now you are telling me that I am asking for too much. You cannot tell me what the actual expenditures were for just two years? You cannot tell me what we spent all that money on? I can almost understand now why ASUU should be upset. It is just that they do not have the skillsets to ask management and government the right questions. With the mindset of management and government, this journey will be long. Can you imagine what would happen to you in my position, if you asked me for data on our CIP and I simply said, "Abeg go siddon!" You would be fired on the spot! LOL!Bolaji, I have asked for basic data, if you guys don't have that, then the situation is worse than I thought.
- IkhideStalk my blog at http://www.xokigbo.com/Follow me on Twitter: @ikhideJoin me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide
On Friday, November 1, 2013 1:55 PM, Mobolaji Aluko <alu...@gmail.com> wrote:
Ikhide:You are asking for too much. The CVC was responding PRECISELY to what the FME asked, and cannot now come and respond to all your questions....certainly not I.Besides, come down to UniBen, your alma mater, and help it with all your imported Education accountability experience.In any case, what you are asking is NOT what will solve the ASUU problem. But I might be wrong.Bolaji AlukoOn Fri, Nov 1, 2013 at 1:50 PM, Ikhide <xok...@yahoo.com> wrote:
Bolaji,Thanks for sharing. Please pay attention. The table you have helpfully provided does not tell me much. You cannot reduce the budgets and expenditures of a major institution, say UniBen to a line item. I am sure there is more detail that goes with all of this. Help me hereFor the University of Benin, we are told that "Capital Development Costs Met from IGR" is $118 million (2010) and $271 million (2011). The IGR for UniBen was $710 million (2010) and $1.16billion (2011). The data is not helpful, I can guess that much of the revenue was gulped by salaries and employee benefits (I have no proof of this). It appears that in 2011, a little over 700,000 US dollars was committed to capital development projects (bricks and mortars) which, if you ask me, is absurd, certainly disgraceful. The next year, the figure was doubled, still disgraceful. And you wonder why the buildings are chicken coops. This is the kind of data that ASUU should be using to make its case if it was not too lazy and/or interested in being paid. Now, it is possible that other funds are dedicated to funding the renovation and maintenance of the buildings. I still cannot tell from your document.Do you have a breakdown of actual expenditures versus budgeted for each of both years? Do you have a simple breakdown of the cost figures, what were they used for? HVAC, new buildings, modernizations, soccer fields, etc etc? How am I or anyone expected to talk intelligently about funding just with this one letter? That is absurd. Surely you have more details than this? I can provide details of my school system's CIP budget, line by line, school by school, going back as many years as you want. I am not even asking for that, I am asking for only UniBen and for just TWO years. I am sure there is a document somewhere that shows all this. All I can surmise right now is that UniBen allegedly spends a measly 17 percent of its revenue on the capital budget. Given that there is no proof that much of it is not looted, you can now understand why we are where we are. Bolaji, this is worse than I thought. I am even more outraged. I will hold my outrage until I get even more data from you. This letter makes little sense from a funding perspective. And why are the revenues that measly? It seems to me that if all people are doing is writing letters with sketchy numbers on them, then there's little or no accountability. Bolaji, you are on my turf, so you pay attention. ;-)
Bolaji,Thanks for sharing. Please pay attention. The table you have helpfully provided does not tell me much. You cannot reduce the budgets and expenditures of a major institution, say UniBen to a line item. I am sure there is more detail that goes with all of this. Help me hereFor the University of Benin, we are told that "Capital Development Costs Met from IGR" is $118 million (2010) and $271 million (2011). The IGR for UniBen was $710 million (2010) and $1.16billion (2011). The data is not helpful, I can guess that much of the revenue was gulped by salaries and employee benefits (I have no proof of this). It appears that in 2011, a little over 700,000 US dollars was committed to capital development projects (bricks and mortars) which, if you ask me, is absurd, certainly disgraceful. The next year, the figure was doubled, still disgraceful. And you wonder why the buildings are chicken coops. This is the kind of data that ASUU should be using to make its case if it was not too lazy and/or interested in being paid. Now, it is possible that other funds are dedicated to funding the renovation and maintenance of the buildings. I still cannot tell from your document.Do you have a breakdown of actual expenditures versus budgeted for each of both years? Do you have a simple breakdown of the cost figures, what were they used for? HVAC, new buildings, modernizations, soccer fields, etc etc? How am I or anyone expected to talk intelligently about funding just with this one letter? That is absurd. Surely you have more details than this? I can provide details of my school system's CIP budget, line by line, school by school, going back as many years as you want. I am not even asking for that, I am asking for only UniBen and for just TWO years. I am sure there is a document somewhere that shows all this. All I can surmise right now is that UniBen allegedly spends a measly 17 percent of its revenue on the capital budget. Given that there is no proof that much of it is not looted, you can now understand why we are where we are. Bolaji, this is worse than I thought. I am even more outraged. I will hold my outrage until I get even more data from you. This letter makes little sense from a funding perspective. And why are the revenues that measly? It seems to me that if all people are doing is writing letters with sketchy numbers on them, then there's little or no accountability. Bolaji, you are on my turf, so you pay attention. ;-)
- IkhideStalk my blog at http://www.xokigbo.com/Follow me on Twitter: @ikhideJoin me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ikhide
On Friday, November 1, 2013 12:59 PM, Mobolaji Aluko <alu...@gmail.com> wrote:
Moses, quite a number of members of this Forum know you and your pedigree more than I do, for now. Coincidentally, I am also Moses, but I don't use the name, lest I be caught in the same web of intellectual shortsightedness as you. ---Diran

“The strike option has
become strikingly nauseating! Let ASUU listen.”
--------Adeshina Afolayan.
What are the other viable options open to trade unions like ASUU, especially, in situations where employers continually refuse to listen to legitimate demands for improvements in conditions of service made by such trade unions?
CAO.
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Thinking Through
Repoliticising ASUU
As Suggested by Obi Nwakanma
Obi Nwakanma
On the Challenges of the Nigerian University System
In Relation to the Ongoing ASUU Strike
On Sun, Nov 3, 2013 at 4:01 PM, Oluwatoyin Adepoju <tovad...@gmail.com> wrote:
Repoliticising ASUUAs Suggested by Obi NwakanmaOluwatoyin Vincent AdepojuNwakanma's suggestions are in quotation marks1. Lobbying the Govt
"What strategic lobbying capacity has ASUU established in the National Assembly which is actually where the bacon is fried?"
Vital point because it suggests the need to approach ASUU-Govt relations as an ongoing process.Such continuity, ideally, across changes of government, could go a long way towards ensuring that dialogue between ASUU and the govt does not began and end with negotiations and conflict situations.Difficulties with this suggestion- the academic mindset, to the best of my limited understanding, might be different from the mindset of the world of politics outside the university and of the political class.It might require different skills and attitudes.How can this gap be bridged?One approach is to work with serving academics who have been in politics or have worked with political appointees.ASUU members might need to be informed that such methods do not necessarily imply selling out on the democratic principles by which the union is run, or represent an effort to ingratiate oneself or ASUU with the political class, but to open and maintain consistent lines of communication.Nwakanma further suggests, as a means of achieving this goal - "ASUU could certainly use the likes of Professor Adeyeye, but how many times and by what means has the ASUU leadership established official and unofficial contact with its key supporters within the Federal Parliament?"Every human likes to be recognised, their value commended. Such an approach as Nwakanma suggests could help decrease or eliminate shouting matches between ASUU and the govt.
Dangers with this ApproachHow does one ensure ASUU and the interests of academics and the university system are not sold out through this new partnership?How do we make sure academics are not fed empty promises that never materialise as members' confidence in the integrity of the union is sapped by confusion as to the transparency and precision of the strategies being employed?How do we make sure ASUU liaison figures with the govt dont become corrupted by the smell of self empowering opportunity coming from the national seat of power?One of the worst developments that can emerge is loss of faith by academics as a group in the value of the union.An every person for himself approach will be sheer hell.To the degree that some staff are guilty of malpractices right now, that could be be escalated in an environment of hopelessness, since one would have to address one's needs purely by oneself.2. Active Participation in Politics as a Power Broker
"Who has ASUU raised money and supported to get into parliament; the office of the governor, or the local government?"
A particularly interesting idea.
This approach extends the first one in suggesting an even more dynamic engagement of ASUU with the government by sponsoring people into power, people who share ASUU's ideas, and who would be expected to reciprocate the gesture by making sure the union's vision gets fair and respectful hearing and, hopefully, implementation.Is it practical?A govt that spends most of its revenue on running itself, as the CBN governor describes the Nigerian govt, can be described as a predator govt.Would ASUU not be betraying itself and the nation by actively encouraging buying into such a clearly exploitative system by supporting members of the govt into office?ASUU's demands could be met but would the soul of the union not be destroyed thereby?Will all vestiges of being an independent citizen body in civil society not be removed , members alienated, the public coming to see ASUU as ultimately a sell out, a selfish group that has been moving towards such an unholy marriage at the expense of Nigerian university students while hypocritically pretending to pursue interests that include but go beyond personal interests?3. Involving All Stakeholders in Civil Society in the Struggle for a Better Educational System
"ASUU does not have groundwork operations and networks that could create a horizontal support base and network with other sectors of interest in Nigerian public education: teachers at the two other levels - the primary and the secondary levels - community leaders; community organizers, students, and parents, who could force political consequence as a result of their action. "
Very interesting because it suggests sharing vision and strategy with all members of civil society who have a stake in the educational system , thereby theoretically multiplying ASUU's power to engage in dialogue with the govt from a strong base.How realistic is the idea?
The idea looks sound to me because it expands ASUU's dialogue base and thereby its allies.There is an important price to be paid if it is to work.
Students are perhaps the most powerful constituency outside the govt in relation to ASUU.The national university student union president made it clear in an interview forwarded to this group that he could not be seen identifying with ASUU as the ASUU leadership wanted him to do because ASUU and its members do not keep faith with students.He stated that unfair disciplinary action against student union activists is met with silence from ASUU.He accused ASUU members of molesting students without a response from the union, perhaps among other issues I dont remember now.I left the Nigerian university system 11 years ago, and know almost nothing about its state beyond the University of Benin, where I was.In that limited context, however, I observed a strong elitist mentality among significant numbers of senior academic staff, even towards junior academic staff.Non-academic staff and students often belonged in a different social universe, not surprising, and perhaps inevitable, and if it applies across Nigeria, it would not be unique to the country, since the routes of self and institutional development and of sociation of these groups are different.Cultivating the Loyalty of StudentsIt is crucial, however, to cultivate the loyalty of students. They can speak out with a loud voice in the union's favour in the appropriate contexts.Such cultivation would involve ASUU taking a consistent active interest in Student Union affairs, with particular reference to general issues of student welfare and more specifically, student union activism, recognising in such activism a reflection in a different context, of its own struggle for its members' welfare and the well being of the university and of society.Infringement on student's rights for engagement in student union activism must be met with a carefully considered and powerful response from ASUU, consistently, so the point is made and never forgotten.Academics will need to consistently do their best by students, keeping in mind that by being fair to them, you are cultivating an ally in a collective struggle.Sexual Relationships with StudentsOne of the more glaring complaints about Nigerian academics relates to relationships with female students.Rather than simply state academics should avoid such practices, it could be vital to acknowledge that in any context where humans are together, particularly for long periods, it is likely to or almost or will certainly involve a sexual dimension.An academic has to learn how to navigate these contexts in a way that is in one's best interests without working against the interests of others involved.The issues here are complex and involve a significant number of variables.One can narrow these down by stating categorically that the vision of relationships between consenting adults cannot be compromised. Any coercion, direct or indirect, is an injustice.Academics also need to school themselves to manage sexual coercion from students.I've not read this being discussed in this context but its real.Such schooling involves making sure one places oneself in contexts in which one's vulnerability is reduced and one is thereby better empowered to make decisions.It is also important to cultivate an understanding of the opportunities available to one so that one is not pushed into relying purely on local talent, as it were.A senior colleague I discussed this with suggested getting a girlfriend from a different educational institution, a girlfriend from a class one was teaching being absolutely taboo, according to another colleague, since that could readily blow up in one's face.Another colleague, this time, in England, indicated that trying to force female students into relationships is ridiculous since they must come to you anyway, eventually, on account of your visibility, the authority and knowledge you embody, all these being attractive forces. Trying to micromanage such opportunities is where the problem comes in, according to this colleague.Also, the Nigerian online space is becoming increasingly sophisticated, Facebook, in particular, and other media providing tailor made platforms for relational encounters.All it takes to find these platforms is some careful searching, and if one is so motivated, consistent visibility.Cultivating the Loyalty of Primary and Secondary School Teachers
I wonder how this can be done.Would they not ask what they stand to gain as a group from ASUU initiatives?
Cultivating the Loyalty of Community Leaders, Community Organizers and Parents
Achieving this would be priceless but would have to involve absolute transparency and justice in dealing with students by ASUU members so the parents of these students would more readily lend support to ASUU.It would also be vital for ASUU to involve itself in decision making in relation to and monitoring of university expenditure so as to make sure that just distribution of resources is made apart from addressing academic staff welfare, as Ikhide has judiciously suggested in his detailed post on the subject of financial and academic planning.This expenditure needs to be made public, in the spirit suggested by Ikhide.ASUU could then point to such public data as evidence of keeping faith with the resources provided in trust and the need for collectively cultivating positive growth in the educational system.Information Management
The subject of information management is central.
Ikhide has a vital point here which he made difficult to appreciate bcs of the context of calumny in which he enveloped it.The character of the suggestions made by Nwakamma as well as the report by the former ASUU figure posted here suggests this challenge is best seen as a permanent struggle, in which transformative growth over time is the goal, necessitating rethinking of strategy as contexts change and new opportunities emerge.The virtual universe is now the most ubiquitous information system on the planet and must be be vigorously embraced.A website, a Facebook page or a blog is your primary face to the world.It has to be maintained with the care you give a beloved child. Nothing else will do. A striking example is the Facebook account of the Ekiti State governor, Kayode Fayemi.If ASUU is able to modernise at this level , particularly its information management, a new era would have emerged in the history of the union.Facebook, in particular, is an octopoidal network with which one can penetrate a broad swathe of the Nigerian demographic, if well used.ASUU Uniport has a very active and impressive Facebook accountThe ASUU Umaru Musa Yaradua University Facebook account , if I got the name right, is also busy but not as impressive as that of UniportThere are other Facebook groups and pages related to ASUU, the one most closely related to a national ASUU Facebook page being ASUUNews, but I cannot see one that describes itself as set up for the national body.An ideal ASUU Facebook account in my view, might be a group, because the group format particularly encourages boding among members and demonstrations of loyalty.I could respond later to the other points made by Nwakanma, which deal with Nigerian academic culture.
Obi Nwakanma
On the Challenges of the Nigerian University System
In Relation to the Ongoing ASUU Strike
Have we looked at the viability of the options we propose? I have heard, for instance, that ASUU should lobby the national assembly for more allocations in the budgets. Have we taken into consideration, the money and clout needed to pull through a successful lobby in Abuja? Does ASUU have the money and the clout? I have also heard of ASUU mobilizing students to support their demands. Those who propose this option are perhaps of the belief that those students who did the “Ali must go” demonstrations in 1978 are still in school, they are not. To mobilize Nigerian students of today, one has to have the key to a bank vault. Can ASUU mobilize such resource? I can go on, but no need for that.
The question is; which of those options suggested are viable in Nigeria? Some of them, I concede, may have worked elsewhere.
As my people at Arugo Motor Park Owerri would always say; na we dey here, na we know wetin dey here.
CAO.
ReplyTo: usaafric...@googlegroups.comSubject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Senator Adeyeye responds to ASUUDiran and Moses,
I don't know where this argument back and forth will lead to or if it is capable of returning some sanity to our messy educational sector with particular reference to our universities but, I will like to make the following remarks pertaining the issue and my person in relation to this whole debate and my last post and what it has generated, specifically;
1. Diran, I was never officially your student at any stage of my academic pursuit. No. You were on you PhD while I was on a Master's programme. Yes, you were, as academic culture of Ibadan expects, attached to my class by Professor Femi Osofisan to handle tutorial in a Dramatic Literature course. To claim to being my lecturer would amount to you claiming that at that point in time, you were a lecturer in the Department of Theatre Arts, University of Ibadan. Before posting this, I got in touch with colleague in the department. If my claim is wrong, I'd apologise if not please retract your statement. We are scholars and should dwell on fact and verifiable truth.
2. Perhaps, Moses, you should read my posts at the begging of this whole debacle. I NEVER argued against the fact that the problems facing the university system is purely funding or that lecturers are not engaged in some of the ignominious activities such as victimisation, sexual harassment, inducement and intellectual laziness and so on. Yes, in truth ASUU at national and local levels must act to correct this and that adequate funding, commensurate remuneration, research grants and infrastructural development in synergy with sanction for erring lecturers are needed to address these problems. I remember pointing out that ASUU has an Ethics Committee to handle such abuses. Perhaps what is needed is to ensure that this committee works as it should. I'm aware of some lecturers that have been sacked for such offences and ASUU never defended them. Moses, that ASUU is doing nothing is not true that it needs to do more is not in contention.
3. My allusion to your claim to higher intellect derived from a post in response to Diran where you wrote that if a particular thinking could come from a university teacher, that explains the quality of our undergraduates. I can't remember the particular post now as I'm replying to this in the midst of a whole lot of work. Sir, the day I sense that I'm intellectually inferior to any scholar local, foreign or Diaspora, I'd pack my bags out of the system and leave the space to batter candidates. I came into the system by conviction that I could contribute something to the system. So, Moses, inferiority complex with me, no, never.
4. My full name is AZEEZ, Adetunji but I prefer the short form- Tunji Azeez. Most of my students call me TA. I teach at Lagos State University, Lagos and I'm current Acting Head of Department.
5. You asked if I would be willing to subject myself to evaluation by my students. Yes, I would, gladly. Let me inform you that in my Department, even before I became Acting Head, we have distributed questionnaires to our students at the end of semesters and sessions to examine ourselves. This has been revealing and we are making corrections. We also organise what we call "family meeting" with students and staff. We make it very informal and our students have spoken freely and none of them has been victimised after. At these meetings issues relating to attendance at lectures by staff and students, extortion, sexual abuse etc have been trashed. We have acted promptly, also, on anonymous letters by students against lecturers by investigating claims. I believe that we need to do more but we can only do more when students report cases officially without fear of reprisal. Although, I understand their fears but, we always encourage them to speak up as we aren't training docile people or robots for the society.
6. Moses, I got to LASU in 1998 and in all my years, I can't remember being absent from class without a cause. I must add that I also have not been late to class up to 15 times in 15 years. If I was to be absent or late for a few minutes, I always communicate this to mystudents. I've said this believing as you said that we are in an age where information can be got in no time. So, please feel free find out if there's any truth in my claims.
7. Yes, truly, there are lecturers who regurgitate old notes, I don't. And this is why I get frustrated with the system for not providing basic instructional materials so one could give one's best. This was what I meant when I wrote in my post that what some of our colleagues in other countries take for granted, we labour to get. Yet we must compete with colleagues outside the country. That was what led to my "rants", "inanities" "regurgitation" as you prefer to call my long talk about the rot in the system. Really, Moses, I wish things were better, when they do, most of us will be more ffilled and productive. That was why I wrote that the Diaspora needs to understand what's truly on ground to be able to work with those at home for the good of the nation. I remember posting, here, professor Tejumola Olaniyan's book donation recently to my Deparment. By the way, if you could be kind to assist us, too, despite our differences, I'd be glad.
8. I still insist that your position on ASUU is one sided and, Moses, that won't help the debate to move the system forward. Yes, our strike option is time worn but if ASUU has no option for now, people can suggest. Some of us have suggested that we do a documentary on our univerities and post on youtube and other media for Nigerians to see. This and other media can galvanise the people. However, you are not correct to say that ASUU's demands are pecuniary. No. Of course, there is nothing stating that ASUU shouldn't ask for pecuniary benefits if they are deserved.
9. I also maintain that you pick only those things that interest you in a post without linking what you've picked to the larger argument. If it's a style, as I said in my post, there's nothing I can do to change it. However, I strongly advocate that we be as objective as possible in our analysis. We can't be infallible and admission of new ideas or a better evaluation of old ones is the hall of scholarship.
Finally, please, when you pick and respond to what interests you in this post, include my request for assistance in your interest. Do have a nice weekend.
Tunji AzeezSent from my BlackBerry® smartphone provided by Airtel Nigeria.From: Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>Sender: usaafric...@googlegroups.comDate: Fri, 1 Nov 2013 19:21:35 -0500
To: USAAfricaDialogue<usaafricadialo...@googlegroups.com>
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