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- All excellent points but context matters. I can remove Nigeria or Africa from what you say below and insert many US campuses, and they will fit!
- Dismiss my point no. 1 as I get angry if anyone says he is bad because there is a worse person. I cannot be corrupt because others are corrupt. So, don’t take my point no. 1 seriously because comparative data on bad things make me angry as a person. I cannot beat my son because others beat their sons!
- You mentioned concrete below—multiply what you do by 100 and you will see the changes. 100 of us can change honors theses in the History Depts in many Nigerian universities. It is those 100 that I am always looking for.
- I took a small team to Nigeria to run methodology workshops….suppose I get 50 people a year!
- I have data to say that there are books, but only that folks are not reading them. I donated 5000 books to one university last year…are they reading them? I build E-libraries, comprising close to 200,000 materials, are they reading them?
I want us to cumulate.And I want us to always answer the question based on one premise:I went to school on the land confiscated from peasants; I went to school with the money collected from poor farmers. What do I owe the children of this poor people? In my own mind, I disconnect my own answer from how a system operates…that is, it does not mean I don’t understand the system, but what can I do? I owe the people of Makurdi where I trained myself after my first degree—it was the library they built at Government College that truly began my serious education, that exposed the very limits of my first degree. I have to realize that what I owe Makurdi is not always the same as what I owe Benue State University which now occupies my old place.TF
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
From: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@ googlegroups.com> on behalf of moses <meoc...@gmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@ googlegroups.com>
Date: Saturday, July 22, 2017 at 9:27 AM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@ googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos, no. 1
Good question. We need to do concrete things to ameliorate the situation, not gloss over it with platitudes. That's my point. I've done and continue to do concrete things in my own little way. Others are doing theirs. You're at the apex of "doing concrete things" and inspire all of us to do more than we're doing at present. But I don't think we help the situation when we throw around platitudes that we know to be disconnected from reality. I have read the undergraduate theses of several first class graduates as well as MA graduates in the social sciences and humanities who were awarded distinction by Nigerian universities. They cannot analyze their way out of a box, do not know basic research methodology, and their written English is, to put it mildly, heavily challenged. Does this bear any correlation to the picture you paint of LASU as a center of student academic excellence and innovation, great instruction, and well-staffed units in your brief note accompanying the photos? I don't blame the students; I blame institutions that continue to recruit and retain academics who are not interested in teaching, research, and mentorship, and instructors who simply see their position as just another way to make a living in a difficult Nigerian job market.
On Sat, Jul 22, 2017 at 9:06 AM, Toyin Falola <toyin...@austin.utexas.edu > wrote:
A tiny question:What concrete things can we do? It is that concrete things that all of us must reflect upon.
Sent from my iPhone
Beautiful pictures from a beautiful campus. However, your over-the-top positive assessment of the university based on a brief visit, while consistent with your well known ideological project of showcasing the positive side of Africa, is tantamount to what Bill Maher calls the soft bigotry of low expectation. How many of these staff you speak of are committed to research and teaching? And how is LASU exempt from the widespread problems of poor research and teaching ethics, professorial impunity, ASUU tyranny, etc? And is LASU and UNILAG not the epicenters of "sorting." Are they free from the scourge of sexual harassment and sexual transactions in exchange for grades?
I realize that you're invested in a project of not criticizing or putting down African/Nigerian institutions and colleagues. That is understandable, given your extensive collaborations in multiple African universities. Some of us do not have such entanglements and the anxieties that come with them and are, moreover, past the point of caring about people's feelings.
A whole generation of Nigeria's young men is being shortchanged and the country's future is being damaged and we must call culpable people out and criticize those deserving of criticism. We should not whitewash the mess or offer false or exaggerated praise in a patronizing manner. We diaspora Nigerians take offense when white people do that to us; we shouldn't do that to our continental institutions. Southern Nigerian universities do marginally better than northern ones, but they are riddled with the same problems that plague others. Nigerian universities have become incestuous national cake institutions where intellectual in-breeding, nepotism, ethno-religious insularity, and academic self-cloning reign and innovative thinking and interdisciplinary works are discouraged by academics wedded to formulaic, outmoded disciplinary templates.
We will tell the truth and refuse to be complicit in the ongoing collapse of public higher education in Nigeria. We're accountable to our conscience. This accountability is superior to any affinity we may have with colleagues and institutions back home.
On Sat, Jul 22, 2017 at 6:46 AM, Toyin Falola <toyin...@austin.utexas.edu > wrote:
In over 300 photos, I will bring to you the impressive campus of Lagos State University, Nigeria. The Departments are all well staffed, and the students are incredibly talented and energetic. The millions of African young men and women represent our future, and their abilities at imaginations and inventions are so extraordinary that we may not even know that we are witnessing a revolutionary moment. To those who speak ill of these young men and women, they should check their thinking processes.
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
- All excellent points but context matters. I can remove Nigeria or Africa from what you say below and insert many US campuses, and they will fit!
- Dismiss my point no. 1 as I get angry if anyone says he is bad because there is a worse person. I cannot be corrupt because others are corrupt. So, don’t take my point no. 1 seriously because comparative data on bad things make me angry as a person. I cannot beat my son because others beat their sons!
- You mentioned concrete below—multiply what you do by 100 and you will see the changes. 100 of us can change honors theses in the History Depts in many Nigerian universities. It is those 100 that I am always looking for.
- I took a small team to Nigeria to run methodology workshops….suppose I get 50 people a year!
- I have data to say that there are books, but only that folks are not reading them. I donated 5000 books to one university last year…are they reading them? I build E-libraries, comprising close to 200,000 materials, are they reading them?
I want us to cumulate.And I want us to always answer the question based on one premise:I went to school on the land confiscated from peasants; I went to school with the money collected from poor farmers. What do I owe the children of this poor people? In my own mind, I disconnect my own answer from how a system operates…that is, it does not mean I don’t understand the system, but what can I do? I owe the people of Makurdi where I trained myself after my first degree—it was the library they built at Government College that truly began my serious education, that exposed the very limits of my first degree. I have to realize that what I owe Makurdi is not always the same as what I owe Benue State University which now occupies my old place.TF
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
I doubt if Prof. Falola is comparing LASU with OAU where he graduated or UT where he is a professor.
I accuse Prof. Falola of two things though. He is always quick to offer praise for what he perceives as genuine effort. I guess he thinks that by doing so, the person to whom praise is given will try to do more.
Another is that the Prof. seems to ask himself always what he can personally DO to solve a defined problem or how he can contribute positively to other people’s lives. And he starts to do them.
I first found these attributes among some American Peace Corps Volunteers when I was in secondary school. In those days, most of us students would get terrifically bad grades from our African teachers. Then came the Peace Corps Volunteers. And all of a sudden we started scoring 80’s and 90’s in our tests. We, schoolchildren were tremendously proud of ourselves. Of course, we cannot doubt the sincerity of the volunteers, many of them men and women in their twenties, who left the cozy life in America to come and live among African school boys in far away 'jungles'. And let us remember, there was no electricity in those days, neither were there good roads. Many of them did not even have bicycles.
Most of us Africans have now graduated from giving bad grades to offering terrific criticisms of things we know very little about. In the mean time we will not define a problem to solve lest we be responsible for solving it. Another attribute is our penchant for overdramatizing our ignorance through incessant paralysing analysis whose objective is to make others see us as smart. The question, ‘what can I do to help’ never crosses our consciousness.
If you should perceive that there is a problem with our universities, please define it in such a way that you can be of help.
God help us.
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Oga Fakinlede:
Thank you very much for sending many of us to real memory lane. As a trained Journalist and Historian, I did appreciate your analysis below because it did also remind me of my own past Peace Corps experiences (as a student back in Ghana in the 1960s), and also including my personal positive encounters with the late Lawyer Franklin H. Williams (as the then President of The Phelps Stokes Fund of New York), who was the first Assistant Director of the Peace Corps. Due to his Lincoln University (PA) connections with Ghana's late President Kwame Nkrumah, a Lincoln alumnus (and as former U.S. Ambassador to Ghana), the Williams-Nkrumah connections helped in making Ghana the first African country to receive Peace Corps Volunteers! Ambassador Williams, who died in 1990 aged 72 years, has been honored today with the establishment of the Franklin H. Williams Award, which honors ethnically diverse returned Peace Corps Volunteers, who are seen "to exemplify a commitment to community service and Peace Corps’ third goal of promoting a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans."
However, Oga Fakinlede, I reached the portion of your useful analysis that reminded me of my "ancient" Yoruba Mentor (Baba Ijebu of Palm Grove Estates, near Yaba & Surulere). He often said that Nigerian problems keep on multiplying daily because of book long on the part of the country's intellectuals; your own book long was seen in this part of your analysis: "Another attribute is our penchant for overdramatizing our ignorance through incessant paralysing analysis whose objective is to make others see us as smart." Smart? Well, when Mr. Trump was accused by Mrs. Clinton for not paying enough or for not releasing his taxes during one of their presidential debates, the future Businessman-cum-President of America said: "It's because I'm smart!" Is that the type of smartness, Oga Fakinlede, that you refer to in your "book long" sentence?
Of course, it is good for us, sometimes, to experience comic relief, and I certainly enjoy some of it in perusing several USA Africa Dialogue postings, including yours below! Hopefully, our Maker will let SIR Toyin live on, until he passes the 100+ years old mark, so that, as we all age together, the USA Africa Dialogue will continue to enrich us for many, many more years!
A.B. Assensoh.
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I really do not understand what Kayode is trying to get at; impugning genuine optimism, pillorying personal observations, masticating encouraging acknowledgement of creativeness and imaginative development or what?. Professor Falola had been familiar with the narrative and reality of LASU almost from inception from the 80s. He was a major subscriber, if not the spirit auctores of LASU's history programme. Besides, he was an active observer-participant in efforts at solving government/ASUU face-offs when LASU was a major Command and Control Centre of crises during Baba Iyabo's (President Obasanjo) raj. So, if Professor Falola could come with other American colleagues to see firsthand what has changed over the years in terms of DEVELOPMENT and PEACE (realities not studies), and the quality of students and faculties, shouldn't we concede to him the right to voice his observations as an acknowledgement of positive changes which will encourage all stakeholders to sustain the change and even do more?More importantly, will this not better educate those who stay away in cosy American, Trump stifling and Brexiting worlds so that they can change/adjust their thinking caps and also see how they can make things better at home?Even OAU which used to be the University of Ife, has also changed its name for better or for worse too. The simple fact which Kayode and other diasporic observers through the keyhole should note is that Nigerian universities, the socio-economic constraints notwithstanding, are forging ahead in a positive manner and for this, all must join the train of sustainability. LASU is obviously changing the face of academe in Nigeria.Amidu O. SanniLagos State University, Nigeria
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I really do not understand what Kayode is trying to get at; impugning genuine optimism, pillorying personal observations, masticating encouraging acknowledgement of creativeness and imaginative development or what?. Professor Falola had been familiar with the narrative and reality of LASU almost from inception from the 80s. He was a major subscriber, if not the spirit auctores of LASU's history programme. Besides, he was an active observer-participant in efforts at solving government/ASUU face-offs when LASU was a major Command and Control Centre of crises during Baba Iyabo's (President Obasanjo) raj. So, if Professor Falola could come with other American colleagues to see firsthand what has changed over the years in terms of DEVELOPMENT and PEACE (realities not studies), and the quality of students and faculties, shouldn't we concede to him the right to voice his observations as an acknowledgement of positive changes which will encourage all stakeholders to sustain the change and even do more?
More importantly, will this not better educate those who stay away in cosy American, Trump stifling and Brexiting worlds so that they can change/adjust their thinking caps and also see how they can make things better at home?Even OAU which used to be the University of Ife, has also changed its name for better or for worse too. The simple fact which Kayode and other diasporic observers through the keyhole should note is that Nigerian universities, the socio-economic constraints notwithstanding, are forging ahead in a positive manner and for this, all must join the train of sustainability. LASU is obviously changing the face of academe in Nigeria.
Amidu O. SanniLagos State University, Nigeria
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The next time I meet Profs. Falola and Ochonu, I plan to hand eachof them a glass of beer, and find out whether they each find the glass in hand, half-full, or conversely, half- empty. Each glass will be identical, contain the same amount of beer, and will be 50% of total capacity.
One more question: Is there such a thing as the bigotry ofhyper -high expectations?
The next time I meet Profs. Falola and Ochonu, I plan to hand eachof them a glass of beer, and find out whether they each find the glass in hand, half-full, or conversely, half- empty. Each glass will be identical, contain the same amount of beer, and will be 50% of total capacity.
One more question: Is there such a thing as the bigotry ofhyper -high expectations?
Professor Gloria EmeagwaliGloria Emeagwali's Documentaries onAfrica and the African Diaspora8608322815 Phone8608322804 Fax
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Kenneth Harrow <har...@msu.edu>
Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2017 5:12 AM
To: usaafricadialogue
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos, no. 1
Well, this is THE question, what can we do. I admire toyin’s efforts at supporting the scholarship of junior african colleagues. His conference, the subsidiary conferences and conferences he has promoted over the years, give people a place to present their work and to bolster the cv. Offers to help in publication are the most important in our profession. that’s what we do: research and publish. Any help, mentoring, suggestions of where to place articles or books, etc., is probably the most valuable thing we can do to advance the careers of african academics here.All of that work translates into supporting academics in africa as well, although the conditions are radically different.I also do believe supporting a publication, just to get it published, is meaningless. Supporting a publication so as to get a scholar’s work out there, is meaningful. This is a real distinction. I would hope my simple ideas of mentoring and promoting scholarship—not pro forma, not just to put it on a cv or get promoted—but to join in the scholarly discussions we all try to share, that is what we should be doing. In large, like toyin, or in small, like reading a junior colleagues work and offering criticism. Not just to get it published, but to get it up to speed, to get it interesting. To believe in the value of the work, and to make it meaningful.I believe in the value of this work. If we help those entering into the profession, if we regard it as our duty, the actions should follow.
kenKenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Moses:
These ideas of commitment to higher education—teaching, research and mentorship—are there, from Malami Buba in Sokoto, Onwuka Njoku in Nsukka, Sati in Jos, Adeshina at Ibadan, Imbua at Calabar, Zeleza in Nairobi, Amutabi as Vice Chancellor, etc. etc. etc. that we have no choice but to empower them. My co-editor of African Economic History, Jennifer, has just moved to become the VC of American University in Yola, Nigeria, leaving her job here in the US. We must empower her. A catalog of bad things can be compiled, but where does this leave us? How many people will pack their luggage in Austin and move to Yola? I was approached for this same position and I turned it down.
How do we empower them, as a question, is what makes me sleepless. We must empower them, even minimally by words of encouragement.
We must cumulate what we do, you and I and others.
TF
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
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Moses:
I do not want to get involved with this aspect, having just co-host a successful conference on higher education with over a dozen Vice Chancellors, with three reports already posted on this list.The major thing that caught my eye is that you don’t want to have exceptions. Theoretically, we should not encourage this. Practically, we should promote the culture of exceptions. Morally, it is good to point to good people so that society can have direction.
So, what would you say, if I were to tell you that one former VC is owing me money as we speak….he is on this list. It is not a big sum of money, to be sure, but he does not have it.So, what would you say, if I were to say that one that I know very well is yet to finish his first and only house? He is so broke that when I saw him at Ondo, I promised to help.So, what would you say if I were to tell you about Tamuno and Akinkugbe and Ayandele? Two of them are dead and one is alive, but I know their houses and their worth. If anyone were to say that Professor Tamuno stole a cent as VC at Ibadan, that person must be dead crazy.
Or more broadly, if people say that Nigerians are corrupt, I can say that for every Nigeria you accuse of corruption, I will bring 9 Nigerians who are not corrupt. I can say that Professor Gloria Chuku, a current head of her dept, if she sees a brief case of money on the street, will not take it. Or I can say Gloria Emeagwali will never steal anyone’s money.
I am not turning exceptions into rule, but to say that society needs those people to make a moral point. Otherwise, society creates a void.TF
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
From: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of moses <meoc...@gmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: Monday, July 24, 2017 at 3:22 PM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos, no. 1
Malami,
I couldn't agree more about the VCs.... please don't even get me started on them. The processes by which VCs are picked are so corrupt and so riddled with nepotism, politics, and ethno-religious considerations that one would be naive to expect the chosen ones to be anything other than thoroughly politicized appointees with no commitment to faculty and students. As I write this in July 2017, in the twenty first century after the death of Jesus Christ (Prophet Isa), there are VC's in the Nigerian university system who have no email accounts, cannot surf the web even if their lives depended on it, and are functionally computer illiterate---or at least they were before their appointment. I know this for a fact. Go figure.
Most of their allegiances lay not on campus but elsewhere in the political world. Even the problem of recruitment and retention that looms large over any discussion of faculty mediocrity and misconduct is largely the doing of VCs who force departments and units to hire unqualified minions or kinsmen of theirs, pseudo-academics who have zero interest in teaching, research, mentorship, and service and instead see their positions as platforms to earn salaries and benefits from a federal resource pool that nobody's father supposedly owns. If people like you talk they'll ask you: is it your father's money?
So, yes, VC's are responsible for a big chunk of the problem. They are mediocrity personified, and they enable and reward mediocrity among the professoriate. I have a dinner with the wife, so please let me not ruin my appetite by talking about the VCs, a despicable lot indeed. And please let no one come here to tell me that there are exceptions. Of course there are. But the one who was recently convicted of embezzling more than a billion Naira from Southwestern federal university (google it) is not one of them.
Prof,
Thank you, thank you, thank you. May your tribe increase.
I am very grateful to you that you are
able to actually name some Nigerians who are incorruptible and exceptional. As long as we celebrate these people, even in
passing, others will like to emulate them. And is that not really what history
is made of - exceptional people? For every Jesus Christ, Mohammed, Orunmila,
Achebe, there are hundreds of millions
of us who go bye as mediocres.
Most Nigerians are not corrupt. Most of us
wake up every morning trying to do the best to stay alive.
Most Nigerian lecturers are not thieves or sexual perverts who are out to get into students’ pants. Most Nigerian lecturers and professors try to do the best with the hands they are dealt. There are of course, too many factors militating against Nigerians lecturers and professors that make it not possible to be as productive or as effective as their American counterparts. This is not due to their laziness or lack of will.
True, there are many areas of our university life that need improvement; and that is where many of the people in the diaspora can be of help. Helping means that the diasporean people, who are definitely more aware of ways ‘to grapple with the challenges of running a university in the twenty first century and doing right by students,’ can come in the spirit of love and wanting to contribute their own quota. This is not to say that Nigerian in the Diaspora are not contributing already, however, they have to take it out of their minds that once they enter that big bird and escape to Europe or America, the rest of us suddenly become deadheads and bumblers.
The process of getting into the university in Nigeria is quite effective. I would say that for every one hundred students that are admitted into the the university, upwards of ninety of them come though the right way. Nigerian universities are also conscious of their reputation.
I have noticed that by the time they graduate from the university, most Nigerians do not speak good English. One notices that this trend is observed even in American universities where English is the first and many a time, the only language. I know older Nigerians tend to judge the younger ones harshly for not being as proficient in the English language as themselves. I daresay that I will never be as proficient in using the smart phone as my grandchild. I also know that this yardstick does not apply to Chinese, Russians, Japanese etc, who sometimes may speak no English at all by the time they become doctors, engineers or space scientists. I always see this as the vestiges of enslavement or deep seated colonial mentality among older Africans. Why don’t we ask ourselves why we are even speaking English in the first place or why cant we use our own languages to teach our students.
Prof, I share your observation that ‘the millions of African young men and women represent our future, and their abilities at imaginations and inventions are so extraordinary that we may not even know that we are witnessing a revolutionary moment. To those who speak ill of these young men and women, they should check their thinking processes.’ And when you come up with this assessment, you are in no way exaggerating.
Again Prof, I say, ‘May you tribe increase.‘
Moses:
I do not want to get involved with this aspect, having just co-host a successful conference on higher education with over a dozen Vice Chancellors, with three reports already posted on this list.The major thing that caught my eye is that you don’t want to have exceptions. Theoretically, we should not encourage this. Practically, we should promote the culture of exceptions. Morally, it is good to point to good people so that society can have direction.
So, what would you say, if I were to tell you that one former VC is owing me money as we speak….he is on this list. It is not a big sum of money, to be sure, but he does not have it.So, what would you say, if I were to say that one that I know very well is yet to finish his first and only house? He is so broke that when I saw him at Ondo, I promised to help.So, what would you say if I were to tell you about Tamuno and Akinkugbe and Ayandele? Two of them are dead and one is alive, but I know their houses and their worth. If anyone were to say that Professor Tamuno stole a cent as VC at Ibadan, that person must be dead crazy.
Or more broadly, if people say that Nigerians are corrupt, I can say that for every Nigeria you accuse of corruption, I will bring 9 Nigerians who are not corrupt. I can say that Professor Gloria Chuku, a current head of her dept, if she sees a brief case of money on the street, will not take it. Or I can say Gloria Emeagwali will never steal anyone’s money.
I am not turning exceptions into rule, but to say that society needs those people to make a moral point. Otherwise, society creates a void.TF
Toyin FalolaDepartment of HistoryThe University of Texas at Austin104 Inner Campus DriveAustin, TX 78712-0220USA512 475 7224512 475 7222 (fax)
From: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of moses <meoc...@gmail.com>
Reply-To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: Monday, July 24, 2017 at 3:22 PM
To: dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos, no. 1
Malami,
I couldn't agree more about the VCs.... please don't even get me started on them. The processes by which VCs are picked are so corrupt and so riddled with nepotism, politics, and ethno-religious considerations that one would be naive to expect the chosen ones to be anything other than thoroughly politicized appointees with no commitment to faculty and students. As I write this in July 2017, in the twenty first century after the death of Jesus Christ (Prophet Isa), there are VC's in the Nigerian university system who have no email accounts, cannot surf the web even if their lives depended on it, and are functionally computer illiterate---or at least they were before their appointment. I know this for a fact. Go figure.
Most of their allegiances lay not on campus but elsewhere in the political world. Even the problem of recruitment and retention that looms large over any discussion of faculty mediocrity and misconduct is largely the doing of VCs who force departments and units to hire unqualified minions or kinsmen of theirs, pseudo-academics who have zero interest in teaching, research, mentorship, and service and instead see their positions as platforms to earn salaries and benefits from a federal resource pool that nobody's father supposedly owns. If people like you talk they'll ask you: is it your father's money?
So, yes, VC's are responsible for a big chunk of the problem. They are mediocrity personified, and they enable and reward mediocrity among the professoriate. I have a dinner with the wife, so please let me not ruin my appetite by talking about the VCs, a despicable lot indeed. And please let no one come here to tell me that there are exceptions. Of course there are. But the one who was recently convicted of embezzling more than a billion Naira from Southwestern federal university (google it) is not one of them.
"but it is the DUTY of the teacher to resist. Not all teachers have the armoury to resist."
Yinka,The first sentence above answers your own specious rhetorical questions. Student-teacher seduction happens both ways in all climes, but it is, as you said, the duty of the teacher to resist, being that he/she is in a position of authority over the student. Isn't that why it's called sexual harassment and is outlawed by universities in the West?If I didn't personally know you, I'd say that your second sentence above was an attempt to justify the epidemic of rape and sexual exploitation in Nigerian higher institutions. Because I know you, I'll chalk it up to defensiveness and a facile attempt to defend our colleagues in Nigeria. For goodness sake, being an academic comes with responsibilities. It is not for everyone. It's okay if you do not have the "armoury to resist" (we all have our weaknesses), but have the decency to get out of the profession and go and do something else, preferably something in which you can seduce and allow yourself to be seduced to your heart's content without breaching any ethical or legal lines. Do not remain in the profession and exploit people's daughters and wives entrusted to you to educate. It is a heinous crime. It is rape and it is an egregious betrayal of trust and the responsibility of your calling as an educator and mentor.I guess you did not read Falola's statement that grasping to point out equivalences in the West is an outrageously escapist way to respond to criticism of malfeasance in Nigeria. It is the very definition of defensive racism and relativism. It is a very dangerous enterprise. So what if occasionally one hears of sexual harassment cases in the US? Who the heck is talking about the US? We are talking about Nigeria, and you predictably invoke the West to avoid having to deal with Nigerian problems on their terms. Let me tell you something. Even before I came to the West, when I was an undergraduate in Nigeria, I seethed with rage against the misconducts, sexual and otherwise, of Nigerian academics, some of whom where my teachers. So, please do not assume that I am always engaging with these topics from a Western frame of reference. I am a Nigerian who is grated about Nigerian problems. Let Westerners deal with the problems of their own society.Bit since you've invoked the West, let me say this. Professorial sexual harassment does not occur often in the US academy because there is deterrence and it is punished and results in incalculable personal losses to the harasser. Nigerian universities are sexual crime scenes. I say this advisedly and I am not exaggerating. Perhaps you have been away from Nigeria for too long or have not kept pace with the state of affairs in Nigerian universities. How many Nigerian lecturers have been punished for their sexual crimes against students? I personally witnessed many of them get away with full blown rape on my undergraduate campus in Nigeria. Nothing happened to them. Some of them were serial rapists. And guess what? The morally upright lecturers you speak of feed are the ones who feed you with stories of these misconducts and are happy when a spotlight is shone on the problem precisely because the sexual harassers (who may very well be in the majority, although you cannot investigate the number) reflect badly on the non-harassers. They are happy with me for highlighting the problem, and they are as outraged as I am, if not more so.How many Nigerian universities have a faculty conduct handbook or a coherent policy on sexual harassment? Here in the West, when you're appointed you're given a handbook that tells you all dos and don'ts regarding interactions with students. And violations will cost you not just your job but your freedom if you're handed over to the police in egregiously criminal cases. Good luck telling your employers and/or the police that you don't have the "armoury to resist.
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Thanks Ken for this illuminating piece.
Like in your case I know of a few professors who met their spouses at the university. Its no crime although other copy cats on the face value of what they see can indulge in indiscriminate affairs.
My own position is professors when single should be able to tell interested female students 'if you are really interested in ME and not your grades then when you are no longer on my course we will talk about it.' If its true love it must endure the course.
This is part of what I mean by no witch hunting.
I have got a childhood friend who willingly confessed to having a relationship with her professor. She enjoyed it . I was not judgmental. I know she was well brought up. She mentioned some other professor who came after her and she turned down. She had no serious emotional commitment at the time.
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Kenneth Harrow <har...@msu.edu>Date: 30/07/2017 16:42 (GMT+00:00)To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
Dear allThe notion that faculty are significantly abusing their relations w students in the u.s. Academy strikes me as out of touch with reality. The heightened fears and penalties are quite pervasive. Cases that really signal faculty abuse are given enormous negative publicity. that’s my sense of things.I want to add that I married a girl who had been a student in my class (more than 40 years ago), that I saw, and still see, nothing wrong with faculty actually dating students. I know it is now virtually banned throughout academe, but I don’t agree. I no doubt stand alone, but my position is based on the belief that we all have agency, and have moral responsibility. Not law, to regulate our relations. However, that does not mean we condone abuse.Abuses of authority and position have to be severely punished, faculty fired for forcing themselves on students, blackmailing them to have sex. I agree with the punishments there; and I find it equally not credible that students are abusing this situation to blackmail faculty, though perhaps on rare occasion it probably arises.
That this happens in nigeria, or elsewhere in africa, is not a surprise to anyone who has taught in african universities.The extent of it must vary. When I taught in cameroon 40 years ago, the black cars were lined up after school at the highschools, and it was disgraceful that female students were virtually prostituting themselves, and that big men took advantage of themThis was, I repeat, common knowledge: not hidden, not sneakily done.It was also there in sembene’s film Faat Kine. No one found it hard to believe in that film. Common knowledge.How to correct it? Moses is setting the standard, period. We shouldn’t focus on how much, how many, but how to stop it
What I really wanted to state is that this is not an issue that is debated in the american academy: it was settled practice to stop it many years ago.What is debated, where the huge bonfire issue now exists, is the question of rape, of physical abuse of students, not so much by faculty but by other students. Especially athletes. If you are really interested in bringing the u.s. Campus into this discussion, you have to begin there. that is where the powers that be, the concerns, the fightingback to regain the night, etc, etc., is occuring. That is where the seachange in relations is being fought out.
Another memory: my aunt was a student in the class, at medical school, of a man who became her husband. That was somewhere around the 1930s. No one condemned them for falling in love and marrying, the prof and his student. As for myself, well, I didn’t date liz till a year after she had been in my class. I was lucky she had been my student…. And lucky the university then did not prevent a prof from falling in love with his student!Ken
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
"Incidents of professorial sexual abuse of students are rare in the US."
Moses,
Sexual abuse is still quite rampant on US campuses. Some cases are not reported officially. Many campuses try to conceal the statistics. Students, in some cases, do not report the abuse openly to avoid the public glare, or, from fear of the blame game, retaliation, peer response etc.
Sexual abuse is also rampant in the US military and prevalent in the media with recent high profile cases and accusations of abuse by senior administrators- including the President himself.
Vanderbilt and Michigan must be exceptions.
Thanks Ken for this illuminating piece.
Like in your case I know of a few professors who met their spouses at the university. Its no crime although other copy cats on the face value of what they see can indulge in indiscriminate affairs.
My own position is professors when single should be able to tell interested female students 'if you are really interested in ME and not your grades then when you are no longer on my course we will talk about it.' If its true love it must endure the course.
This is part of what I mean by no witch hunting.
I have got a childhood friend who willingly confessed to having a relationship with her professor. She enjoyed it . I was not judgmental. I know she was well brought up. She mentioned some other professor who came after her and she turned down. She had no serious emotional commitment at the time.
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Kenneth Harrow <har...@msu.edu>Date: 30/07/2017 16:42 (GMT+00:00)To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
Dear allThe notion that faculty are significantly abusing their relations w students in the u.s. Academy strikes me as out of touch with reality. The heightened fears and penalties are quite pervasive. Cases that really signal faculty abuse are given enormous negative publicity. that’s my sense of things.I want to add that I married a girl who had been a student in my class (more than 40 years ago), that I saw, and still see, nothing wrong with faculty actually dating students. I know it is now virtually banned throughout academe, but I don’t agree. I no doubt stand alone, but my position is based on the belief that we all have agency, and have moral responsibility. Not law, to regulate our relations. However, that does not mean we condone abuse.Abuses of authority and position have to be severely punished, faculty fired for forcing themselves on students, blackmailing them to have sex. I agree with the punishments there; and I find it equally not credible that students are abusing this situation to blackmail faculty, though perhaps on rare occasion it probably arises.
That this happens in nigeria, or elsewhere in africa, is not a surprise to anyone who has taught in african universities.The extent of it must vary. When I taught in cameroon 40 years ago, the black cars were lined up after school at the highschools, and it was disgraceful that female students were virtually prostituting themselves, and that big men took advantage of themThis was, I repeat, common knowledge: not hidden, not sneakily done.It was also there in sembene’s film Faat Kine. No one found it hard to believe in that film. Common knowledge.How to correct it? Moses is setting the standard, period. We shouldn’t focus on how much, how many, but how to stop it
What I really wanted to state is that this is not an issue that is debated in the american academy: it was settled practice to stop it many years ago.What is debated, where the huge bonfire issue now exists, is the question of rape, of physical abuse of students, not so much by faculty but by other students. Especially athletes. If you are really interested in bringing the u.s. Campus into this discussion, you have to begin there. that is where the powers that be, the concerns, the fightingback to regain the night, etc, etc., is occuring. That is where the seachange in relations is being fought out.
Another memory: my aunt was a student in the class, at medical school, of a man who became her husband. That was somewhere around the 1930s. No one condemned them for falling in love and marrying, the prof and his student. As for myself, well, I didn’t date liz till a year after she had been in my class. I was lucky she had been my student…. And lucky the university then did not prevent a prof from falling in love with his student!Ken
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
"Incidents of professorial sexual abuse of students are rare in the US."
Moses,
Sexual abuse is still quite rampant on US campuses. Some cases are not reported officially. Many campuses try to conceal the statistics. Students, in some cases, do not report the abuse openly to avoid the public glare, or, from fear of the blame game, retaliation, peer response etc.
Sexual abuse is also rampant in the US military and prevalent in the media with recent high profile cases and accusations of abuse by senior administrators- including the President himself.
Vanderbilt and Michigan must be exceptions.
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
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Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
To be frank a policy of deterrence will be a good thing for Nigeria. It will markedly impact the calibre of the graduate output. Im grateful that Funmi Okelola provided that paper which showed the goal of the originary institutiin as that of a factory.
If a person sets up a factory that continuously produces defective goods for sale due to avoidable practices of his own making would consumers not justifiably boycott his goods for other brands? And should he not be made to suffer financially for his deliberate negligence?
If 30% of the grades are unmerited and things are tightened to reduce it to say 10 is that a bad thing?
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Moses Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>Date: 01/08/2017 03:21 (GMT+00:00)Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
I hope you're not including student-student sexual abuse, which is rampant on US college campuses, with many institutions struggling to grapple with it. Anyway, I was going off of the publicly available statistics on faculty-student sexual abuse. I am not going to argue the numbers, however, because I agree with you, and studies have shown, that many if not most sexual abuses are not reported and are therefore not part of the public statistics. My point was merely to show the power of deterrence and punitive and preventive policy in REDUCING and discouraging professorial sexual abuse. Whatever the true number is in the US, imagine what it would be in Nigeria, where there is no policy of deterrence, punitive or otherwise.
Sent from my iPhone
"Incidents of professorial sexual abuse of students are rare in the US."
Moses,
Sexual abuse is still quite rampant on US campuses. Some cases are not reported officially. Many campuses try to conceal the statistics. Students, in some cases, do not report the abuse openly to avoid the public glare, or, from fear of the blame game, retaliation, peer response etc.
Sexual abuse is also rampant in the US military and prevalent in the media with recent high profile cases and accusations of abuse by senior administrators- including the President himself.
Vanderbilt and Michigan must be exceptions.
Professor Gloria EmeagwaliProfessor of History
History DepartmentCentral Connecticut State UniversityGloria Emeagwali's Documentaries onAfrica and the African Diaspora8608322815 Phone8608322804 Fax
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Moses Ebe Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com>
A Wright State University education professor resigned in May amid a four-month university investigation into accusations that he raped one student and sexually harassed other students.
The university’s Office of Equity and Inclusion launched the investigation of Jason Fruth, 37, on Feb. 19 after a graduate student filed a complaint claiming she had been raped by the professor, WSU investigative records obtained by the Dayton Daily News show.
Please continue reading at
Also at
Dear olayinka,If the police system here functioned as well as you suggest we would not have a Black Lives Matter movement.I have only the highest regard for BLM, and seeing it operate locally only enhanced that view.kenKenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
From: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Olayinka Agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Date: Tuesday, 1 August 2017 at 13:31
To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Cc: Olayinka Agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
".... but the fact that it is relatively rare explains why when it does happen it is headline news. "harrow
So do we apply this kind of logic in assessing homicide, robbery and police brutality news reports?
They make the headlines because the incidents are rare!!!
Sent From the town of Moyale:
At the border of Ethiopia and Kenya
Here is a recent report on sexual abuse in the Australian campus. This report includes student and faculty perpetrators. The distinction
between the two groups of perpetrators is obvious - even for a high school student. Since we have been discussing the issue of sexual abuse I thought
I would post it. This report also suggests that human rights commissions may provide data collection services in this regard.
Unfortunately the police have these powers in the West that they have the power to stop anyone
no matter how highly placed and subject them to interrogations until the police is satisfied of their lawful intentions. That is the procedure to keep EVERYONE safe. Olayinka
How many murders of innocent people by police will it take to convince you otherwise? Black lives don't matter- because a Black female officer once harassed you?
Ken certainly got this right. BLM is a vital movement to challenge police brutality of unarmend Black
men in a highly racialized and imperfect society. Sorry to tell you that the existing police procedure in fact keeps a lot of people unsafe.
Oga Moses,Quck response.You don't do research on this subject. You operate on hearsay.You are therefore not in a position to make this assertion-' Many if not most Nigerian institutions of higher learning have no coherent policy on faculty sexual abuse. Those that do do not enforce them so how can they serve as deterrence? 'When you can present your systematic investigations of institution by institution, then one knows you have moved beyond hearsay, valuable as it could be when related to in a critical manner, to investigation, enabling you make the sweeping condemnations you seem fond of.As for 'I just got off the phone with a Nigeria-based colleague who is a member of this list and has been reading the exchange'Why are such characters not giving us their first hand accounts and analyses but relying on Moses whose 'insider' knowledge comes from what he is told on visits to Nigeria, on Olayinka, Harrow, Gloria and Toyin who are not Nigeria based academics?thankstoyin
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
I have followed these perspectives on sexual harassment. I am with Moses and will even add that sexual harassment and abuse are not only comparatively endemic in our tertiary institutions, but have also flooded the non-tertiary levels of education. The same can be said about the workplace, especially cases of young females looking for jobs.
Kwabena Akurang-Parry
I have followed these perspectives on sexual harassment. I am with Moses and will even add that sexual harassment and abuse are not only comparatively endemic in our tertiary institutions, but have also flooded the non-tertiary levels of education. The same can be said about the workplace, especially cases of young females looking for jobs.
Kwabena Akurang-Parry
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Emeagwali, Gloria (History) <emea...@ccsu.edu>
Sent: August 2, 2017 7:50 AM
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
Unfortunately the police have these powers in the West that they have the power to stop anyone no matter how highly placed and subject them to interrogations until the police is satisfied of their lawful intentions. That is the procedure to keep EVERYONE safe. Olayinka
How many murders of innocent people by police will it take to convince you otherwise? Black lives don't matter- because a Black female officer once harassed you?
Ken certainly got this right. BLM is a vital movement to challenge police brutality of unarmend Black
men in a highly racialized and imperfect society. Sorry to tell you that the existing police procedure in fact keeps a lot of people unsafe.
Professor Gloria Emeagwali
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries onAfrica and the African Diaspora8608322815 Phone8608322804 Fax
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Olayinka Agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 1, 2017 7:31 AM
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Here is a recent report on sexual abuse in the Australian campus. This report includes student and faculty perpetrators. The distinction
between the two groups of perpetrators is obvious - even for a high school student. Since we have been discussing the issue of sexual abuse I thought
I would post it. This report also suggests that human rights commissions may provide data collection services in this regard.
Oga Moses,
Quck response.
You don't do research on this subject. You operate on hearsay.
You are therefore not in a position to make this assertion-
' Many if not most Nigerian institutions of higher learning have no coherent policy on faculty sexual abuse. Those that do do not enforce them so how can they serve as deterrence? '
When you can present your systematic investigations of institution by institution, then one knows you have moved beyond hearsay, valuable as it could be when related to in a critical manner, to investigation, enabling you make the sweeping condemnations you seem fond of.
As for 'I just got off the phone with a Nigeria-based colleague who is a member of this list and has been reading the exchange'
Why are such characters not giving us their first hand accounts and analyses but relying on Moses whose 'insider' knowledge comes from what he is told on visits to Nigeria, on Olayinka, Harrow, Gloria and Toyin who are not Nigeria based academics?
thanks
toyin
On 1 August 2017 at 20:59, Moses Ochonu <meoc...@gmail.com> wrote:
I have followed these perspectives on sexual harassment. I am with Moses and will even add that sexual harassment and abuse are not only comparatively endemic in our tertiary institutions, but have also flooded the non-tertiary levels of education. The same can be said about the workplace, especially cases of young females looking for jobs.
Kwabena Akurang-Parry
Kwabena:
Thank you for your contribution and the impact in the wider society; that is the precise goal of our drift.
It was the retired soldier Theophilus Danjuma who on examining why stratospheric corruption was the hall mark of the Ibrahim Babangida regime opined that when a fish starts to get rotten it starts from the head.
A university system is a university system precisely because it sets the tempo for the cognitive systems of the whole society. If the university system is rotten the college of education system cannot be paradisiac.
Many of the graduates of the university system will transmit the rot downwards. Faculty at the colleges of education will transmit the rot downwards to the elementary teachers. It is not hard to see the combined effect on the products of all of these on the larger society.
Reform the university system with the zero tolerance for abuse and corruption and the whole society is cured by the same logic and process.
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Kwabena Akurang-Parry <kap...@hotmail.com>Date: 02/08/2017 14:50 (GMT+00:00)Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
I have followed these perspectives on sexual harassment. I am with Moses and will even add that sexual harassment and abuse are not only comparatively endemic in our tertiary institutions, but have also flooded the non-tertiary levels of education. The same can be said about the workplace, especially cases of young females looking for jobs.
Kwabena Akurang-Parry
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Emeagwali, Gloria (History) <emea...@ccsu.edu>
Sent: August 2, 2017 7:50 AM
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
Unfortunately the police have these powers in the West that they have the power to stop anyone no matter how highly placed and subject them to interrogations until the police is satisfied of their lawful intentions. That is the procedure to keep EVERYONE safe. Olayinka
How many murders of innocent people by police will it take to convince you otherwise? Black lives don't matter- because a Black female officer once harassed you?
Ken certainly got this right. BLM is a vital movement to challenge police brutality of unarmend Black
men in a highly racialized and imperfect society. Sorry to tell you that the existing police procedure in fact keeps a lot of people unsafe.
Professor Gloria Emeagwali
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries onAfrica and the African Diaspora8608322815 Phone8608322804 Fax
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Olayinka Agbetuyi <yagb...@hotmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 1, 2017 7:31 AM
I believe we have to realize that sexual abuse on campuses, and in the wider society, is a global problem. There is no need to criminalize an entire society and exempt others. The problem facing us is that of fixing the pandemic in whichever country we choose to focus on. Unfortunately, world wide, Faith -based institutions seem to have endemic sexual abuse problems themselves- such as the sexual abuse of little boys (Catholics) or abuse of female parishioners under the guise of spiritual enlightenment (Evangelicals). Don't know how this plays out in religions such as Hinduism and Shinto, but we know that there are misogynistic tendencies in some Muslim dominated countries.
It is heartening to see scholar - activists like Moses ready to provide solutions to the problem. That is commendable.
I suggest the following:
GE
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Here are some rough thoughts on what could be done about some of the issues we’ve discussed.
Unfortunately, several of these problems require the robust involvement of the regulatory organ, the National Universities Commission, NUC. I say unfortunately because ideally, universities should be self-governing entities with minimal regulatory intrusion from outside. However, in Nigeria we have to deal with the reality of an overbearing regulatory framework in the form of the NUC bureaucracy, whose stifling effect on university education is a topic for another day. At any rate, if we’re trying to implement a national solution to the problems, the NUC will have to be consulted and brought on board.
Sexual Abuse
The NUC, through its legal and supervision departments, should outline a broad outline of a policy on faculty-student sexual harassment. All universities should then be required to formulate their own policies on sexual abuse, making sure that these policies conform to or meet the broad requirements outlined in the NUC policy guideline. The NUC’s appropriate department(s) will review and approve the individual policies of universities. Four important components that the NUC should insist on are, 1) protection against victimization and retaliation for student victims who report faculty sexual abuse and harassment, and 2) expedited and transparent investigation of allegations, 3) harsh punishment for offending lecturers, and 4) the involvement of the police in cases of rape. Finally, the NUC should build a database of confirmed predatory academics, which universities could consult when making hiring decisions so that lecturers who are disgraced from one institution on account of sexual abuse do not find employment in another. This is important as Nigeria does not yet have robust criminal and professional background check systems.
Once the policies are in place, a series of townhall meetings should be mandated in every university, so that the provisions of the policies can be thoroughly explained to faculty members and those seeking clarifications can have their questions answered. The object is to leave no ambiguity, so that no lecturer has an excuse for violating the policies.
An appendage of this policy should be another one explicitly outlawing all demands or acceptance of material or monetary gratifications from students to lecturers who currently teach or have pedagogical authority over said students.
Teaching
1. The NUC should make student teaching evaluations mandatory for all universities and should, after consultation with ASUU and other stakeholders, establish a weighted role for such evaluation in faculty promotion and retention decisions.
2. One of the biggest problems of Nigerian higher education, especially from the perspective that students’ interests are paramount, is the failure of lecturers to show up and teach, something so basic to the calling of an academic that one would not think that it would be a problem. But many Nigerian lecturers simply don’t show up in class enough. Some only show up to administer tests and exams after giving students study materials. Others don’t even bother to give students study guides. To solve this problem, the NUC, working with university governing bodies and ASUU, should formulate a clear policy making class attendance mandatory for lecturers except for legitimate reasons such as ill health, family event or emergency, pre-scheduled conference, research, and other external academic obligations. This policy should also set a maximum number of times that lecturers can be absent from class outside of the aforementioned legitimate reasons.
Research
The problem of poor research output in our universities begins from poor teaching and mentorship early on. A student who was never properly taught how to conduct research and how to analyze the research findings and construct original arguments on the strength of such findings will not be able to conduct compelling research or produce strong research outcomes when s/he becomes an academic.
However, that is not the immediate issue with our poor research culture. The main problem, as I see it, is an emphasis on quantity of research output, rather than quality, in the NUC’s research guidelines for promotions from one rank to another. It is a terrible way to cultivate a research culture. The result today is that trash is being published by Nigeria-based academics in predatory online journals hosted in India and Pakistan and elsewhere. Some of these “articles” are unworthy of an undergraduate term paper. Most are not even grounded in any original research and are derived solely from published works and peppered with pedestrian conjectures. Some are even shamelessly plagiarized.
I was at a conference five years ago in Ibadan when the citation of a Nigeria-based colleague was read out and he was said to have over a hundred published papers. Even if you discount the fact that Nigerian academics tend to count newspaper op-eds and other popular writings as part of their academic publications, you’d see clearly that this is a fraudulent statistical representation of the said scholar’s academic output. It is not his fault however. It is the fault of the NUC, which prescribes fixed numbers of publications of various kinds for the purpose of promotion.
The NUC needs to shift from bean counting, from an emphasis on quantity to quality. It will cause academics to thoroughly research their papers, develop their analyses and arguments, and go through the rigorous, sometimes lengthy peer review process of reputable publications. It is better for an academic to have one or two quality publications in reputable venues than to have fifty poorly researched and hurriedly written articles in junk predatory publications. The current system makes mockery of the academic publication culture. And yes, I have read or at least skimmed many of these trashy “articles.” They’re a disgrace to scholarship. The NUC’s new guideline on research output should also explicitly discourage publishing in predatory journals. One measure might be to compile a constantly updated list of predatory journals that academics can consult. Another measure might be to outlaw payments for publishing. Yet another one would be a requirement for peer review reports to be submitted along with a published article for the purpose of promotion.
Mentorship and supervision
This is a touchy one. Our current postgraduate supervision culture is one of oppression, hazing, and mean-spirited tyranny perpetrated by supervisors. Supervisors behave as though they are doing the students a favor, the result being a slavish relationship between mentor and mentee in which the latter has no voice and has his or her intellectual initiatives killed or subordinated to the whims and predilections of the powerful supervisor. It is a system largely devoid of the mentoring and guidance that one expects from such a relationship. What we need is a postgraduate student bill of rights, which would empower and restore some rights to the student. The NUC should issue a set of guidelines to govern this important relationship in the academy. Such guidelines should make it possible for students to:
1. Ask to be reassigned to a new supervisor when the existing one is not giving them time, attention, and guidance, or is delaying the completion of the dissertation and its associated processes. If this right already exists, it should be strengthened and enforced.
2. This bill of rights should include the right of the student to refuse arbitrary, tyrannical orders to simply replicate the scholarly or analytical trajectory of the supervisor. It should allow the students to creatively pursue their own analytical direction without their supervisors forcing them into a straight-jacket and refusing to consider the merit or otherwise of the analytical choices the student is making.
3. The NUC should set a time limit for supervisors sitting on chapters submitted by students without offering them feedback/comments.
4. The NUC should explicitly forbid supervisors from demanding money or material goods, services, errands, or sexual favors from graduate students they are supervising, with penalties for violations clearly prescribed.
5. The guidelines should encourage the exploration of interdisciplinary questions where appropriate without supervisors punishing students who do so or insisting on the observance of narrow disciplinary conventions for the sake of conformity.
These are some of my rough thoughts, which can be fleshed out, debated, and refined. On sexual abuse, I endorse the prescriptions of Gloria, especially the one about working with non-governmental entities to protect victims and pressure investigators and school authorities. This is especially important since universities and the police have a history of treating teacher-student sexual assault with levity.
I believe we have to realize that sexual abuse on campuses, and in the wider society, is a global problem. There is no need to criminalize an entire society and exempt others. The problem facing us is that of fixing the pandemic in whichever country we choose to focus on. Unfortunately, world wide, Faith -based institutions seem to have endemic sexual abuse problems themselves- such as the sexual abuse of little boys (Catholics) or abuse of female parishioners under the guise of spiritual enlightenment (Evangelicals). Don't know how this plays out in religions such as Hinduism and Shinto, but we know that there are misogynistic tendencies in some Muslim dominated countries.
It is heartening to see scholar - activists like Moses ready to provide solutions to the problem. That is commendable.
I suggest the following:
GE
Here are some rough thoughts on what could be done about some of the issues we’ve discussed.
Unfortunately, several of these problems require the robust involvement of the regulatory organ, the National Universities Commission, NUC. I say unfortunately because ideally, universities should be self-governing entities with minimal regulatory intrusion from outside. However, in Nigeria we have to deal with the reality of an overbearing regulatory framework in the form of the NUC bureaucracy, whose stifling effect on university education is a topic for another day. At any rate, if we’re trying to implement a national solution to the problems, the NUC will have to be consulted and brought on board.
Sexual Abuse
The NUC, through its legal and supervision departments, should outline a broad outline of a policy on faculty-student sexual harassment. All universities should then be required to formulate their own policies on sexual abuse, making sure that these policies conform to or meet the broad requirements outlined in the NUC policy guideline. The NUC’s appropriate department(s) will review and approve the individual policies of universities. Four important components that the NUC should insist on are, 1) protection against victimization and retaliation for student victims who report faculty sexual abuse and harassment, and 2) expedited and transparent investigation of allegations, 3) harsh punishment for offending lecturers, and 4) the involvement of the police in cases of rape. Finally, the NUC should build a database of confirmed predatory academics, which universities could consult when making hiring decisions so that lecturers who are disgraced from one institution on account of sexual abuse do not find employment in another. This is important as Nigeria does not yet have robust criminal and professional background check systems.
Once the policies are in place, a series of townhall meetings should be mandated in every university, so that the provisions of the policies can be thoroughly explained to faculty members and those seeking clarifications can have their questions answered. The object is to leave no ambiguity, so that no lecturer has an excuse for violating the policies.
An appendage of this policy should be another one explicitly outlawing all demands or acceptance of material or monetary gratifications from students to lecturers who currently teach or have pedagogical authority over said students.
Teaching
1. The NUC should make student teaching evaluations mandatory for all universities and should, after consultation with ASUU and other stakeholders, establish a weighted role for such evaluation in faculty promotion and retention decisions.
2. One of the biggest problems of Nigerian higher education, especially from the perspective that students’ interests are paramount, is the failure of lecturers to show up and teach, something so basic to the calling of an academic that one would not think that it would be a problem. But many Nigerian lecturers simply don’t show up in class enough. Some only show up to administer tests and exams after giving students study materials. Others don’t even bother to give students study guides. To solve this problem, the NUC, working with university governing bodies and ASUU, should formulate a clear policy making class attendance mandatory for lecturers except for legitimate reasons such as ill health, family event or emergency, pre-scheduled conference, research, and other external academic obligations. This policy should also set a maximum number of times that lecturers can be absent from class outside of the aforementioned legitimate reasons.
Research
The problem of poor research output in our universities begins from poor teaching and mentorship early on. A student who was never properly taught how to conduct research and how to analyze the research findings and construct original arguments on the strength of such findings will not be able to conduct compelling research or produce strong research outcomes when s/he becomes an academic.
However, that is not the immediate issue with our poor research culture. The main problem, as I see it, is an emphasis on quantity of research output, rather than quality, in the NUC’s research guidelines for promotions from one rank to another. It is a terrible way to cultivate a research culture. The result today is that trash is being published by Nigeria-based academics in predatory online journals hosted in India and Pakistan and elsewhere. Some of these “articles” are unworthy of an undergraduate term paper. Most are not even grounded in any original research and are derived solely from published works and peppered with pedestrian conjectures. Some are even shamelessly plagiarized.
I was at a conference five years ago in Ibadan when the citation of a Nigeria-based colleague was read out and he was said to have over a hundred published papers. Even if you discount the fact that Nigerian academics tend to count newspaper op-eds and other popular writings as part of their academic publications, you’d see clearly that this is a fraudulent statistical representation of the said scholar’s academic output. It is not his fault however. It is the fault of the NUC, which prescribes fixed numbers of publications of various kinds for the purpose of promotion.
The NUC needs to shift from bean counting, from an emphasis on quantity to quality. It will cause academics to thoroughly research their papers, develop their analyses and arguments, and go through the rigorous, sometimes lengthy peer review process of reputable publications. It is better for an academic to have one or two quality publications in reputable venues than to have fifty poorly researched and hurriedly written articles in junk predatory publications. The current system makes mockery of the academic publication culture. And yes, I have read or at least skimmed many of these trashy “articles.” They’re a disgrace to scholarship. The NUC’s new guideline on research output should also explicitly discourage publishing in predatory journals. One measure might be to compile a constantly updated list of predatory journals that academics can consult. Another measure might be to outlaw payments for publishing. Yet another one would be a requirement for peer review reports to be submitted along with a published article for the purpose of promotion.
Mentorship and supervision
This is a touchy one. Our current postgraduate supervision culture is one of oppression, hazing, and mean-spirited tyranny perpetrated by supervisors. Supervisors behave as though they are doing the students a favor, the result being a slavish relationship between mentor and mentee in which the latter has no voice and has his or her intellectual initiatives killed or subordinated to the whims and predilections of the powerful supervisor. It is a system largely devoid of the mentoring and guidance that one expects from such a relationship. What we need is a postgraduate student bill of rights, which would empower and restore some rights to the student. The NUC should issue a set of guidelines to govern this important relationship in the academy. Such guidelines should make it possible for students to:
1. Ask to be reassigned to a new supervisor when the existing one is not giving them time, attention, and guidance, or is delaying the completion of the dissertation and its associated processes. If this right already exists, it should be strengthened and enforced.
2. This bill of rights should include the right of the student to refuse arbitrary, tyrannical orders to simply replicate the scholarly or analytical trajectory of the supervisor. It should allow the students to creatively pursue their own analytical direction without their supervisors forcing them into a straight-jacket and refusing to consider the merit or otherwise of the analytical choices the student is making.
3. The NUC should set a time limit for supervisors sitting on chapters submitted by students without offering them feedback/comments.
4. The NUC should explicitly forbid supervisors from demanding money or material goods, services, errands, or sexual favors from graduate students they are supervising, with penalties for violations clearly prescribed.
5. The guidelines should encourage the exploration of interdisciplinary questions where appropriate without supervisors punishing students who do so or insisting on the observance of narrow disciplinary conventions for the sake of conformity.
These are some of my rough thoughts, which can be fleshed out, debated, and refined. On sexual abuse, I endorse the prescriptions of Gloria, especially the one about working with non-governmental entities to protect victims and pressure investigators and school authorities. This is especially important since universities and the police have a history of treating teacher-student sexual assault with levity.
...
All of the suggestions on sexual abuse seem to be sound except for one thing. I believe
that ASUU and gender based organizations should be involved along with the NUC.
I have many doubts about American style teaching evaluations. They lead to grade inflation,
and intimidation etc although there may be some merits here and there.
I believe that Toyin has made some good points and his comments should not be
arbitrarily dismissed. Don't throw away the baby and the bath water. He is less dismissive of the output and contributions of Nigerian based academics. You have some solid recommendations on sexual abuse, a student bill of rights and mentorship. How about a middle ground?
GE
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Ken:
I dont think a petition is apt. I think this issue if handled appropriately through ASUU proves that the body is not concerned merely about bread and butter issues for its members alone but genuinely cares for the educational development and structural moral probity of the country.
It will be the duty of ASUU to work with NUC for the wholesome implementation of the strategy put in place.
Goals such as not charging students for course materials cannot be realistically implemented without involving the NUC in how the loophole can be filled
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Kenneth Harrow <har...@msu.edu>Date: 04/08/2017 10:57 (GMT+00:00)To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
what’s the next step? A petition? A public stance somehow?ken
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824
Ken:
I dont think a petition is apt. I think this issue if handled appropriately through ASUU proves that the body is not concerned merely about bread and butter issues for its members alone but genuinely cares for the educational development and structural moral probity of the country.
It will be the duty of ASUU to work with NUC for the wholesome implementation of the strategy put in place.
Goals such as not charging students for course materials cannot be realistically implemented without involving the NUC in how the loophole can be filled
Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Kenneth Harrow <har...@msu.edu>Date: 04/08/2017 10:57 (GMT+00:00)To: usaafricadialogue <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Lagos State University in Photos,no. 1
what’s the next step? A petition? A public stance somehow?ken
Kenneth Harrow
Dept of English and Film Studies
Michigan State University
619 Red Cedar Rd
East Lansing, MI 48824