08

Jan

2008

Education in Africa; whose Education, anyway PDF Print E-mail
By Chika Ezeanya
08 January 2008

Education in Africa; whose Education, anyway
By Chika Ezeanya

      “Why do some of our people sometimes talk and behave as if they are not educated,” queried the man from the podium, as he addressed his largely West African audience; “Illiteracy, the Bane of Africa’s Underdevelopment,” the international magazine headline recently declared; and according to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, as at 2007, only 3 out of 10 adults in sub-Saharan Africa are literate. The above, represent the widespread belief held within and outside Africa that the leadership crisis and the development dilemma, which plague the continent is a direct correlation of low literacy levels. In effect, the fact that few Africans have been opportune to sit under structured tutelage, to imbibe the basics of arithmetic, geography, history or the sciences, account for the decadence that prevail in the continent’s social, political and economic clime. A fact that goes unnoticed by Africans is that pointing to low literacy levels as the root of Africa’s predicament, shuns the innate abilities and shrewdness of the African. According to the same UNESCO statistics, much more than sub-Saharan Africa, East-Asia accounts for the highest level of illiteracy globally, but the Asians are able to manage their economies despite being so academically challenged. In the case of  Africa, their ability to manage or structure their society and develop their environment is hinged on the extent to which they are able to assimilate western education.  

      Education ought to empower an individual to master the peculiarities of his surroundings and afford him the tools to improve on it qualitatively. In essence, what might be considered knowledge in a certain part of the world could amount to useless information in another. Take for instance a teacher in faraway northern Nigerian teaching his elementary school pupil under the perpetual year round heat that the four seasons of the year are; fall, winter, spring and summer. The confusion the pupil will encounter is such that will take him a very long time, if at all, to decipher what the word ‘season’ implies, owing to the lack of correlation with his environmental reality. While the example given may seem implausible, such, form the bulk of what is widely disseminated as knowledge in the continent of Africa today.  

      Western incursion into Africa brought with it a repudiation of everything original to the continent. The African way of doing things were classified as backward, unscientific and barbaric. To the point of death from malaria, the westerners that first set foot on Africa refused to drink the herbal remedies offered by the kind natives to alleviate their suffering. Indigenous knowledge was regarded as baseless and summarily dismissed as superstition. Intuition, metaphysics, sixth sense and other sources of knowledge generation long depended on, tried and tested by Africans were de-emphasized and western “scientific” method was upheld as the ultimate. The outdoor learning culture of Africans was scoffed at and African children were made to seat in classrooms just like in Europe, to learn the history of the Europeans, the Geography of Europe and the language of the colonialists. Education became an enigma for the young and impressionable African child, who looked on with confused eyes as his blue eyed teacher explained that Mungo Park discovered the source of the Niger River in 1796. Unable to comprehend, the young child ponders over the fact that the source of the Niger River is just a stone throw away from his home, and yet his forefathers, who lived, fished and farmed on the edge of the river, could not “discover” it. Ashamed of his lineage, the African boy considers the Europeans heroic to have traveled thousands of miles to ‘discover’ a river just by the nose of his own people. He dreams of being like the Europeans, the great discoverers, and understandably looses any regard for his 'ignorant’ people. The deep rotted inferiority complex leads him to dismiss whatever is African; cloth, food, culture, values, speech, technology and medicine as inadequate and in that same mind-set, he rears his children. 

      Many generations later, inferiority complex and a passionate disregard for everything African reigns in the subconscious of the average African. Acquisition of western education is equated with the acquisition of common sense and values. People who were unfortunate not to have tarried within the four walls of a school are seen to be of no value to society. African herbal remedies are viewed with suspicion in several quarters, and the younger generations speak only the colonial language and cannot be caught speaking their mother tongue. An African, no matter how brilliant and of good character, who lacks a good command of either English or French as the case maybe or whose fairly acceptable grammar is accented with his local dialect has a much higher chance of finding a decent job in Europe and America than in his own country. But for the wise step taken by Mzee Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya and to some extent Mwalimu Julius Nyerere of Tanzania in elevating Swahili to the level of a national language, Africa would not have had any language with global appeal in the 21st century.  

      Worse still, are the courses offered within the African higher academic system; Euro-centered disciplines that lack applicability to the compelling needs of the continent and its people. Nothing prepares the African student for the reality he would face upon graduating with a degree in French, English, Business Management, Engineering, Food and Nutrition, Agricultural Economics or Pharmacy, to discover that he is still ill equipped to contribute meaningfully to his society. The fields mentioned are not inherently of no value to Africa, but the approach and curriculum they employ is bereft of originality and does not take cognizance of the environment in which the students are situate. Education remains an abstract and unfathomable concept, neither easily nor conveniently appreciated nor applicable - a wasteful endeavor that should never have been embarked upon in the first place. Take for instance, the Pharmacy department of African universities, where students are forced to memorize the chemical components of the drugs already discovered by Europe and America. On the contrary, pharmaceutical companies of Europe and America - with the co-operation of ignorant natives – are claiming to “discover” and patent the many herbs in the rich forests of Africa long used to cure ailments. The drugs so manufactured are sold back to Africa at exorbitant prices, while the student of Pharmacy from Africa graduates, clueless about what to do with his degree.

      The high drop out rate of pupils in Africa is a symptom of the underlying problem of boredom. The curriculum is not tied to reality and is neither adequately intellectually stimulating nor engaging for the very brilliant children of Africa; African children on their own, assemble radios and mini cars from scrap metals, carve beautiful artifacts and even repair broken down cars and motorcycles. The unproductive nature of the African educational system goes beyond paucity of funds to a deeply entrenched apathy on the sides of teachers, researchers, students and educational administrators, who deep down, do not feel connected to an alien knowledge system that is elusive of their reality. The problem of food scarcity in Africa is not just caused by drought, but the fact that long ago, ever before famine became heard of in Africa, youths were discouraged from farm work and forced to sit for long hours within brick walls to learn, just like their European counterparts. Farm work became unfashionable and as the African proverb says, only the hands dirty with farm work get greased with cooking oil; hunger became the reward for self denial.   In Europe, classroom learning is prioritized because of the harsh and extreme weather conditions that constrain people to stay indoors for most of the time.  Ostensibly, African youth would have excelled more with a greater combination of outdoors or practical learning with the theoretical, as the culture and environment dictated. Unfortunately, they were forced to sit indoors to learn only to go home to bed confused and hungry. As Agriculture is not part of Europe’s curriculum at the foundational level, a fundamental part of African culture – food production- was discouraged.  

      The vicious cycle of hunger and underdevelopment can only cease when Africans realize that indigenous knowledge, native intelligence, and values are what makes a society grow and not any super-imposed, parasitic and dependent knowledge. Any knowledge that lacks foundation or is completely alien to the culture of a people would hardly engender growth, but rather, it would create some sort of bi-polar mentality, fostering confusion rather than progress. Until the chemical engineering departments of African universities start  using local resources as the raw materials for research,  the Food and Nutrition department take pride in researching the calorific, nutritional and therapeutic values of African foods, and invest efforts in developing healthy, tasty  and endurable snacks that a foreigner can enjoy, and make enquiries as to how to import such into his own country, development and growth would remain elusive to the continent.  

      The problem is not in the acquisition of western education; the problem lies in the fact that Africans have lost their identity. Like a man in a borrowed suit a size or more too big or too small, Africans continue to struggle in the ill-fitting apparel, pointing accusing fingers, first to the tailor for not being magnanimous enough to make the suit fit a second person; or maybe to themselves for being be too fat and needing to go on a diet, or too thin and needing to gain a pound or two; or could it be the fault of the fabric, but how come it fits the original owner so perfectly well, then? The answer, which Africans have never come to accept, is that the suit does not fit because it does not belong to them. Western education was made to measure for the individualistic culture, the environmental dynamics and the extreme weather conditions of the west. The educational system should be overhauled in a simple and inexpensive re-evaluation of curriculum, process and system carried out by Africans who understand the nature of the issues at stake. A practical combination of African values should be merged with international standards, in order that the continent would not loose out in the era of globalization. 

      Further, Africans must realize that the acquisition of western education alone, as it were, does not amount to common sense or the ability to be innovative and positively impact society. The emphasis should cease to be on the ability of an individual to express himself in English or French as the case maybe, as that does not remotely attest to one’s brilliance. The fact that an individual cannot handle fork and knife or sit properly to eat at the dining table has no direct correlation to his IQ; enough of the self-hatred and denial. Education is good when it is a product of the immediate environment and ought not to be validated by western culture and educational system. The solution does not lie in looking up to the west but in searching inwards to emerge with something original and authentic that can be explored, developed through R&D and used to foster development at home and ultimately exported. The list is endless; herbal medicine, artifacts, iron and steel products, traditional clothes, folklores, proverbs, cassava, yam, solar energy, dance, music, agricultural practices or movies, to mention but few. Consciously, diamonds, gold, oil and cash crops such as cocoa and coffee have been omitted as those have been manipulatively procured by the west and can only be reclaimed after Africa has found a voice in global discourse by being true to its authentic self. 
  

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Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 08.01.2008 20:55

var sbtitle9804=encodeURIComponent(Education i...Read the full article.

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EjaEja is offline

 # 2 | 09.01.2008 01:24

Excellent article. Thank you.

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kynettakynetta is offline

 # 3 | 09.01.2008 01:33

wow! very well written

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Shoko Loko BangosheShoko Loko Bangoshe is offline

 # 4 | 09.01.2008 01:43

I would like to see the author propose an education curriculum which merges African values with international standards. That would form the basis of an interesting discussion.

I did once upon a time touch on the irrelevance of our educational system to our current needs and propose an alternative educational system in this article:

http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/shokos-mixed-bag/ibn-yasin-and-the-almoravids-12.html

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katampekatampe is offline

 # 5 | 09.01.2008 01:50

The theme of your essay that we have lost an authentic part of ourselves resonates well. For example our Nollywood movies that ape the western lifestyle is bound to have a restricted market .One it is not authentic enough and the cultural symbols that the westerners understand so well is largely absent. As such the cultural producers, i.e. the film producers peddle artificiality in movies that is laughable and it caricatures Africans as not so developed.

Take the case of Godfather, a film that was adapted for screen from the novel by Mario Puzo of similar name , when you look at the list, fashion and set designers and artists came together to make it work. The lightning effects and the cinematography were excellent. The storyline was beautiful and it had a message that was staged on an Italian immigrant theme of American life that that saw them on the fringes of a largely define Anglo-Saxon economy and system.

Nevertheless, they made a choice and adapted criminal enterprise into successful formal ventures in their search for power, wealth and fame. For our imagination, cultural touchstones were extruded in picturesque and enchanting settings .The cuts of the fashion designers were elegant and reflected a period, or an era that was charming and historic.

Contrast that with a Nollywood produced film that the voices in the movie are crowded. We see artificial mannerisms, and some token neighbourhood in Lagos populated by houses without good finishes, and we miss spectacular delights and details. And in some very pathetic scenes we see gully erosion that has become a feature of some local villages. These are the tastes found within the African culture. My little analogy attempts to bring home the argument of authenticity and the hopeless attempt to do the impossible.

But here is the deal, artificiality can lead to quality. We have the case of the Japanese and how they cornered the car market. Take for instance this excerpt from here http://www.wtec.org/loyola/ep/c6s1.htm that talks about Quality Control that embodies the statistical methods that was adapted to advance quality:

* quality comes first, not short-term profits
* the customer comes first, not the producer
* customers are the next process with no organizational barriers
* decisions are based on facts and data
* management is participatory and respectful of all employees
* management is driven by cross-functional committees covering product planning, product design, production planning, purchasing, manufacturing, sales, and distribution (Ishikawa 1985)


It speaks to the issue that application of knowledge is both contextual and scientific. It speaks to the notion that if you are a good observer you can derive insights from your locality, especially from contrasting it with alien environments , it has made western civilization arrive at this point , surviving, soaring and succeeding.The key is having a learning culture.

The Japanese adapted half of their language from Chinese culture. The technological culture they have mastered and improved upon was from the Americans and the western culture .What exactly am I getting at, the cankerworm in African societies can be found in the enterprise of intellectual barbarians and hooligans that promote such thesis that you are promoting ( I am sorry I have to be this blunt).

Until we accept ourselves as members of the human family and decry this idea of doing things our way, like having African time and Nigerian way of doing things. We will never push forward. Until we embrace a western mode of enquiry of resolving and solving problems we will never move far.

You wrote a fluffy essay that was more on rhetoric and less on substance. The reason we haven’t adapted science to resolve our problems is because of this notion of the sixth sense, intuition and superstitious beliefs has corrupted our sights.

At what age do you think we would start looking inwards? How long will it take to re-invent the wheel? Personally, I think what we should do is embrace the originality of the western science, at the moment we are at the borders of its artificiality. We should shift our gaze and enter within the borders of originality of western science.

That is the problem, nothing else.

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Vade MecumVade Mecum is offline

 # 6 | 09.01.2008 02:06

Brilliant, great ideas and a beautiful writer.

Tony

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nero africanusnero africanus is offline

 # 7 | 09.01.2008 04:10

very brillant article

the best i have read in ages

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dele26dele26 is offline

 # 8 | 09.01.2008 07:59


=Anthony Okosun;4294978382>Brilliant, great ideas and a beautiful writer.

Tony



................. reason for the 'advert'?

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dele26dele26 is offline

 # 9 | 09.01.2008 08:04


=nero africanus;4294978390>very brillant article

the best i have read in ages



Would it still be the best without the writer’s picture?

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Jah GudaJah Guda is offline

 # 10 | 09.01.2008 08:21

Excellent, very well written. Good education is vital in any progressive society.
Unfortunately our leaders do not share our hunger for success and progress.

You can sense the frustration in most Africans, we now realise that we depend too
much on western ideas and values. Some members of NVS constantly curse the
thrashing of our culture and way of life and the alternative forced upon us; Christianity, Western culture, education, attire, food and state of mind.
Some villagers see this as being racist that it isn’t; it shows, to a great extent, the level of frustration and discontent. Longing to see Africa free from the all-consuming foreign influence is not anti-white/west; we are simply looking for the African way, our way.

Like you rightly stated, the Asians do well despite low literacy. Asians are proud of their heritage and love their country to death, literally. They speak and write their language in schools, emphasis is on their language, and English & French are viewed as add-ons.

Chinese herbal medicine is now very popular in the West. It is no different from African herbal medicine. The big pharmaceutical companies turn African herbal medicine into capsules and pills then call it theirs. Like a Warri comedian once joked, the difference between Kpekere and Plantain Chips is packaging. Says it all.

The whites/westerners are not smarter than us, what they have is a universally accepted way of doing things. They can take their knowledge with them wherever they go because the products of their knowledge are welcomed in most parts of the world, and in demand. Just like Microsoft Windows, you can take your Excel spreadsheet with you to Nigeria, Ghana or Gambia because you are confident 98% of PC’s in those countries will have MS Office applications, in other words their knowledge is second only to natures creations.

We will need a complete overhaul of the education system and substantial investment to change the status quo.
A good idea will be to set up a private school, college and university, all on the same premises. The curriculum will have a strong African theme and elements of what you wrote about here. Then see what the result’s are; the difference in the students’ ability to comprehend, understand and apply the newly acquired knowledge. Also the level of confidence amongst the population in general, do they trust or believe in the end product?

An interesting question to ask is: which group of people can we say are our founding fathers?

Thanks and wish you a pleasant year.
 

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