Wednesday, Jun 12th

Last update11:00:00 PM GMT

You are here: Opinion Letters Internet as the ultimate

Internet as the ultimate

E-mail Print
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Letter

SIR: The former Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos, Professor Tolu Odugbemi, made a promise to the university community to provide students and staff on campus access to broadband internet facility. This was about four years ago. Three years and nothing was forthcoming on the promised project, but we kept our fingers crossed, knowing that politics is played in the Ivory Towers as well. We have been anticipating the day when we would be able to browse the internet from the comfort of our rooms and lecture halls.

Finally, it became a dream come true in 2012. The university management, headed by the late Professor Babatunde Sofoluwe, delivered on its promise by making the broadband service accessible to final year and postgraduate students as well as the staff members. This constituted a little above one-quarter of the university population. It is, however, a commendable start and a sign of better things to come. This goes to say that students can access the service from the comfort of their rooms by simply logging in with their matriculation numbers and personalised passwords while staff can do just the same from their offices.

There are dozens of online courses, many of them offered free of charge, which students can take advantage of and gain international certifications in. In fact, this writer is currently an online student of the Harvard University free online school. You get to obtain a branded certificate on completion of your modules, tests, assignments, projects and examinations as you would in the usual real world institutions. However, to meet up with class and tests schedules, such a student must have access to ample internet service  to download course lecture materials (if he cannot go through them real time online), turn in assignments in record time. With the availability of internet service, he can do all these without any glitches. This also applies to students in universities and higher institutions other than the University of Lagos.

It is, therefore, preposterous for the Ministry of Education and the National Universities Commission to expect our graduates to be anywhere near the level of other countries when they pay lip service to the provision of vital facilities. Nigerian graduates should be able to compete favourably with those from other universities and be globally relevant, but they are denied quality education. A colleague of mine recently represented Nigeria at a Global Agricultural Research Event in Uruguay. While there, Olawale Ojo shared this with me on the Facebook social medium platform. “Uruguay has gone as far as having wireless internet service on their public buses. I wonder when Nigeria will get there”.

In some parts of the world, access to internet service has become part of their citizenry’s fundamental human rights. This means as a citizen in such country, I have a right to sue my landlord or school management if I do not get internet service for my use. Moreover, I posit that any nation or educational system, which does not highly prioritise the provision of internet facility to its learning class is only digging its grave. Sooner than we think, we would be doing almost all our human activities on the virtual space. Now, we shop online, buy online, pay bills online, write exams online and get degrees online amongst so many other things. Information technology is fast taking over from the archaic method of carrying out activities and this reality must be awakened in our leaders. If an average Nigerian undergraduate is not information technology empowered, he would no doubt be a misfit for the workforce.

• Joshua Oyeniyi,

Lagos.

Author of this article: Joshua Oyeniyi

Want to make a comment? it's quick and easy! Click here to Log in or Register