ABSTRACT
This study was undertaken to
investigate privatization of university education and quality
service deli very in South-West Nigeria. It was meant to
assess the essence of privatization of university education and to ascertain
the impact of adequate and modern facilities, coupled with quality teaching
personnel on the quality of education and the mode of their service delivery in
south-west Nigeria. Six research questions were formulated to guide
the study. A descriptive survey design was adopted for the study and the data
collection was validated questionnaire. The study population sample was drawn
from two private universities in Lagos and Ogun state. This study
was made up of 100 students. The research questions that guided this study also
formed the basis for the 4-item close-ended questionnaire that was
administered. Section A contains personal data that differs among categories of
respondents, while section B contains similar question items with little
difference. The data gathered were analyzed qualitatively using statistical
package for social sciences (SPSS) version 17.0 The findings from the analysis
therefore shows that quality of teaching personnel has great
influence on the quality of education ,coupled with adequate
and modern facilities which has positive influence on education.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the
study
Universities all over the world are
accepted as the citadel of learning and development of human resources.
According to Subair (2008), the entire intellectual and professional life of a
country depends on sound higher education, especially university education that
provides quality products (graduates) of international standard. The Nigerian
university system sprang out of the need for the development of a high level
workforce to take the challenge of nation building after independent (Fadipe,
2000).
Higher
education in general, which could be professional or technical education, in
particular; plays vital roles in the economic and social development of a
country. It provides a wide range of increasingly sophisticated and ever
-changing variety of trained manpower needed in education, engineering,
medicine, agriculture, management, communication, etc. It produces researchers,
who, through their activities, deepen and extend frontiers of scientific and
technical knowledge leading to innovations which energize engines of economic
growth and development. Apart from developing human resources, higher education
turns out thinkers who reflect on critical problem that affect humanity and
thereby ensure its survival and development and growth. Thus, the single most
important indicator of the nation’s future can be said to be the state of its
higher education. Universities are therefore identified as critical engines for
socio-economic and political development. Universities have become a primary
locus for innovation, expanding the pool of high calibre manpower to address
the challenges of under-development. In Nigeria, education is however seen as
an instrument for development and national integration. According to the National
Policy on Education (FGN 2004), the teaching and research functions of higher
educational institutions have an important role to play in national development
particularly in development of high level manpower.
Specifically,
the aims of higher education in Nigeria as articulated in the NPE include:
(a) The
acquisition, development and inculcation of the proper value-orientation for
the survival of individual and society.
(b) The
development of intellectual capacities of individuals to understand and appreciate
their environment.
(c) The
acquisition of both physical and intellectual skills which enable individuals
to develop into useful members of the community.
(d) The
acquisition of an objective view of the local and external environments.
The policy further states that
higher educational institutions should pursue their goals, through, teaching,
research, the disseminating of existing and new information.
The
exponential expansion of the university system since the 1980’s amidst
complaints of dwindling standards led the federal government to adopt measures
designed to control the quality of education. Some of these measures include:
the closure to outreach centers or satellite campuses, introduction of rigid
entry requirements such as the post JAMB aptitude test, unduly long duration of
programmes and the transfer of regulations of regular programmes to distance
learning Programme. The Federal Government has embarked on some forward-looking
policies to reform the University System. In March 2002, a National Summit on
Higher Education was held to examine the management, funding curriculum
relevance and access into universities. There is a mass evidence to show
that the existing curriculum is not only defective, but also
lacks quality. The NUC accreditation exercise in 2000 showed that, out of 1,185
academic programmes, only 11% were given full accreditation (NUC, 2001).
Besides, the requirements to run universities according to private sector
principles and the dominance of managerial and entrepreneurial approaches to
higher education have occupied the centre stage in educational management. What
has become fashionable in Universities around the world is a shift from basic
to applied research, with emphasis on the nexus between education and the
economy, and greater concern with issues of intellectual property rights and
the prioritization of research for product development and commercialization.
(Mala Singh, 2001). These trends are bringing Universities in line with
influential global paradigms and best practices.
More so, the demand for university
education in the last 20 years is far greater than the supply. This is in spite
of the phenomenal expansion in the publicly owned universities in Nigeria from
1 in 1948 to 56 in 2007.However, government had problems providing space for
the large number of applicants ready to be admitted into the university, due to
the explosive population rate of Nigerians,especially the young ones. According
to the population Reference Bureau (PRB) 2003, Nigeria had a projected population
of 133.9 million and 45 percent of these figures are people of school going
age. Consequently, the government alone seems not to be able to provide the
required educational facilities for the teeming population of the school
age.Almost 30 million people in the world are fully qualified to enter a
university; but no available place for them (Duderstadt 2002).
Bearing in mind that no less than half of the world populations are youth under
age twenty, most of whom live in Africa, Asia
and Latin America , it implication on staggering demand
for university education is enormous for government alone to shoulder. In
Nigeria for instance, the series of committees set up by the Federal
Governments over the years (Long commission of 1990;
EstuNupe committee on the future of Higher
Education in Nigeria, 1996; and the Education , Science and
Technology Committee of vision 2010 , 1997) consistently
reported of the gross inadequate provision of
the university education in Nigeria ( Olaniyan 2001).
In the absence of improved
facilities to cope with, there is increase in demand in university education
which makes most institution to exceed their carrying capacities, which is
defined as the maximum number of students that the institution can sustain for
qualitative education based on available human and material resources
(NUC2005).
Although public universities have dominated the higher
education landscape in Nigeria for several decades, their failure to cope with
admission pressures became more critical with the introduction of the
Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in the later part of the 1980s
(Obasi,2007) .Hence, the public supply of higher education falls far short of
the new demand. Incessant industrial unrest is another major issue that
necessitates the emergence of private education. Strikes brings about
destabilization of the learning process and lead to low quality service from
lecturers because of their desire to cover lost ground. More so, there are
serious allegations that the public university system in Nigeria is
characterized by poor funding, high students’ wastage, huge unsatisfied
demand-supply gap and lack of critical educational inputs. The tables below,
shows the trend in university admission for the past few years.
Academic Year
|
No. of Applications Received
|
No. of Admissions Given
|
Percentage Admitted
|
1995/1996
|
508,280
|
32,473
|
6.4
|
1996
|
376,645
|
56,055
|
14.9
|
1997
|
419,807
|
73,781
|
17.6
|
1998
|
321,368
|
78,550
|
24.4
|
1999
|
593,670
|
64,358
|
10.8
|
2000
|
467,490
|
50,277
|
19.8
|
2000
|
467,490
|
50,277
|
10.8
|
2000/2001
|
550,339
|
60,718
|
11.0
|
Average
|
13.7
|
Source:
JAMB, Annual Report for Various Years as cited in Obasi (2007:47)
Alli (2004) observed that Nigerians
generally have the peculiar attitude of individual solution as a response to
social malaise. For instance people strive to provide boreholes or water for
themselves and generate electricity because government has failed to meet their
expectation. Hence, with increasing awareness of the importance of education
for human emancipation and development, Nigerians continue to adopt the usual
and peculiar response, which is private option. Therefore the trend has been
that of the private sector gradually taking over the primary and secondary sub
– sectors of the education industry. Consequently, more parents and guardians
tend to opt for private universities where strikes and other vices associated
with public universities are virtually non-existent.
Also, access to higher
education is essentially a social process, deeply involved with the society’s
cultural pattern system of value [Thressher, 1970]. The conditions governing admission
into universities must therefore be determined by the existing social, economic
and political realities within the society. In Nigeria, within a population of
over 140 million scattered over 36 states and Federal capital territory
situated at Abuja, finding an equitable formula for admitting all eligible
applicants is a challenge.
Recently, the federal government has
initiated momentous reforms in the University sub-sector, designed to promote
institutional autonomy, strengthen governance and entrench mechanisms for
quality assurance and control. Whereas university autonomy and academic freedom
only exist in principle, institutional mechanisms of quality control have been
weakened by the centrifugal forces of politics of ethnic balancing. Although the
contention is that the standard of education is diminishing, attempts at
improving the system’s dysfunctional ties have been incremental hence Nigerian
Universities are at the risk of losing their competitive edge. Many nations in
Africa recognize the fact that sustainable development can be attained only
when a functional system of education exists, thus, a higher level of education
is a sine qua-non for upward social and economic mobility in recent
times. Therefore, the Nigerian government should also formulate and
implement people-oriented policies that will reduce widespread poverty.
Selective-user charges should also be introduced to make the wealthy pay more
for university education.
Realizing that education is the
spark plug for development, Nigeria adopted policies and programmes that are
inclined to the Social Demand Approach to the supply of education. It was for
the same reason that in 1979, university education was placed on the concurrent
list in the Nigerian Constitution. This provision marked the genesis of the
establishment of private universities in Nigeria. The rationale for
establishing state universities was essentially political because of the
entrenched quota system tradition in Nigeria, which is driven by politics of
ethnic balancing rather than merit. Some state universities were established to
reflect the federal character and to bridge the huge demand-supply gap. There
was a feeling that candidates from the Southern part of the country were denied
places in universities outside their catchments areas. There is today an
increasing demand for university education, which the existing universities
cannot accommodate. Therefore, private universities were established to
accommodate the increasing demand for places in existing institutions. It is
evident that the government alone cannot provide the much needed university
education to the teeming applicants seeking places yearly, hence the
involvement of private sectors .The Private universities is owned by
individuals or corporate bodies. The corporate bodies are mostly religious
organizations. Private universities are wholly funded by the proprietors hence
they do not benefit from the NUC government grants. Nevertheless, the private
sectors have been licensed to complement governmental efforts at providing
university education to the masses. Today, there are 32 private universities i
A fundamental justification for the
emergence of private universities in the late 1990 is the rising index of
unsatisfied demand.
Statement of the Problem
Although, public universities have
dominated the higher landscape in Nigeria for several decades, their failure to
cope with admission pressures became more critical which then made the public
supply of higher education fall far short of the demand. More so, it has been
observed that the public university system in Nigeria is
characterized by incessant industrial unrest, poor funding, high
students’ wastage, huge unsatisfied demand-supply gap and lack of critical
educational. However, the contention is that the standard of education is
diminishing and the attempts at improving the system’s dysfunctionalites have
been incremental. Hence, Nigerian universities are at the risk of losing their
competitive edge.
The presence study probably became
more relevant in order to ensure quality, access and equity in education
provision in private institutions through coordinated and concerted efforts of
all stake holders necessitated the present study titled: Privatization of
University Education and Quality Service Delivery.
TOPIC: PRIVATIZATION OF UNIVERSITY EDUCATION AND QUALITY SERVICE DELIVERY IN SOUTHWEST NIGERIA
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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