Ululations over the Academic Staff Union of Universities, ASUU, calling off its five-month-old strike have overtaken the damage the long-drawn dispute has done to education. How do we ensure that in the new year, another ASUU strike does not occur?
What appears to be important is the fact that the lecturers are returning to
the classrooms. Government is relieved that it has stopped the embarrassing
headlines of universities that have lost five months of academic activities
while haggling over a 2009 agreement.
How important is education to the authorities? How would the lost learning
time be recovered? What is the quality of certificates the students would
obtain after the long absence from school?
ASUU’s refusal to call off the strike until government produced proof of
depositing the money to meet its demands in the Central Bank is another chapter
in government’s relations with ASUU. Other labour unions would adopt the same
measures in resolving own issues.
Government has failed to gain the trust of labour unions. When the Academic
Staff Union Polytechnics, ASUP, went on strike, government did not speak to the
union for three months. The issue remains partially resolved. Governments sign
agreements with no intention of keeping them. The disputed 2009 agreement is
due for re-negotiation, yet it has not been implemented.
Our governments should change their policies of planning for immediate
needs. ASUU is not the only labour union in education. Its strike that took so
long to resolve is not the major challenge education faces.
At the foundational levels, challenges with number and quality of teachers,
teaching aids, classroom space, learning environment, and curriculum persist.
The thinking that once the universities are open, education is on the proper
ken is deceptive. Higher education is at most vacuous when foundations at the
primary and secondary school levels are ignored.
Governments urgently need to address these issues as well as the
bureaucracies in education. They are wasteful; savings from emerging them could
release funds for core education.
What are governments’ plans beyond depositing N200 billion to end the ASUU
strike? How would they tackle sustainable funding to stem another wave of
strikes next year? Would governments ever consider education important enough
that it should run without disruptions?
Thousands of conferences held annually on the future of education are mere
talk sessions that hardly improve education. When will the changes be made? Do
governments require strikes to realise the importance of education? What are
governments’ plans for education?
Unions, which always consider the welfare of their members as a first
charge, cannot determine the future of education. Governments should provide
sustainable means for funding education, not to avoid strikes, but to underline
the importance of education.
Vanguard
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