Why are most Nigerian graduates unemployable?

Uche Metuh

I’ll tell you a story.

There’s this girl who aced all her subjects in secondary school. Not just acing but award-worthy educational success. She was so good that at her Junior Secondary 3 (JSS 3) level, she was solving mathematical problems from Senior Secondary 1 & 2 (SS 1 & 2) curriculum.

First mistake

She loved Maths & computers but was admitted into the university to study Geology. Today, she still thinks she would have been a statistics wizard if she’d been allowed to just study Math or Engineering. You know – subjects where she doesn’t have to always cram some qualitative garbage but provide quantitative solutions.

Second mistake

When she got into the university, she realised she didn’t have to study very hard. Very few people were bothering to anyway. She was extremely smart and could hold her own but it became easier to combine intellectual efforts with other students at assignments, tests and final exams. The system allowed it. All her friends did it so, why fight it?

Third mistake

While at school, no one ever taught her how to write a résumé or successfully approach interviews. She, just like everyone around her wanted a good life but the system pretty much set them up to fail. When she graduated, she met a professional at an international oil & gas company who asked her what she wanted to do in life & to explain her undergraduate degree experience but she was not prepared for that.

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She gave answers, which were weak, mostly incoherent, lacked precision or clarity. She’d never thought of herself in that light. The internet wasn’t readily accessible back then so she was pretty much left on her own with her fellow ignorant peers. She also had a great and  supportive family who she leaned on.

Luckily for her, she got some mentors, then left the country for her master’s degree. At first, she struggled at her Canadian university.

Correcting her second mistake

She had to actually learn all those skills & resources she didn’t bother with back in Nigeria due to combined students’ efforts. She had to read all those textbooks she never bothered with in her Nigerian university in order to excel at her program.

Correcting her third mistake

She also met lecturers whose method of teaching was about empowering students to run with their ideas.It wasn’t about multiple choice questions but making a case of why Case A is better/worse than Case B. It made her actually think for the 1st time in her life. She learned how to make great presentations. It was a confidence boost. It was exhilarating! She learned about plagiarism which is a very despicable thing. She also learned about self-development, professional development and presentations. She learned it was ok to make decisions, make mistakes and then learn from them. She became comfortable working alone & also with a team.

She learned the power of independence. She was a different person. She became more confident about her thoughts and ideas. No one laughs at her mistakes nor condemns her for them. Her bosses don’t care about always being right or barking orders at those under them. Team contributions is crucial, encouraged & needed. Everybody is equal. No one feared anyone. It was a healthy environment. She was valued. She freely runs her programme the way she sees fit.

There’s no correcting my first mistake. If I ever do, I’ll tell a story about it.

If you read this, you’d understand how the Nigerian system encourages laziness and might discourage talent because of envy or pride. Many Nigerian graduates are victims of their own underdeveloped and redundant society.

Maybe with the Internet, a few might self-improve. Otherwise, they’re unemployable because there’s very few people to teach them better.

Note to any Nigerian student reading this – don’t take the easy way out. Read not just to pass your exams but to actually know. You’d be truly a better person and student for it.

Engineeringhealthy environmentmathematical problems
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