Opinion
Requiem For WASSCE
Examination scam, especially at the senior secondary certificate cadre, has been a recurring decimal in Nigeria. However, recent lamentations by the Registrar of the West African Examinations Council, WAEC, Dr. Iyi Uwadiae, that students, parents, council officials and mercenaries connive to compromise the West African Senior Secondary Certificate Examination, WASSCE, indicates the need for urgent action.
A most recent outcry came from the Head of Nigeria Council, West African Examinations Council (WAEC), Charles Eguridu, that Nigeria has the highest number of examination irregularities among the member-countries of WAEC.
Also, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), on Wednesday last week said parents of candidates sitting for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, have been the Board’s major challenge.
When these outcries and lamentations are aggregated, they simply point to one fact and that is, all the examination bodies in the country need to introduce stricter measures through the use of advanced technology to curb malpractice in their examinations.
The truth remains that the quest to be educated in Nigeria has literally taken a new dimension. Stories abound on how parents and relatives actually give assistance to their children or wards in the Senior Secondary Certificate Examinations, SSCE.
The strong desire by parents, who are supposed to be models in directing their children to the right parts in life, to descend so low by aiding and abetting such children to cheat, have left the authorities and indeed many Nigerians in gloom.
Surprisingly, a good number of parents go to any length to get question papers for their children before the examinations. The same parents proceed dangerously far to look for invigilators or supervisors who would give them scripts to assist their children pass.
It beats my imagination how in some instances students raise huge amounts of money to obtain the so-called question papers that litter everywhere including the social media. What is the desperation about? Isn’t it ridiculous for somebody to have a WAEC or National Examination Council (NECO) certificate and yet unable to spell a simple English word correctly?
Irrespective of the stringent provisions of the law, examination malpractice has continued unabated. According to the Director- General of the National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mr. Mike Omeri, Nigeria currently occupies the number one position in the world’s examination malpractice index. In his opinion, examination malpractice has been elevated to the level of organised crime in Nigeria that must be halted from protracting.
I agree with Omeri absolutely. The situation has so deteriorated and vitiated the education standard that in the last four years, no Nigerian student has made first position in African examinations. Ghana, which is not up to the size of a state in Nigeria, has been taking the first, second and third positions except last year when Nigeria came second, while Ghana still emerged first and third.
I feel really pained and disturbed by this development. If we continue to sit by and watch the situation worsen, what shall we say if our children ask what we did to arrest the downward trend? That is why all hands have to be on deck to let them know that there is no short cut to success in life.
Both state and federal government must see examination malpractice in our secondary schools and beyond as a huge threat to national development and security in the same way terrorism is viewed and employ very drastic measures to end it.
Stakeholders from member-nations such as Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Gambia must interact periodically and exchange experiences from their countries. Such synergy may expose them to some of the subterfuges candidates use these days to cheat.
I usually compare what School Certificate Examination was years back and what it is now. In those days, WAEC would set the questions, take them to Lagos and distribute to the regions or states, then to the schools. Because schools were fewer, they were handed over to principals for safe-keeping. Nothing ever happened to the question papers neither did anyone go after them. But since the situation has changed, the method of handling and securing the question papers need to change.
In a developing country like Nigeria, examination malpractice may not be hard to find because education will always be competitive. Over reliance on paper qualification is equally not helping matters. Nevertheless, ending examination malpractice in a country like ours is a collective responsibility of all stakeholders in the education industry.
Arnold Alalibo
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