Opinion
Exploring Academic Walls For Agric Literacy
In the 1960s, agriculture was the mainstay of Nigeria’s economy, providing the main source of livelihood for the majority of Nigerians. Then, the farming sector employed about 70 percent of the entire country’s labour force. Not only did this sector provide the country with employment, it also provided it with foreign exchange earnings. Unfortunately, this all-important sector became overtaken by the oil boom that began in the 1970s as reported by the National Bureau of Statistics, (2012). Howbeit, the oil boom era, like every other season that is never permanent, is gradually fizzling out of stage, thereby making official calls for boosting the employment prospect of the nation’s teeming youths through economic diversification highly persistent in recent times.
Beyond the call, first and foremost, is the need to sensitise a people who for a long time have basked in the euphoria of white collar job and this no doubt, requires a sustained systematic approach, capable of reorientating the mindset of the people, especially the youth. This of course, can best be achieved using the instrument if Western education. All over the world, educational institutions are known mainly as a platform used directly or indirectly to influence the general life of a person. The government, in most cases, through the school, plans and leads the study of experience, and also contributes to the continuous growth of an individual through the systematic reconstruction of knowledge and experience. Having known knowledge as a dynamic and functional element, there is every need to have it constantly reconstructed, especially in accordance with the changes in time.
This is why in various spheres of life, interested parties always prefer using education to solve issues that limit social orientation and thinking. Harry Smorenberg, the founder and chairman of the World Summit on the Fight Against Corruption, realised this for which he said; “teaching financial literacy as a subject in schools helped other countries increase access to financial products and services.” With the place of financial literacy in promoting financial participation, consumer protection and financial stability, Smorenberg advised Nigeria to teach financial literacy in schools. He believed that such idea would allow students to better understand financial planning, the importance of preparing household budget, managing cash flows and distributing assets to achieve financial goals.
However, Smorenberg is not alone in his thought. Tanner and Tanner, ( 1980) in their “curriculum” Development: Theory and Practice”, also recognised the role of the school in systematically building knowledge and experience, unlike the role of other institutions. If the thought postulated by these educators and others like them is anything to go by, then it is enough to say that education is very useful to the society, and therefore, should be accepted and embraced by Nigerian leaders as a platform through which a faster sensitisation of the theory and practice of agriculture among the Nigerian citizenry could be achieved.
Therefore, if Nigeria is really interested in the development of agriculture as an alternative source of income, it follows that from the junior secondary school level, emphasis should be placed on driving programmes aimed at promoting the understanding and knowledge necessary for the synthesis, analysis and transmission of basic information about agriculture to students, producers, consumers and the general public. It is expected that such programmes will focus on helping teachers and other stakeholders to effectively incorporate agricultural information into subjects taught or studied for public and private purposes in order to better understand the impact of agriculture on the society.
The writer is thus concerned about the aspect of agricultural literacy that acquaints and farmiliarises students or individuals with the knowledge and understanding of not only the concepts of health and the environment, but also their history, current economic and social significance for the people of Nigeria. In this case, the knowledge of the production, processing and domestication of food and fibre, as well as international marketing through the school will ultimately lead to informed citizens of our great country who, in turn, will play an important role in the development and implementation of policies able to maintain competitive agro-industrial enterprises.
By this, young people with knowledge and understanding of nutrition system and fibres will naturally be able to synthesise, analyse and communicate basic information about agriculture, such as the production of plant and animal products, its processing, economic effect, social significance, marketing and distribution, etc. Therefore, making agricultural literacy compulsory from the level of primary education through secondary education, regardless of the intended course of study, undoubtedly will have a significant impact on the rehabilitation and development of Nigeria’s difficult economy.
That is why Gbamanga (2000) advised students to plan the programme as necessary, to examine and interpret the nature of the society in relation to its basic stable values and the areas in which it changes, when choosing content. While Nigeria is currently talking, preaching and dreaming about agriculture, individuals must be encouraged to take advantage of the opportunity provided by the prevailing economic crisis in the country to get involved in agriculture. It is advisable that every child be subjected to compulsory agricultural knowledge in school.
The recovery of Nigeria from the impact of fallen crude oil prices will certainly not be sudden. In fact, there is a need for an orderly organisation of a series of courses and support activities aimed at helping young Nigerians to rediscover themselves in the field of agriculture.
By: Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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