Opinion
Still On Examination Malpractice
Examination malpractice is a recurring problem of Nigeria. Yearly, cases of examination malpractice are reported in this country. This is, indeed, unfortunate for the growth of Nigeria. No country can move forward without the development of the human person. Candidates for examination should therefore be honest while sitting for their various examinations. Meanwhile, three persons have been sentenced to various prison terms because of examination malpractice. The malpractice took place during the examinations conducted by the National Business and Technical Education Board (NABTEB).
The Registrar of the Board, Professor David Awanbor, announced the conviction recently while addressing newsmen in Benin. According to him, two of the convicts, Patrick Ogyoko and James Abiola were sentenced to three years imprisonment each on a three-count charge preferred against them at a Federal High Court in Lafia. He said Ogyoko, a secondary school teacher in a private school served as a Supervisor while Abiola was an invigilator. Professor Awanbor told newsmen that the fraud abetted by the convicts was detected by NABTEB staff who reported the matter to the police. The third convict, Omogbolahan Sadiq was sentenced to three months imprisonment by a Chief District Court in Abuja presided over by Chukwuemeka Nweke for impersonation. The Registrar assured Nigerians that the examination body would continue to maintain zero tolerance for examination malpractice.
Similarly, two persons were earlier convicted for two years each following examination malpractice during an examination conducted by the same board. Disclosing this, Professor Awanbor advised parents, guardians and students to desist from examination malpractice. Also, the Michael Okpara University, Umuahia, Abia State, expelled twenty-one students during the 2007/2008 session for examination malpractice.
It will be recalled that worried by the high incidence of examination malpractice in Nigeria, the wife of the Rivers State Governor, Mrs Judith Amaechi, launched a campaign against the crime in Rivers State. The campaign was flagged off at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology on May 24, 2009. Speaking on the occasion, Mrs Amaechi advised lecturers to desist from monetary inducements or “sorting” in their various educational institutions. According to her, this behaviour is causing the dwindling fortunes of our educational system and making the universities produce half-baked graduates.
Lecturers should listen to Mrs Amaechi in this regard. It is very nauseating to hear that some lecturers at our institutions of higher learning collect money from their students before giving them pass marks in their examinations. University teachers ought to know that passing examination is not actually the true test of knowledge. Acquisition of knowledge is gained through hardwork after graduation. At the diploma or basic degree levels of training, students are merely introduced to the various branches of knowledge. They gain true knowledge with the steady application of the intellect after graduation. We, therefore, add our voice to the call by Mrs Amaechi for university teachers to stop the ugly practice of “sorting”.
Earlier, the Joint Matriculation Board disclosed massive fraud in the 2008 Monotechnics, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education matriculation examination. According to the Registrar of the Board, Professor Dibu Oyerinde, 3,039 candidates cheated in the examination halls across the country. Top on the list of those who cheated were candidates from Imo State (811) Rivers State (611) Osun State (217) Abia State (199) and Delta State (137). The Registrar further revealed that a student union leader was caught impersonating at a particular centre during the examination. He said, the case was reported to the institution he came from for necessary disciplinary action.
However, it should be noted that no nation can be seen as advanced if its students indulge in examination malpractice at all times. Knowledge, it should be emphasised, is not acquired through cheating at examinations. It is acquired through sincere and honest hardwork. Students should therefore take their studies seriously and avoid cheating during examination. They should realise that the brain is the only thing we cannot cheat. What we do not know cannot be known through cheating. Knowledge cannot be bought with money. We can only use money to buy clothes and other materials. We therefore advise students to make honest efforts and pass their examinations so that their country can move forward and be respected by the world community.
Dr.Mann Tolofari, Fellow, Institute of Corporate Administration of Nigeria.
Mann Tolofari
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