In a 2015 universities’ ranking, Webometrics, one of the leading online university ranking sites, named ten top universities in Nigeria to include University of Lagos, Obafemi Awolowo University, University of Ibadan, University of Ilorin, Covenant University, Federal University of Technology, Minna, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, University of Benin, University of Port Harcourt and the Ahmadu Bello University in that order. These are undoubtedly our best at the moment, but how many of them are among the world’s best 1000 universities?
Universities worldwide are cited and ranked based on six performance indicators, out of which, academic reputation and research output (Citation) constitute 60 per cent. According to QS World Universities Rankings, they include Academic reputation (40 per cent), Citation per faculty (20 per cent), Student-to-faculty ratio (20 per cent), Employer reputation (10 per cent), International faculty ratio and International student ratio 5 per cent each.
Research is a profound intellectual activity that requires profound intellectual profundity to excel.
It is too serious to be left in the hands of mediocre. When only 40 per cent of the brightest and the best brains are left to undertake the arduous task of teaching and research, it means that, the quality of our research output is not likely to exceed 40 per cent.
Plagiarism is a serious intellectual fraud that is viewed seriously in the academia. The monster has continued to impede our ability to compete favourably with other world class universities in terms of citation of research work in International Journals, as most products of intellectual fraud are recycled back into the system as lecturers.
While academic reputation is measured using a global survey in which academics are asked to identify the institutions where they believe the best work is currently taking place within their field of expertise, citation per faculty aims to assess universities research impact, which means a piece of research being cited or referred to within another piece of research.
Generally, the more often a piece of research is cited, the more influential it is and the more highly cited research papers a university publishes, the stronger its research output is considered. This is undoubtedly a function of quality academic staff, as no university rises above the substance of its staff.
Student-to faculty-ratio is a simple measure of the number of academic staff employed relative to the number of students enrolled. This indicator aims to identify universities that are best equipped to provide small class sizes and a good level of individual supervision.
Dearth of critical scholars in the Nigerian university system has continued to force most universities in the country to go to other friendly institutions to borrow lecturers in order to meet the National Universities Commission (NUC) requirements. In most cases, instead of the stipulated fifteen or twenty lecturers required for a programme to be accredited, most institutions boast of only five or seven permanent staff with visiting lecturers making up the remaining number.
There is also the perennial problem of over admission in which more than two hundred students are admitted for a space for fifty students. A lecturer is assigned to more than twenty undergraduates in addition to scores of postgraduate students to supervise. This negates the principles of student-to-faculty ratio as there will be no proper supervision of projects and thesis. The implication is that, undergraduate and postgraduate research outputs lack originality as a result of unbridled academic fraud.
The subsisting criteria for accrediting degree programmes in Nigerian universities as published in NUC’s website include among others, quantity and quality of teaching staff, physical facilities, philosophy and objectives of programme, students admission/retention and graduation as well as adequate financial support for the university and departments.
A cursory look at these criteria reveals that they conform to global standards, but enforcement/implementation remain bane of our policy documents. This can be gleaned from some degree awarding institutions existing for many years without accreditation; or admitting and graduating students in programmes without full accreditation. The recent recognition granted Plateau State University by the NUC after ten years of existence is a case in point.
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