2021
DOI: 10.1080/23311886.2021.1890897
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Challenges in Nigeria’s education sector and the migration of Nigerian postgraduate students to South African universities

Abstract: Education remains the weapon for upward stratification, social and economic development of any nation but the Nigerian government has not shown enough commitment to the educational sector. The manifestation could be seen in the shrinking government funding on education, decaying and lack of infrastructure in Nigeria's universities which have led to demoralization of the academia. A major consequence of this is the frustration experienced by postgraduate students who are pursuing higher education and having to … Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Over a long period, government-owned universities have been starved of required funds needed for both human and infrastructural development. Several years of neglect is responsible for the lack of preparedness of the government-owned universities to quickly switch to virtual teaching (IseOlorunkanmi et al (2021). Regarding when they were trained on the use of teaching tools, 58% of the participants were trained before the pandemic outbreak, while 42% were trained during the pandemic to address the crisis caused by the shutdown.…”
Section: Analysis and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over a long period, government-owned universities have been starved of required funds needed for both human and infrastructural development. Several years of neglect is responsible for the lack of preparedness of the government-owned universities to quickly switch to virtual teaching (IseOlorunkanmi et al (2021). Regarding when they were trained on the use of teaching tools, 58% of the participants were trained before the pandemic outbreak, while 42% were trained during the pandemic to address the crisis caused by the shutdown.…”
Section: Analysis and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is as a result of many variables that stand as challenges to quality education delivery in tertiary institutions in Nigeria, and shortage of funds continue to remain a prominent and constant challenge. According to a study by IseOlorunkanmi et al (2021), the government of Nigeria has been persistently underfunding the education sector for years since it does not set aside sufficient funds from its budget for this purpose. The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization ([UNESCO], 2015) recommends that countries are expected to allocate 4% to 6% of their Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or 26% of their national budget to their education sector.…”
Section: Presentation Of Data For Research Question One How Has Poor ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sector is plagued by poor funding, mismanagement, incessant industrial strike actions, and dysfunctional and unethical practices, including inadequate implementation of budgetary allocations, leading to insufficient staffing and non-availability of the most essential instructional materials (World Education Services [WES], 2017;IseOlorunkanmi et al, 2021). There are approximately 16 million students in these Nigerian tertiary institutions (UNESCO, 2018).…”
Section: Study Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The poor teacher-to-student ratio due to the overcrowding of students in limited-capacity classrooms remains one of the major challenges within the sector (WES, 2017). Furthermore, the management of work structures and processes in this sector is viewed as excessively bureaucratic and highly regimented (Omodero and Nwangwa, 2020) and undermines support for academics within the sector (IseOlorunkanmi et al, 2021). Despite several restructuring measures over the years, the availability and usage of FWAs that permit locational flexibility across the sector mirrors the deteriorating rate of academics' well-being (Adekoya et al, 2019;Akanji et al, 2020).…”
Section: Study Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
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