Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: ||NaijaObserver|| RE: [Raayiriga] Re: [NIgerianWorldForum] RE: ||ABBA|| 13 Northern states and WAEC results....



Anunoby Ogugua:

"Fact-based comments" are not necessarily truths.  Facts that are facts that are facts are not necessarily true statements.  We are entitled to our opinions, but not our facts, and even those facts are not necessarily true.

The bane of discussions on Nigerian Nets in my 21 years on it has been the constant confusion of opinion with fact;  the confusion that a fact is invariably a truth; and  the hope that repeated opinion rises to the level of truth; and finally false syllogisms will again rise to truths.

To state for example that "Mr. A. killed Mr. B. because A hates B" is a statement of fact, rounded off with an opinion.  "Mr. A killed Mr. B. because A stole B's money" is a fact rounded off with another fact.  Various additional facts - and truths - must be obtained/ascertained by questioning:

    - do Mr. A and Mr B exist?  They have to exist at all for A to kill B.  I have had occasions to argue about ghosts, and you have pointed out that that was a ghost, the repeater says, "Well it does not matter, it is the principle that counts."
.
    - Is Mr. B. dead?   He cannot have been killed if he is not dead.   I once had an interlocutor here describe how a fellow was "piece-sed" to death by bullets in a war zone, only for the same person to be contesting for Deputy Governor of his state fifteen years after the "deadly" event.  (The fellow knows himself.)

    - If indeed he has been certified dead, was his death a result of murder?  A could not have killed B if B died a natural death.
 
It is only after the above have been established can we really begin to interrogate the veracity (truthfulness) of the statement of fact.

Or take the statements:

    "A hates B.   B was killed in the Hotel H.  A was in the hotel H when B was killed.  Therefore A killed B."

These kinds of circumstantial evidence from false syllogisms which rise to statements of facts, which, oft repeated from the lowliest to the highest elevate into truth fill Nigeria's "history" - or parlor/pepper-soup talk.   Propaganda, ethnic triumphalism, macho intractability and boastfulness are major causes.   Then when you challenge these facts, the repeaters get annoyed that you wish to confuse them with the facts, that are you challenging what their Papa told them, and you are challenging because you hate them?

Another opinion...

And so on..... and there you have it.



Bolaji Aluko


On Wed, Oct 1, 2014 at 5:19 PM, Anunoby, Ogugua <AnunobyO@lincolnu.edu> wrote:

There are ethnic champions (real or imagined) in all ethnic communities. Fair and balanced commentary requires that champions on all sides of a conversation be called out if any such call is being done.

It is very evident in this forum, that even fact-based comments on some ethnic champions' heroes, can be deemed unacceptable and painfully intolerable to some champions. They are driven so mad that they pour invectives on commentators using the most vile words at their finger-tips. Facts are facts. Historical facts are especially so. They are not always favorable. They are not always pleasant. They could not always be. To deny them therefore does not undermine their "factness". They remain facts even after they are denied with or without obsequious logic.  

No one however brilliant, does/gets things right all the time. Every life is spiced with some errors of thought, judgment, and action. If any one's judgment and action arise in a conversation, the one should rightly be called out. That the one is so called out, does not  necessarily diminish them. It proves their humanness. Their story is just being retold. If they were not a person of some consequence, they would not be talked about in this forum. I think.

 

oa     

 

From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Mobolaji Aluko
Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2014 12:34 AM
To: Asagwara, Ken (EAL)
Cc: NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com; Baduba54; abba2007@gmail.com; nigerianworldforum@yahoogroups.com; raayiriga@yahoogroups.com; naijapolitics@yahoogroups.com; talknigeria@yahoogroups.com; naijaintellects@googlegroups.com; vin_modebelu@yahoo.com; rotfash@yahoo.com; rotimi_osunsan@yahoo.com; nebukadineze@aol.com; roteemee@yahoo.ca; traji@aol.com; tinaiigho@yahoo.com; aadeboye@mac.com; yahaya64134@yahoo.com; igbonize@yahoo.com; ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk; matto1@msn.com; rexmarinus1966@yahoo.com; e26m2atum@aol.com; talkhard@yahoogroups.com; adungbemorg@yahoo.com; wadedayo@yahoo.co.uk; odidere2001@yahoo.com; ibk@usa.net; idowubobo@gmail.com; olakassimmd@aol.com; ikeagbor@yahoo.com; dipoeniola@yahoo.com; wharfsnake@yahoo.com; teluemunor@yahoo.com; nowa_o@yahoo.com; jbi8@cdc.gov; ericayoola@aol.co.uk; abraham.madu@yahoo.com; salihumustafa@gmail.com; africatoday80@gmail.com; bizon586@yahoo.com; nigeria360@yahoogroups.com; omoodua@yahoogroups.com; stdawodu@gmail.com; aauwnycpres@aol.com; jamesagazie@yahoo.com; rotehm@yahoo.com; odidere2012@gmail.com; ibirogbak@yahoo.com; yodumakin51@gmail.com; yemifash64@gmail.com; gkerley@gmail.com; biolasavage@rocketmail.com; justinluv4870@yahoo.co.uk; pachusim@yahoo.com; saharareporter@yahoo.com; chris.udoh@yahoo.co.uk; aliyubala.aliyu@gmail.com; nekujumi@gmail.com; femmylawson@yahoo.com; ksonif@gmail.com; fabiyi@live.com; hastrups66@gmail.com; ige.leye@yahoo.com; joanoviawe@gmail.com; alaremu2007@gmail.com; ayoojutalayo@yahoo.com; nationalvision@yahoo.com; kol_onif@yahoo.com; yemifash@yahoo.ca; yodumakin@yahoo.com; yanarewa@yahoogroups.com; USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: ||NaijaObserver|| RE: [Raayiriga] Re: [NIgerianWorldForum] RE: ||ABBA|| 13 Northern states and WAEC results....

 

 

Ken Asagwara:

 

Thanks for your thoughts...always welcome

 

It is my long-time promise that despite all attempts at blackmail, intimidation and character assasinations by your Confederacy, the promise, and not a threat,is that those of you Internet Brigade who shout victimization and marginalization all the time, and yet push Igbo supermenschen mentality all the time shall be pushed back against, consistently and firmly. I put Obi Nwakanma and Nebu Adiele in that category of pushers, and to a lesser extent yourself, Ken.  (For example, you in particular go to psychological meltdown when the word "Biafra" is mentioned.)  The thugs among you - under who the more refined of you hide as they scatter hateful comments against other ethnic groups in the country under the guise of of comicality and truth-telling and defenders of the "faith"  - are Chuks Agwunobi, Stan Odera, Canice Onuoha (alias Swamp Snake), Vincent Modebelu, Peter O'Para and a motley flotsam and jetsam others, who should name themselves if I have omitted their names.

 

Take this from me:  Intrinsically, no one group of persons is better than others in the world:  not White over Black, Yellow or Brown, not Male over Female, not Yoruba over Igbo or Hausa, NOTHING.  Whether it was while I was in the US or now that I am in Nigeria, I interacted/interact with a wide variety of Nigerians of all ethnicities on a daily basis, and I can affirm that,   History, culture and opportunity may make certain metrics compare differently, but there is nothing intrinsically that prevents a positive change if the will to do so is there.....and that is what we should encourage each other about, and not denigrate each other - or elevate our group of prideful association arbitrarily,  particularly on the basis of ethnicity.   

 

In the mean-time, let us move on.  We all agree that the educational standards in the country - or maybe outcomes - are sordid in the country; some sections of the country are better than others, but not that great on an international basis;  and  that the North of Nigeria, already behind for many historical reasons, are in even sorrier shape now because of a serious lack of leadership effort, too much emphasis on power-for-power sake rather than on service, and now the threats of a consuming and long-coming (Boko Haram) conflict, particularly in the North-East. That is why I have just spent some time to provide Abba Gumel with relevant Big Data, for him to convince himself.

 

And there you have it.  I am done for now.

 

 

 

Bolaji Aluko

 

 

On Tue, Sep 30, 2014 at 8:46 PM, Asagwara, Ken (EAL) <Ken.Asagwara@gov.mb.ca> wrote:

Nwanna Obi Nwakanma:

 

Reading Bolaji Aluko describe any other, in this case, you and Nebu as "ethnic supremacists", I wondered if he really thought over the expression before labeling you thus. My reason being that of all the "ethnic supremacists" in all of Nigeria's internet forums, every discerning mind knows there is none more qualified for that reproach than Bolaji Aluko himself.

 

Whoa; talk about the pot calling the kettle black. Well, no surprise there any ways. Psychological attitudinal projection of sorts typical of the man Bolaji Aluko. What else can it be!

 

Cheers.

 

Mazi KC Prince Asagwara

 

From: NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com [mailto:NaijaObserver@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: September-30-14 11:36 AM
To: Baduba54; alukome@gmail.com; abba2007@gmail.com
Cc: nigerianworldforum@yahoogroups.com; raayiriga@yahoogroups.com; naijapolitics@yahoogroups.com; talknigeria@yahoogroups.com; naijaintellects@googlegroups.com; naijaobserver@yahoogroups.com; vin_modebelu@yahoo.com; rotfash@yahoo.com; rotimi_osunsan@yahoo.com; nebukadineze@aol.com; roteemee@yahoo.ca; traji@aol.com; tinaiigho@yahoo.com; aadeboye@mac.com; yahaya64134@yahoo.com; igbonize@yahoo.com; ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk; matto1@msn.com; rexmarinus1966@yahoo.com; e26m2atum@aol.com; talkhard@yahoogroups.com; adungbemorg@yahoo.com; wadedayo@yahoo.co.uk; odidere2001@yahoo.com; ibk@usa.net; idowubobo@gmail.com; olakassimmd@aol.com; ikeagbor@yahoo.com; dipoeniola@yahoo.com; wharfsnake@yahoo.com; teluemunor@yahoo.com; nowa_o@yahoo.com; jbi8@cdc.gov; ericayoola@aol.co.uk; abraham.madu@yahoo.com; salihumustafa@gmail.com; africatoday80@gmail.com; bizon586@yahoo.com; nigeria360@yahoogroups.com; omoodua@yahoogroups.com; stdawodu@gmail.com; aauwnycpres@aol.com; jamesagazie@yahoo.com; rotehm@yahoo.com; odidere2012@gmail.com; ibirogbak@yahoo.com; yodumakin51@gmail.com; yemifash64@gmail.com; gkerley@gmail.com; biolasavage@rocketmail.com; justinluv4870@yahoo.co.uk; pachusim@yahoo.com; saharareporter@yahoo.com; chris.udoh@yahoo.co.uk; aliyubala.aliyu@gmail.com; nekujumi@gmail.com; femmylawson@yahoo.com; ksonif@gmail.com; fabiyi@live.com; hastrups66@gmail.com; ige.leye@yahoo.com; joanoviawe@gmail.com; alaremu2007@gmail.com; ayoojutalayo@yahoo.com; nationalvision@yahoo.com; kol_onif@yahoo.com; yemifash@yahoo.ca; yodumakin@yahoo.com; yanarewa@yahoogroups.com; USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: ||NaijaObserver|| RE: [Raayiriga] Re: [NIgerianWorldForum] RE: ||ABBA|| 13 Northern states and WAEC results....

 

 

The only "ethnic supremacists" in these fora for Bolaji Aluko are people like Obi Nwakanma and Nebu - so says the uber ethnic supremacist himself by the name, Bolaji Aluko. I mentioned the fact that Chima is Igbo simply because Abba insisted that "Southerners" should not presume to know the problems in the North or proffer solutions to what they know nothing about. Professor Chima's work was dedicated to nomadic education, particularly the education of the pastoralist communities in the North, and he did not have to be a Fulani to know the problem or the solution to the crisis of education in the North which Abba denies. For mentioning Chima's Igbo identity, Obi Nwakanma becomes "supremacist" - and largely because the word "Igbo" raises the hackles of the likes of Bolaji Aluko. The problem is simple: the crisis of education in the North is a Nigerian problem, and requires all hands on deck: it does not matter from where the solutions come, - northerner or Southerner. If that makes me triumphalist, then I'm glad. I do not consider the situation in the North of Nigeria, a "northern problem," because its effects are not, and even in the longer run, will not be confined to the North. And yes, Chima was the central proponent of nomadic education, and it was largely by his advocacy that Prof. Jubril Aminu as minister adopted it as policy and appointed him the first Chairman of the National Commission on Nomadic Education. We must pay just tribute to a man and his work, period.
Obi Nwakanma

 


To: alukome@gmail.com; abba2007@gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Raayiriga] Re: [NIgerianWorldForum] RE: ||ABBA|| 13 Northern states and WAEC results....
From: baduba54@aol.com
CC: nigerianworldforum@yahoogroups.com; raayiriga@yahoogroups.com; naijapolitics@yahoogroups.com; talknigeria@yahoogroups.com; naijaintellects@googlegroups.com; naijaobserver@yahoogroups.com; vin_modebelu@yahoo.com; rotfash@yahoo.com; rotimi_osunsan@yahoo.com; nebukadineze@aol.com; roteemee@yahoo.ca; traji@aol.com; tinaiigho@yahoo.com; aadeboye@mac.com; yahaya64134@yahoo.com; igbonize@yahoo.com; ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk; matto1@msn.com; rexmarinus1966@yahoo.com; e26m2atum@aol.com; talkhard@yahoogroups.com; adungbemorg@yahoo.com; wadedayo@yahoo.co.uk; odidere2001@yahoo.com; ibk@usa.net; idowubobo@gmail.com; olakassimmd@aol.com; ikeagbor@yahoo.com; dipoeniola@yahoo.com; wharfsnake@yahoo.com; teluemunor@yahoo.com; nowa_o@yahoo.com; jbi8@cdc.gov; ericayoola@aol.co.uk; abraham.madu@yahoo.com; salihumustafa@gmail.com; africatoday80@gmail.com; bizon586@yahoo.com; nigeria360@yahoogroups.com; omoodua@yahoogroups.com; stdawodu@gmail.com; aauwnycpres@aol.com; jamesagazie@yahoo.com; rotehm@yahoo.com; odidere2012@gmail.com; ibirogbak@yahoo.com; yodumakin51@gmail.com; yemifash64@gmail.com; gkerley@gmail.com; biolasavage@rocketmail.com; justinluv4870@yahoo.co.uk; pachusim@yahoo.com; saharareporter@yahoo.com; chris.udoh@yahoo.co.uk; aliyubala.aliyu@gmail.com; nekujumi@gmail.com; femmylawson@yahoo.com; ksonif@gmail.com; fabiyi@live.com; hastrups66@gmail.com; ige.leye@yahoo.com; joanoviawe@gmail.com; alaremu2007@gmail.com; ayoojutalayo@yahoo.com; nationalvision@yahoo.com; kol_onif@yahoo.com; yemifash@yahoo.ca; yodumakin@yahoo.com; yanarewa@yahoogroups.com; rexmarinus@hotmail.com; USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
Date: Tue, 30 Sep 2014 10:54:22 -0400

13 Northern States Education

Mr. Dear Mr. Abba,

I want to congratulate you for your ability to take on the world. It reminds me of a soccer game we watched in high school. It was "England vs. the rest of the world." And England won. I think that you think you are winning. The best brains in these list serves have tried to convince you that the state of education in Nigeria is dire and that the state of education in the northern region is beyond disastrous but you are not persuaded. I want to put in my 11/2 pence because whatever we have been talking or discussing about any other Nigeria endeavor, be it development, politics, national interest, security, etc., does not matter until we have an educated populace. That is the beginning of wisdom. Education is too important a matter to be left to politicians such as you are.

Many people have provided a lot of statistics to you to prove their points but I want to draw your attention to one graph provided by Mr. Aluko (forget his opening paragraph on the Igbo for what he did there was to provide you a pacifier to calm you down so that you can listen to him). That graph shows the number of children not in school. It stretched from the left all the way to the right end of the paper. The number is 8.7 million of OUR children. And believe it or not over 70% of them live in the north. If that number does not scare you, I propose that you return your cap and gown especially your hood to the place you got it from. Mr. Aluko, after he had played the good cop to Mr. Nwakanma and Mr. Adiele's bad cop, went on to deliver exactly the same message, that education in the north is very scary. I wish that you would pay attention to what these professional educators are saying.

I want to concede some of your points, PDP is responsible for some of deficiencies we have in education. They do have a hand for they have been in charge for over twenty years and would have claimed credit if it were otherwise. But this preceded PDP. So the blame also goes to the military leaders and the premiers before them. However the important point from my perspective is that it no longer matters who was/is at fault.

What are we going to do about it?

I want to use my village Achi, and my local government, Oji River Local Government, to show what can be done.

1.   We the people wrote off the government (as a manner of speaking) and took things into our hands.

2.   The Diaspora Oji River people donated desks and chairs to the schools in the local government

3.   Diaspora Achi people donated backpacks and books to ALL the students in the village.

4.   We are donating 50 computers (laptops) to 50 schools in the LGA. And more will be donated next year.

5.   Science teachers do not like to go to Achi because it is not Enugu or Onitsha. We are giving monthly stipend to science teachers in Achi to help our students get the science education they need. This is attracting science teachers to the village.

6.   One of our Diaspora members, Dr. Humphrey Iroku, donated sports jerseys to the schools and others have done similar things.

7.   Etc.

The examples above about Achi/Oji River Diaspora is a mere microcosm of what is happening in most southern villages because state governors (like Mr. Chime of Enugu) are just city mayors, they see their famous cities and  try to make them beautiful - as a show and tell piece. The northern villagers should go and do likewise. And when APC comes aboard and is different from PDP they can then leave things in their hands, but meanwhile let us as individuals and concerned citizens try to educate our kids. The children of PDP politicians are not among those 8.7 million children out of school. Their children live here in US and go to schools I dreamt my children would go. And when they graduate they will come back to claim that it is their turn to be president. We point to Abubakar's son as the poster boy for this example.

Mr. Abba, do not deny the truth for as the Holy Book says "the truth shall make thee free."

Nigeria education is bad and the northern education is bader (worse).

Benjamin Obiajulu Aduba

Boston, Massachusetts

September 30, 2014

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Mobolaji Aluko <alukome@gmail.com>
To: A. Gml <abba2007@gmail.com>
Cc: NIgerianWorldForum@yahoogroups.com <nigerianworldforum@yahoogroups.com>; Raayiriga <raayiriga@yahoogroups.com>; naijapolitics <naijapolitics@yahoogroups.com>; talknigeria <talknigeria@yahoogroups.com>; naijaintellects <naijaintellects@googlegroups.com>; naijaobserver <naijaobserver@yahoogroups.com>; vin_modebelu <vin_modebelu@yahoo.com>; rotfash <rotfash@yahoo.com>; rotimi_osunsan <rotimi_osunsan@yahoo.com>; Nebu <nebukadineze@aol.com>; roteemee <roteemee@yahoo.ca>; traji <traji@aol.com>; tinaiigho <tinaiigho@yahoo.com>; baduba54 <baduba54@aol.com>; aadeboye <aadeboye@mac.com>; Yahaya <yahaya64134@yahoo.com>; Dr. C Emenike <igbonize@yahoo.com>; ijebujesa <ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk>; matto1 <matto1@msn.com>; rexmarinus1966 <rexmarinus1966@yahoo.com>; Ogbuefi <e26m2atum@aol.com>; Talkhard <talkhard@yahoogroups.com>; adungbemorg <adungbemorg@yahoo.com>; wale <wadedayo@yahoo.co.uk>; odidere2001 <odidere2001@yahoo.com>; Ibukunolu Alao Babajide <ibk@usa.net>; Idowu Bobo <idowubobo@gmail.com>; olakassimmd <olakassimmd@aol.com>; Ik Agbor <ikeagbor@yahoo.com>; Dipo Eniola <dipoeniola@yahoo.com>; wharfsnake <wharfsnake@yahoo.com>; Tony Eluemunor <teluemunor@yahoo.com>; King Nowa Omoigui <nowa_o@yahoo.com>; Joe Igietseme <jbi8@cdc.gov>; ericayoola <ericayoola@aol.co.uk>; Abraham Madu <abraham.madu@yahoo.com>; Wane <salihumustafa@gmail.com>; africatoday80 <africatoday80@gmail.com>; bizon586 <bizon586@yahoo.com>; nigeria360 <nigeria360@yahoogroups.com>; omoodua <omoodua@yahoogroups.com>; stdawodu <stdawodu@gmail.com>; Nkechi <aauwnycpres@aol.com>; James Agazie <jamesagazie@yahoo.com>; Charles Tola <rotehm@yahoo.com>; odidere2012 <odidere2012@gmail.com>; ibirogbak <ibirogbak@yahoo.com>; yodumakin51 <yodumakin51@gmail.com>; yemifash64 <yemifash64@gmail.com>; GEORGE Kerley <gkerley@gmail.com>; biolasavage <biolasavage@rocketmail.com>; justinluv4870 <justinluv4870@yahoo.co.uk>; pachusim <pachusim@yahoo.com>; SAHARAREPORTER <saharareporter@yahoo.com>; chris.udoh <chris.udoh@yahoo.co.uk>; aliyubala.aliyu <aliyubala.aliyu@gmail.com>; nekujumi <nekujumi@gmail.com>; femmylawson <femmylawson@yahoo.com>; Kolawole Onifade <ksonif@gmail.com>; fabiyi <fabiyi@live.com>; hastrups66 <hastrups66@gmail.com>; ige.leye <ige.leye@yahoo.com>; Joan Oviawe <joanoviawe@gmail.com>; alaremu2007 <alaremu2007@gmail.com>; Ayo Ojutalayo <ayoojutalayo@yahoo.com>; nationalvision <nationalvision@yahoo.com>; kol_onif <kol_onif@yahoo.com>; yemifash <yemifash@yahoo.ca>; Yinka Odumakin <yodumakin@yahoo.com>; Yanarewa@yahoogroups.com <yanarewa@yahoogroups.com>; Rex Marinus Obi Nwakanma <rexmarinus@hotmail.com>; USAAfrica Dialogue <USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Mon, Sep 29, 2014 4:17 am
Subject: Re: [Raayiriga] Re: [NIgerianWorldForum] RE: ||ABBA|| 13 Northern states and WAEC results....

 

 

Abba Gumel:

 

Yes, there are ethnic supremacists galore in these our discussions, who want to put other groups down and build their own up, using numbers and named individuals.   I put Obi Nwakanma, the Forrest Gump of Nigeria's history (who happens to be EVERYWHERE that Nigeria's history is being made)  as a prime example (Nebukadineze is another), hence his naming an "Igbo Education professor" as the originator of Nomadic education.  Is the fellow an "Igbo Education" professor, or an Education Professor who happens to be Igbo?  Or when did "Prof. Chima" become a Yoruba fellow with a name like Chima - so why highlight his Igboness, except for the supermenschen attitude that he always exhibits when it comes to things Igbo?  If it is to highlight possible cooperation between North and South as he put it, NO OTHER person worked with Chima - no single OTHER Igbo or non-Igbo, non-Northerner?

 

It is ridiculous, and it is that attitude of ethnic triumphalism that makes people to pull punches, and not address a central thesis of Northern education deprivation that is correct....

 

Moving on....

 

Yes, his main thesis remains the same:  the North is in trouble, economically, socially, politically - and academically, which is the main discussion point here.

 

You ask for proof of the academic problem, and I will attempt it, NOT to make the North feel inferior or the make the South feel superior.  The data is sordid throughout for the country, just much more sordid in the North, and the quicker the scale of problem is known and acknowledged, the better it is for everybody, since we are yet one country.  Northern elites like yourself, more so university Northern elite like yourself have a special responsibility to do something, and finally Muslim university Northern elite like yourself bear the greatest responsibility.

 

First some short-hand information:

 

   School age: 6-11

   Lower Secondary school age: 12-14

   Higher Secondary school age: 15-17

 

 

Next, is this school attendance information of Nigeria:

 

 

 

There is this troubling information of Nigeria's out of school population: 8.7 million, more than 40% of Sub-Sahara Africa:

 

 

 

 

 

 

If we now drill down inside Nigeria as to what contributes to  this and why this is so, we begin to see patterns.  Even though enrollment may be LARGER in some Northern states than Southern states, the percentage enrollment is SMALLER, and completion/transition rates even SMALLER yet.  Gender problems also become highlighted.

 

 

 

 

 

The situation becomes worse in the Secondary School level, with completion and transition to higher levels being problematic:

 

 

 

 

Finally, to show that this North-South imbalance is historical, and not necessarily changing for the better as years wear on, I present these fairly dated tables (the paper was presented in 2002 by one Professor Okoblah):

 

 

Primary school disparity:

 

 

 

Secondary School disparity:

 

 

 

University Undergraduate enrollment disparity:

 

 

Finally, we look at some historical JAMB enrollment and new university entrants figures:

 

 

 

The above more precise information supplements the table that I gave a few days ago, when I challenged you, Abba, in order for anybody to ESTIMATE this mis-alignment between our census and education enrolment figures around our dear country Nigeria, IF the CIA's age distribution for Nigeria is to be believed, viz:

 

QUOTE

 

 

0-14 years: 43.2% (male 39,151,304/female 37,353,737)

15-24 years: 19.3% (male 17,486,117/female 16,732,533)

25-54 years: 30.5% (male 27,697,644/female 26,285,816)

55-64 years: 3.9% (male 3,393,631/female 3,571,301)

65 years and over: 3% (male 2,621,845/female 2,861,826) (2014 est.)

 

UNQUOTE

 

Then for our 2014 population estimate of 177 million, here is the age distribution, and school entry exit estimates:

 

 

Age Distribution of Nigerian Citizens (Hand-Waving from CIA's Age Distribution)

Age of citizen

Male

Female

Cumulative

Remark

 

 

1

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

             5,464,646

 

 

 

2

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          10,929,292

 

 

 

3

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          16,393,937

 

 

 

4

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          21,858,583

 

 

 

5

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          27,323,229

Starting Primary School

 

 

6

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          32,787,875

Starting Primary School

 

 

7

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          38,252,521

Starting Primary School

 

 

8

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          43,717,166

Starting Primary School

 

 

9

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          49,181,812

Starting Primary School

 

 

10

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          54,646,458

Leaving Primary School

 

 

11

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          60,111,104

Leaving Primary School

 

 

12

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          65,575,749

Leaving Primary School

 

 

13

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          71,040,395

Leaving Primary School

 

 

14

         2,796,522

         2,668,124

          76,505,041

Leaving Primary School

 

 

15

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          79,926,906

Leaving Primary School

 

 

16

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          83,348,771

Leaving Secondary School

 

 

17

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          86,770,636

Leaving Secondary School

 

 

18

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          90,192,501

Leaving Secondary School

 

 

19

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          93,614,366

Leaving Secondary School

 

 

20

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

          97,036,231

Leaving Secondary School

 

 

21

         1,748,612

         1,673,253

        100,458,096

Leaving University

 

 

...

[Message clipped]  

 

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
For current archives, visit http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
For previous archives, visit http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
To post to this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "USA Africa Dialogue Series" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to usaafricadialogue+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
For current archives, visit http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
For previous archives, visit http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
To post to this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "USA Africa Dialogue Series" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to usaafricadialogue+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
For current archives, visit http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
For previous archives, visit http://www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa/ads/index.html
To post to this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to USAAfricaDialogue-
unsubscribe@googlegroups.com
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "USA Africa Dialogue Series" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to usaafricadialogue+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

No comments:

Post a Comment

 
Vida de bombeiro Recipes Informatica Humor Jokes Mensagens Curiosity Saude Video Games Car Blog Animals Diario das Mensagens Eletronica Rei Jesus News Noticias da TV Artesanato Esportes Noticias Atuais Games Pets Career Religion Recreation Business Education Autos Academics Style Television Programming Motosport Humor News The Games Home Downs World News Internet Car Design Entertaimment Celebrities 1001 Games Doctor Pets Net Downs World Enter Jesus Variedade Mensagensr Android Rub Letras Dialogue cosmetics Genexus Car net Só Humor Curiosity Gifs Medical Female American Health Madeira Designer PPS Divertidas Estate Travel Estate Writing Computer Matilde Ocultos Matilde futebolcomnoticias girassol lettheworldturn topdigitalnet Bem amado enjohnny produceideas foodasticos cronicasdoimaginario downloadsdegraca compactandoletras newcuriosidades blogdoarmario arrozinhoii sonasol halfbakedtaters make-it-plain amatha