Please forgive me for recalling Odun Balogun who taught research documentation in the 4th year of my BA at the University of Benin, doing it so well that the idea of an undergraduate from a Nigerian university not being aware of how to make references and avoid plagiarism looks odd to me.
I also salute Ogo Ofuani, a classic scholar, who taught us research methods in my MA at the same university and also exposed me privately to his personal research and writing methods. I am beginning to better appreciate the power of the research methods I learnt from him, even after experiencing the superb research training in my later studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies and at University College, London, both part of the University of London.
I commiserate with those graduates of Nigerian universities who were not so fortunate in their education in Nigeria. I pray they can overcome such limitations.
Yes, our syllabus in the Uniben English and Literature BA at that time was to some degree behind the times in global scholarship, particularly in developments in literary, cultural and philosophical theory, partly, I expect, on account of the difficulty of buying books from abroad bcs of SAP and the limitations in our lectures' mobility beyond Nigeria, but with the tools they had most did their best.
Virginia Ola, Chinyere Okafor, Odun Balogun, Okpure Obuke, Steve Ogude, V. U. Longe, Mr Opene, Dan Izevbaye ( on sabbatical from UI ) , Richard Masagbor, Dr. Nwuemene, Titi Ufomata, Romanus Egudu and Rasheed Yesufu, I salute you all for doing your best in our BA.
Those whose first names I dont know, I have added their titles as of that time. All except Opene, a very dedicated teacher, were PhDs, while Ogude and Egudu were professors.
thanks
toyin
On Fri, 29 Jun 2018 at 21:10, Kwabena Akurang-Parry <kaparry@hotmail.com> wrote:
--Yesterday, l had lunch with Prof Okey lheduru, who is in Accra, Ghana, sherphering students abroad. This was one of the topics we discussed. I found out that even graduate students don't even know what plagiarism is all about. Our educational systems are getting worse. Lecturers who publish student essays, lecturers who publish in predatory journals for promotion, sex for grades, student who bribe their way thru dissertations, and students who pay for others to write dissertations/theses for them. Changing the status quo or bringing new ideas comes with devastating cost. Frankly, if wasn't for mysterious disappearance of my two siblings that I have committed to seeking justice for, I would have returned to the USA. I feel like a stranger in my place of birth but life continues.Kwabena
From: 'O O' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com>
Sent: June 29, 2018 11:02 AM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Research Misconduct
--ARTICLE TOOLS
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