Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Oh No! Prof. Maikaba is Dead, Too?

You could see that it is natural and almost universal to want to say something about the dead. It could be because of how they
were to us, or what we think they are to history. A scholar may choose to write about an important personality, unrelated to them,
just to put  things in historical perspective.The Falolas and Assensohs of this world contend with this fact in their history books.
  I could easily empathise with the author here about how he felt about the death of someone who had
affected his life, one way or the other.
May the soul of Professor Maikala find peace with his Creator.
Anthony Akinola.

On Mon, Apr 27, 2020 at 12:07 PM 'Michael Afolayan' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com> wrote:
So sorry to hear! These sad news are spreading like oil spillage on the current of an active sea. I'm worried for Motherland. Kano has become the epicenter of this uninvited visitor; and except something drastic is done, we might be in for a rude awakening. 

May the family, friends, colleagues, and all those who related with Professor Maikaba be comforted.

MOA






On Sunday, April 26, 2020, 1:32:41 PM MDT, Farooq A. Kperogi <farooqkperogi@gmail.com> wrote:


Sunday, April 26, 2020

Oh No! Prof. Maikaba is Dead, Too?

By Farooq A. Kperogi
Twitter:@farooqkperogi

I just literally woke up to the deeply troubling news of the death of Bayero University Kano's Professor Balarabe Maikaba, who taught me research methods and statistics in mass communication in the early and mid-1990s.

The frighteningly unfolding tragedy in Kano that has seen scores of people dying "mysteriously" and "suddenly" has now hit me personally.

Professor Maikaba loved the quantitative dimensions of mass communication studies, which I dreaded-- and still do. I chose to study mass communication because I'm a pathetic numerophobe who is flustered by even the littlest arithmetic complexity. I'd assumed that mass communication was all words and no numbers.

So when I realized that we had to take a third-year course called "Statistics in Mass Communication," I knew I was going to be in some big trouble. Professor Maikaba taught the course. Every single day that I attended class, I always had a nagging headache that mysteriously disappeared after the class was over.

Maikaba's fondest phrase in the course that I still remember more than 25 years later was "Pearsonian correlation coefficient." I don't remember what it means, but he loved to say it. And it aggravated my situational headaches in his class!

I managed to pass the course with the lowest possible passing grade. It was the lowest grade I ever got in my entire post-secondary school career. More than half of the class failed it.

But I suspect that Maikaba was unusually lenient in grading me because he didn't want the best student in the cohort to fail his course. I was overwrought with emotions when I discovered that I'd passed the course.

I wanted to thank him, but I had a habit of never getting chummy with my teachers. Plus, I really didn't know what had happened. A few days after our grades were posted, I saw him, looked at him with gratitude, and he looked back with a smile on his face (which was rare), and said, "Farooq, that was a close call! Our best student would have had a carry-over!"

Professor Maikaba's death is particularly tragic because it came a little over a month after he announced his older brother's death on Facebook as this screenshot shows-- and on the heels of the death of two other professors—Professor Ibrahim Ayagi and Professor Aliyu Dikko—and many prominent and not so prominent Kano people.

The federal government can't continue to pretend that something eerily macabre isn't going on in Kano, Nigeria's oldest surviving city. We must not let Kano be consumed by whatever is devastating it now. I'm gutted, but may Allah accept Professor Maikaba's soul in Aljannah Firdaus.
Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
School of Communication & Media
Social Science Building 
Room 5092 MD 2207
402 Bartow Avenue
Kennesaw State University
Kennesaw, Georgia, USA 30144
Cell: (+1) 404-573-9697
Personal website: www.farooqkperogi.com
Twitter: @farooqkperogi
Nigeria's Digital Diaspora: Citizen Media, Democracy, and Participation

"The nice thing about pessimism is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised." G. F. Will

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