Provision of academic, as well as moral guidance are all past of the
mandates of Nigerian tertiary institution. Failure to meet up with the
moral aspect has led to the production of half-baked graduates
Nigerian tertiary institutions' failure to go
beyond the mere provision of academic guidance to their students has led
to the production of morally-deficient graduates.
The
Director General of National Orientation Agency (NOA), Mike Omeri, said
this at a re-orientation programme organised by the College of
Education, Minna, Niger State.
Represented by
Director, Planning, Research and Statistics at the agency, Barrister
Bennert Tagwai, Omeri noted that institutions of higher education must
realise that their roles extend beyond ensuring academic excellence.
"The
concern of institutions of higher learning should be, in addition to
academic excellence, the genuineness of character and moral uprightness
of its products," he said.
Failure to do this is has resulted in a crisis "where all forms of social vices have expression".
"The
trend has led to the production of half-baked graduates, who later find
their way into public and private sectors of the nation’s economy."
The
DG added that NOA is dedicated to encourage dialogue among young
people, policy makers and the larger society even as it works towards
"leading the nation’s youth back to the straight and narrow path of
propriety, ethical goodness and moral rectitude”.
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