Prof. Isaac Adewole
Outgoing Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ibadan, Prof. Isaac Adewole, reflects on his tenure, OLUFEMI ATOYEBI writes
What do you expect the incoming administration of Muhammadu Buhari to do to raise the standards in the education sector?
I will first tell him that it is easier
to get to office than to succeed in it. I will tell him to minimise the
number of visits and start working hard. The period of honeymoon is
about six months after which he will start facing hard tackles from
Nigerians who are expecting so much from him. People are expecting the exchange rate
to drop; they want improved electricity, good road and water. Between
now and May 29, he will need to sit down and constitute a credible team
that will be a rich blend of politicians and technocrats.
There are minefields in the education
sector. There are agreements on ground and the unions, especially the
Academic Staff Union of Universities, will tackle Buhari if he fails to
act in his first six months in office.
The outgoing administration signed an
agreement with the union and promised the release of N1.3tr to the
universities. It has released less than N200bn of the promised fund so
far. So, Buhari will have to find money to pay for the settlement of the
2014 and 2015 agreement.
If he cannot get money
immediately, he will have to call ASUU to a meeting and tell its
members that he needs a breathing space on the challenges he inherited.
He must state his reasons and I am sure that the union, being an
association of responsible people, will listen to him. The President
cannot pretend that the agreement does not exist.
He
will have to do a surgical operation in the education sector. We need
to rebuild from the foundation. We must not only pay attention to
tertiary education, we also need to pay attention to tertiary and
secondary education systems. Education cannot be an orphan; Buhari must
put in place a mechanism to rebuild education in the country. People
should not see the education sector as an item of expenditure but a
short path to national development.
What has it being serving as the VC of UI?
I can confidently beat my chest that as
part of the progressive management, we have built on what we met on
ground. We added value to what we met and one day if I visit the
university as its former vice-chancellor, I want to see my successor
building on what we left behind. That will gladden my heart. I do tell
people that no single VC can complete the programme of revitalisation.
It is an ongoing work and the University of Ibadan is a work in
progress. The next VC will have to continue building on what we have
done.
We have contributed to its
infrastructure. We have repositioned the university in the area of
teaching and learning. We have added new lecture rooms and we have
restored the laboratories. We have also introduced new idea in terms of
governance. We have made welfare our keyword and put students in the
front of what we do because we consider them as key to our national and
developmental assignment as a university. We will love to see this
endure and we will love to see the next VC take this to a greater
height.
We have the water project, block making
factory and fisheries as some of the projects put in place to add value
to the university system. The UI Ventures gives the university N20m
annually but in the past four years, we have not taken anything out of
the fund. What we have done is to plough back the money to the
renovation of the UI hotels. Today, it is a completely rebranded
facility generating more money.
We are in this venture to ensure that
the university generates funds to survive. We must be able to wean
ourselves from the money coming from the Federal Government. A
university should be able to survive for three months without the
government subvention. This should be the target of any VC.
What measure did you put in place to ensure the sustenance of this development?
If you take a tour of the university and
look at what we have done, you will realise that there are structures
and projects that are essentially academic, such as laboratories and
lecture theatres. There is also physical and non-physical
infrastructure.
Processes are now in place to ensure
that transcripts and results are ready at the end of every semester.
This is one of the non-physical facilities germane to our function as a
university. In the institution, there is an inbuilt sustainability
structure. Even though the VC and the bursar are leaving, the two deputy
vice chancellors, the registrar and the librarian are still around. Out
of the six principal officers of the university, only two are leaving.
The new VC will work with the existing deputy VCs. This ensures that
continuity is in place. The university system therefore has an in-built
mechanism to sustain its structure.
What is your retirement plan?
I am retiring into farming. It is a
neglected sector. As VC, I have shown a lot of affection for
agriculture. I believe in food security as a form of defence strategy.
Any country that cannot feed its people is not worth called a country.
God has granted us fertile land, good weather, good brain yet we are not
producing; we import food.
The next set of millionaires in Nigeria
will be farmers. As part of my support to promoting viable food security
strategy in the country, I want to lead by example. I started as a VC
and I want to go and put it into practice and show that I can work out
what I have been preaching in the last five years.
You were the returning officer for Lagos State in the last elections. How would you describe the nation’s electoral process?
I am extremely proud to have been part
of the transition process. I travelled to France after the election and
the whole process gave me the joy to raise my head and be proud of being
a Nigerian. I was able to show our success. For the first time in
Africa, we have a President that accepted defeat. This is not happening
in Europe or in the US but in Nigeria.
President Goodluck Jonathan has done
something extraordinary. Jonathan and the Chairman of the Independent
National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega, are the heroes of
our democratic experiment. They deserve worldwide commendation. The
process is not 100 per cent okay but we are moving forward. We are ahead
of where we ought to be. We are a patient nation and comparing
ourselves with nations with 200 years of democratic experience. The
declaration by the President had a bandwagon effect as other losers
conceded defeat.
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