THE ROLE OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS IN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
90 years of Producing Well-rounded and Outstanding Global Citizens.
By,
Olusegun Aganga CON, 30/9/23
at the 90th Anniversary celebration of founding Christ's School, held in London on 30/9/23
Protocol.
Today, we gather here to commemorate a remarkable milestone in the history of our esteemed institution - the 90th anniversary of our school: Christ School, Ado-Ekiti. It is a momentous occasion, a testament to the enduring commitment to education and progress that has defined our institution since its inception. The topic of today’s lecture which has been organised as part of the celebrations by the Alumni Association of Christ School Ado-Ekiti in the United Kingdom is “THE ROLE OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS IN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT”.
According to Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, co-authors of “Why Nations Fail”, nations fail because institutions are weak or do not exist. This conclusion is based on extensive research and study of different nations. Why? In my book, Reclaiming the Jewel of Africa, I identified some of the main institutions and the relative importance of some of them particularly as they relate to our great country, Nigeria. I will summarise the points I made in the book. There are three main Institutions: Political, Economic and Social Institutions. In the case of Nigeria, the Political Institutions include: political parties, the electoral commission, national and state assemblies, the Govt etc. Economic Institutions include the Central bank, ministries of finance, petroleum, industry trade and investment and all their agencies and Social Institutions include the Ministries and Agencies responsible for Education, Health, Humanitarian and Poverty Alleviation, Human Rights and the family systems. For each Institution, the quality of governance and management, how the staff is recruited, trained, motivated, compensated, recognised, and held accountable amongst other factors, determine the weakness or strength of each Institution. One common factor which determines all these is the quality of the people and that is determined by the level and quality of the education system in the country, national values, attitude to work, skills acquired etc. These make the Institutions responsible for Education such as universities, technical institutions and secondary schools, the most or one of the most important institutions for national development. In fact according to Nelson Mandela, “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”. Through education, the daughter of a peasant can become a doctor, and a child of farm workers can become the president of a great nation. We have seen evidence of this in some parts of Nigeria when Chief Obafemi Awolowo made education free and compulsory in the Western Region. Many children of farmers who saw farming in their villages as the only option for survival had to go to school. Today many of them are renowned international professors, doctors, engineers, etc. That is why the name Awolowo remains indelible in the hearts and minds of so many Nigerians.
Education empowers individuals with the knowledge, skills, and values necessary for personal and societal advancement. Education helps in:
1. Governance and democracy: An educated population is more informed and engaged, fostering good governance and democratic participation. All the institutions are only as strong or weak as those driving the political institutions allow. So, producing quality citizens for political institutions can not be over-emphasised. That is where they are taught leadership, governance skills, and values such as honesty, integrity, hard work, and patriotism... just think about your days at Christ's School.

3. Poverty reduction: By providing opportunities for better jobs and economic mobility, education helps alleviate poverty and improve living standards.
4. Social development: Education fosters social cohesion, tolerance, and understanding among diverse communities, promoting harmony and stability. This is essential for a good society and a diverse country such as Nigeria.
5. Technological advancement: Education fosters research and development, driving technological innovation and competitiveness on a global scale. China's focus on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education has played a key role in its technological advancements and manufacturing capabilities and India's education system has produced a large number of IT professionals, contributing to its position as a global outsourcing hub for software and services.
Overall, education is a cornerstone of national development, enabling countries to achieve sustainable growth, prosperity, and improved quality of life for their citizens. Scandinavian countries have done very well in education, and Estonia has recently been identified as one of the best in Europe, particularly in mathematics and science. So as we celebrate the 90th anniversary of Christ School Ado-Ekiti it is right to pause and spend a moment to assess how the school has indeed played its role in Nigeria’s development.
Brief history of the school
Christ’s School was founded in 1933 by Archdeacon Henry Dallimore and, Governor Bernard Henry Bourdillon opened the school. In Archdeacon Dallimore’s last interview conducted by Emeritus Professor Adelola Adeloye, he explained why he founded the School. He said and I quote “...There was no source of leadership then in the district and provision had to be made for it. The school is to prepare pupils for this leadership”. It was clear that right from the outset Christ's School was set up to produce leaders that would play a major role in the development of our nation. To achieve this goal the emphasis was on academic excellence, character formation and spiritual insight. To achieve academic excellence and diversity, some of the brightest students were admitted from all over the country, including the United Kingdom, not just Ekiti as was originally envisaged, and the students had some of the best and dedicated local and international teachers. Some of the Teachers wrote the textbooks for secondary schools in Nigeria - Mr. Busbridge wrote Maths textbooks, and others wrote textbooks for physics, chemistry, and biology. I wonder how many schools can boast of such teachers?
Today, I am delighted to recognise the presence of one of the teachers in our midst, Reverend Geoffrey Gardener, who taught history and bible knowledge in the sixties. Reverend Gardener is about 96 years old now but he is still looking very fit and gave a beautiful sermon at the church service this afternoon. Right from form 4 you start getting guidance on your career. That was when students were called into meetings and based on their academic records and discussions they were allocated Physics, Chemistry Biology (PCB), or Maths, Physics and Chemistry (MPC), or Chemistry, Biology and Geography (CBG) or Biology, History (BH) as main subjects. PCBs are expected to work towards becoming medical doctors or scientists, MPC, engineers; CBG, geologists and BH, lawyers, historians, or majors in Arts, literature and humanities. Of course, some PBCs and MPCs with fine art became Architects. How many schools offered anything near career counselling from secondary school then or even now?
The education was rounded/comprehensive; we had lessons on farming in the school farm, and periods for block making, typing, drama, debating society, and sports. We won the Western State Cup in Football and volleyball and some of the students represented the then Western State in these sports. I was privileged to be a member of the Christ School volleyball team that emerged as the best in Western State and I and others including our super striker and Captain, Femi Falana (known as Femai) were in the team that represented western state in the first national sports festival. High academic standards were set. For example, in some subjects, a credit (C4) was almost a failure and at the beginning of every term the list of the top 20 in each class was published. We all tried our best to make that list. Overall, there was healthy competition amongst students.
On character formation, we were taught to be punctual at all times, obey school rules, and values such as transparent honesty were rewarded. For example, if Student A committed a major offence and told the truth and Student B committed a lesser offence but lied, it was certain that Student B who committed a lesser offence but lied would get a bigger punishment which would include being sent home to tell your parents that you told a lie in school. Dishonesty was abhorred. Discipline was the order of the day. And on spiritual insight, we started and ended the day with prayers and singing of hymns from Ancient and Modern in our dormitories. In between, we had services in the chapel before going to our classrooms and another service before evening prep. Form 1 students were required to learn the first and last verses of at least 20 hymns from Ancient and Modern by heart within 3 weeks of joining the school with the help of one of the senior boys. Religious studies was compulsory and it was common for most of the students sitting for WASC then to achieve A grade in the subject. That was the norm. And all these prepared us for leadership roles and national development.
I have always said I am what I am today because of the parental upbringing I had and the school I went to - Christ's School. Both are part of the social institutions we must strengthen. I expanded on this in my book, “Reclaiming The Jewel Of Africa” and also explained how my parents successfully convinced me to go to Christ School instead of King's College or Igbobi in Lagos. KC and Igbobi are excellent schools but Christ School ticked all the boxes. Christ's School had a history of selecting the best students from all over Nigeria particularly from the southern part of the country regardless of their backgrounds and developing them into world-class nation builders and globally accomplished technocrats. I will give some examples or evidence to support this claim.
How has Christ School contributed to National Development?
There are many ways we can approach this but one of the ways is to look at the list of the recipients of The Nigerian National Order of Merit Award (NNOM). NNOM is an academic award conferred on distinguished academicians and intellectuals who have made outstanding contributions to the academic, growth and development of Nigeria. The award is often conferred on its recipient by the Federal Government of Nigeria following the nomination and approval of the Governing Board of the Nigerian National Order Merit of Award. It is the highest academic award in Nigeria and since its institution in 1979, the award has so far been conferred on only 70 distinguished academicians. Out of the 70 recipients to date, I am delighted to say that Christ School has the highest number. About 10% of the recipients attended Christ School Ado-Ekiti and they include: Prof. Ben Kayode Osuntokun, Prof. J F Ade-Ajayi, Prof. Ladipo, Adamolekun, Emeritus Distinguished Professor of English at the University of New Orleans, Prof Niyi Osundare, Prof Tolu Olukayode Odugbemi etc.
Other old students of Christ School Ado-Ekiti have made exceptional contributions not only to Nigeria and Africa but to the world in different fields. For example: In medicine, we have: Emeritus Prof Adelola Adeloye: The 2nd Brain Surgeon in Nigeria who also built Neurosurgery in Nigeria along with Prof E. Latunde Odeku, the first Nigerian brain surgeon. He and Prof Odeku saved many lives of soldiers with tangential missile head injuries during the war. Prof Adeloye trained other brain surgeons, including Prof Olumide, and Prof MT Shokunbi, who then trained others. He made one of the biggest impact research in brain surgery both in Africa and globally. We also have Prof Femi Oyebode who retired as Professor and Head of Department of Psychiatry at the University of Birmingham. He was a visiting professor at many universities around the world. In 2002 he was appointed Chief Examining Officer at the Royal College and in 2005, Prof Oyebode took over writing Sim's Symptoms in the Mind from its original author Andrew Sims (psychiatrist). Sim's Symptoms in the Mind is a textbook that has become a leading introduction to clinical psychopathology that was translated into Estonian, Korean, Portuguese and Italian. He was awarded the 2016 Royal College of Psychiatrists Lifetime Achievement Award and in 2019, the Royal College of Psychiatrists, gave him their highest award, the Honorary FRC Psych.
The interesting thing is that Prof Oyebode is not only a psychiatrist but he is also an accomplished poet. He has published over seven volumes of poetry and in 2017 he was given Legend Recognition at the Creativity and Arts Awards. Professor Oyebode was part of the 1965 record-setting class at Christ School. About half of the class, 45 in number got grade 1 with many having less than 10 aggregates and about a third of the class, 33 in number, became medical doctors. What a set! My brother, Aganga Williams (Dayo), Dr. Seinde Alo, who is here tonight, are members of that special class. I must mention that Femi was the first President of the Alumni Association in the UK. I took over from him. Unfortunately, Professor Oyebode is not able to join us tonight because he is in Vienna receiving another award. We also have Dr Akin Ojo, a consultant general and breast surgeon in the UK. He specialises in Breast surgery, Thyroid and parathyroid surgery, gallbladder surgery, Hernia repair, and Endocrine disease, and Prof Wuraola Sokunbi, a Haematologist, to mention a few in medicine where Christ's School had produced many global icons practicing all over the world.
Professor Sam Aluko, an acclaimed Nigerian public Economist and scholar is another. He was an Economic Adviser to Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Chairman National Economic Intelligence Committee 1994-1999, Economic Adviser to the president in 1979-1983 and was an informal adviser to the Action Group. I would like to share a short story on Professor Sam Aluko. In 1962, he was approached to serve as the regional economic adviser of the Western region for a salary of £2,942. At the time, he was a lecturer at the University of Ife, earning an annual wage of £1,000. He accepted the offer on the condition that his new salary be reduced to the level he was paid at Ife, stating that he will not be more productive at the new job than what he was doing at Ife. But this condition was rejected by the govt. He was truly a selfless and principled person. His brand of economic policy was critical of ostentatious
government spending. He was critical of opulence in the political class and advocated policies and initiatives to increase government income to fund economic development. It was a privilege to benefit from his wise counsel when I was Minister of Finance and Chairman of the Economic Management Team. Prof Sam Aluko visited me on a number of occasions to offer his advice on a number of matters and he made it clear that he was always available if I needed more. Incidentally, I was the college brother to one of his sons, the late distinguished senator Olugbenga Aluko - may his soul rest in peace.
In Architecture, we have the likes of Professor Yinka Adeyemi and Chief Isaac Fola Alade, the celebrated doyen of Architecture in Nigeria. His works and projects include: 1004 Housing Estate, Victoria Island, Lagos, Federal Secretariat building, Ikoyi, Lagos, National Stadium, Lagos, Remembrance Arcade, Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos. Satellite Town, Lagos, Nigerian Airforce base, Ikeja, Nigerian Institute of Policy and Strategic Studies building, Kuru, Plateau State, National Judicial Institute, Abuja and Nigerian Embassy buildings in 11 countries. What a contribution to national development by a Christ School old boy!
In the diplomatic circle, we had His Excellency Dr. Christopher Kolade, Professor Bolaji Akinyemi, Emeritus Professor Akinjide Osuntokun, a member of Presidential Advisory Council on Foreign Relations and Dr. Eniola Ajayi. In banking, we had Chief Samuel Asabia, who was the first indigenous, CEO and MD of First Bank of Nigeria, Mr Macaulay Iyayi and Mr Jacob Ajekigbe also a former CEO/MD of First Bank, Dr Erastus Akingbola, founder of Intercontinental Bank, and at a time, an old boy of Christ's School was the most senior African in investment banking in Europe and was an MD at Goldman Sachs in London. In law and the judiciary, Christ School had the likes of Professor Akin Oyebode SAN, an erudite scholar and Professor of International Law and Jurisprudence, Mr Gbenga Oyebode, Co-Founder of Aluko & Oyebode law firm which is the largest full-service law firm in Nigeria. In oil and gas, it had Rt Hon Uduimo Itsueli, a former president of Christ's School Alumni Association, who served as the chairman of NNPC and is now Chairman of Dubril Oil, Africa’s first independently owned oil producing company.
In the public service, Christ School has also produced state governors like Dr Kayode Fayemi, Prince Dapo Abiodun and Ministers of the Federal Republic of Nigeria like Chief J.E. Babatola, (Regional Minister) Prof Bolaji Akinyemi, Olusegun Aganga, Kayode Fayemi and recently Dele Alake. Christ's School has also produced many permanent secretaries at the federal level such as Babaijo Olusegun Ogunkua, Dr Goke Adegoroye and of course many commissioners and permanent secretaries at the state level. Today, we have thousands of credible and highly accomplished old students of Christ's School Ado-Ekiti all over the world in different sectors from Medicine to humanities, finance, engineering to public service. I doubt that any secondary school in Nigeria has produced as many Professors, particularly in medicine, as Christ School. Almost all our doctors who graduated at a particular time in Nigeria were trained by old students of Christ School. There is hardly any university in Nigeria that does not have an old student as a professor doing what they love doing best - equipping Nigerians with the academic knowledge, skills and character they require for national development and providing them with the foundation they require to conquer the world, to speak and to be heard anywhere in the world. The beauty of all these is that, despite their accomplishments, Christ's School alumni are known for their humility and respect for other schools. They are quiet achievers and exemplars in many fields. I understand that in a particular year at the University of Ibadan, 8 out of the 10 university scholars selected based on performance in the entry examination were from Christ's School. Up School!
Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, I think we can confidently say that the school has not just met but it has exceeded all the expectations of the founder. It has truly been 9 decades of producing accomplished and highly credible leaders with strong values for Nigeria and the world. That is what we are here to celebrate ladies and gentlemen. What is the outlook for the next 50 years? Will our educational system continue to produce leaders who have the prerequisites to strengthen our institutions, and drive Nigeria’s economy and development? Some would say grim or gloomy if we continue on the same trajectory. The quality of education has been on a downward trajectory since most of the schools were taken over by the Government and the establishment of universities highly politicised. We seem to have forgotten that there is a strong link between the quality of education and the quality of the leaders we produce to run, develop and create wealth for the nation. When I was in government, I recall that in one of our meetings, there were discussions around setting up more state universities. I challenged it because, for me, the focus should be on the quality of education and not just the number or presence of institutions in every state of the federation, as argued by some other members. Some of my colleagues chuckled, and some smiled at my seeming incomprehension of the politics of schools and schooling in Nigeria. For them, the priority was to have at least one university in every state, regardless of whether or not the country had adequate resources and the workforce to run these universities effectively. Most ended up like glorified secondary schools! But we cannot have our cake and eat it. We cannot sacrifice quality on the altar of quantity and expect to have quality educational institutions. In the global competitiveness report issued by the World Economic Forum a few years ago, Nigeria ranked a frightening 136 out of 137 in basic requirements; in higher education and training, it ranked 116 and its primary education enrolment ranked 132. The quality of mathematics and science education ranked 118. These numbers improved slightly in subsequent reports.
The net effect is that many who can afford it are sending their children to private schools, other African countries like Ghana and to countries like Canada, UK, US and Russia. Others argue that we are about to see a change in trajectory as a result of a combination of factors: government handing schools back to their original owners with alumni associations taking a more active role in school administration, the potential to turn brain drain into brain gain at some stage in the future with the Nigerian’s in the Diaspora, the success and growth in the number of private educational institutions. For example, the ratio of public to private schools at both primary and secondary school levels in Lagos State is about 1 to 22 according to the Lagos State Commissioner of Education. In August 2023, the President of King’s College here in the UK, Professor Shitij Kapur, indicated that the Afe Babalola University in Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD) has recorded landmark and unparalleled achievements within ten years of its establishment. He explained that the successes of the institution within a decade took King’s College, UK centuries to attain after its establishment in 1829. Whatever happens, deliberate actions are required to ensure that educational institutions continue to play a major role in the development of our nation. It will involve Governments, original owners of schools, alumni associations, the private sector and NGOs working together. Here are some recommendations for Nigeria.
Way Forward
We must reform our educational system to produce a skilled, knowledgeable, disciplined and hardworking workforce to drive the economy and run our Institutions. At the secondary level, it should provide academic excellence, required skills, character formation and spiritual insight. This will involve:
1. A system which provides compulsory, accessible and free education to all Nigerians up to secondary school level. This is where citizens acquire the 4 requirements to be considered educated: the ability to read and write, critical thinking, acquire the right sets of values and skills to be productive in society. According to research about 63% of Nigerians are literate but there is a large disparity across the country. According to UNESCO, the target should be at least 70%. In Finland, education is not only a fundamental right but also obtained free of charge from primary to university level.
2. Adequate and innovative funding model for schools and universities. In 2020, Budgetary allocation was 0.53% of GDP compared to a benchmark of 6% recommended by UNESCO. According to UNESCO, South Africa was about 6.6% and Namibia allocated 9.64% of GDP, the highest in Africa. It is remarkable that high-income countries spent about double the amount on education as low-income countries in 2020. The funding has to be enough to put an end to the perennial strikes by university lecturers. Thankfully the new Minister of Education has set up a committee to look into this.
3. Improved governance and management of the education sector. Appointing the right people, strengthening the institutions, addressing issues of overlapping mandates in the parastatals etc
4. Setting and enforcing standards by establishing a robust regulatory regime including the reintroduction of school inspectors. There must be consequences for breaching guidelines and operating below-established standards
5. Robust training and retraining programmes for teachers. There are not enough teachers and about 40% of teachers lack foundational competence. The teaching profession must be made very attractive and more teacher training colleges set up. In most countries that are ranked highly in education, such as the Scandinavian countries, teachers are some of the highest-paid workers, enabling them to attract and retain the best talent in the teaching profession. All teachers should undergo a minimum of 30 hours of continuing personal development (CPD) yearly. Each state should consider establishing a National Teaching Institute to ensure high-quality, regulated continuing professional development and training within the sector. Education that will lead to the socio-economic and political development of a country does not only require regular enhancement of the curriculum but delivery by professionals using information and communication technology.
6. Special programmes for particular states. One cap does not fit all. For example, the North-East and North-West need an educational system that recognizes the regions’ culture and peculiarities.
7. Drastically reducing the number of ‘out of school’ children. It is estimated that about 20 million children are out of school. This is almost the population of Gambia, Mauritius, Liberia and Sierra Leone put together.
8. The curriculum and teaching methods in colleges and universities must lead to institutions contributing significantly to scientific research, technological innovation, industrial development, entrepreneurship, and values-based leadership. The curriculum should be relevant to the economy, follow where investments, science and technology are going and seek to solve today's and tomorrow’s problems. There should be a compulsory general knowledge paper at A’level, University and training for Youth Corpers, which covers values-based leadership and societal issues such as corruption, diversity as a strength of a nation, democracy and the value of votes etc. Research institutes should be linked to the appropriate industries to allow the research institutes to develop innovative technologies that will support the competitiveness of the sectors.
9. Still on curriculum. 85% of Nigerian graduates have no digital skills in secondary and tertiary institutions according to a recent report issued by Getbundi. To equip these youths for the digital economy, it is pertinent that the curriculum is updated with relevant skills such as coding, data analysis, and cybersecurity, among others. This will also require expanding broadband infrastructure and reducing the cost of internet services. ICT tools and apps should be deployed to teach and learn.
10. Like China, Nigeria should focus on science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. This is necessary for technological advancements and to develop manufacturing capabilities.
11. Develop an effective programme for vocational training. This could involve a dual vocational education system which combines classroom learning with practical training, producing a highly skilled workforce for the manufacturing sector like Germany, Brazil, Japan and Singapore have done. An annual skills gap survey would greatly assist this process. Technical colleges should be given a lot more attention to give ‘life’ to the concept of the 6-3-3-4 educational system that Nigeria adopted in 1983. This provides for a child to spend six years in primary school, and three years in junior secondary school from where they either go for technical/vocational training or proceed to senior secondary school for another three years, and then spend another four years in university, depending on the course of study. The idea is to satisfy the educational ‘3Hs’ of the head, heart and hand. Most graduates of junior secondary schools move to senior secondary even when they lack the capacity, academically, for higher studies. The technical gap created by this implementation deficit has led Nigeria to depend on neighbouring West African countries for artisans (plumbers, electricians, etc.) and low-level skills critical for inclusive economic growth.
As I wrote in the book, Reclaiming The Jewel Africa, it is not by accident that India produces the most highly regarded graduates in engineering in the world today and also has a very highly developed technology industry. It was because a visionary leader, Nehru, who was the first PM of India, decided to establish the Indian Institute of Technology more than 50 years ago to produce world-class chemical, electrical and computer engineers who would play a transformative role in India. Today the IIT is the source of the biggest talent export to the world. Nigeria can and should do the same.
Finally, as we look back at our time in Christ School and who or what we have become, I think you will agree with me that although Archdeacon Dallimore has passed, his legacy lives in us. You will realise that although you left Christ School many years ago, you are what you are today because you had the privilege to attend Christ School Ado-Ekiti. Not many people have that privilege. Some people gave their yesterday so that we may become national leaders and world beaters today. Let us honour the legacy of those who came before us and dedicate ourselves to shaping a future that builds upon their aspirations. As old students, the question is are we ready to give our today so that we and Christ School can leave the right legacy in the next generation? I hope the answer is a resounding yes!
I end with the School prayer
GRANT O GOD, THAT THIS SCHOOL MAY BE A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL, NOT IN NAME ONLY BUT IN DEED AND IN TRUTH FOR THE SAKE OF CHRIST WHOSE NAME WE BEAR.
Happy 90th Anniversary and here's to the next 90 years of producing well-rounded and outstanding global citizens. God bless Christ School Ado-Ekiti, God bless the Alumni Association, and God bless Nigeria.
Enjoy your dinner!
Olusegun O Aganga CON
30 September 2023.