30/10/2021
OVERCOMING THE SCHOOLING ‘PALAVA’: THOUGHTS FROM THE UIDLC ASPIRE SYMPOSIUM
The importance attached to schooling is so overwhelming that going to school has been erroneously perceived as a license to success in life. Is schooling actually the antidote for a mediocre life? Understanding the disparity between schooling and education is core to gaining the right perspective in seeking university admission and in pursuit of a right standing on the very competitive terrain of relevance. There is no gainsaying the fact that good schooling can produce good graduates, but the rude reality that stares us in the face as a nation is that we have not been able to translate our first class honours to significance in life, hence the clarion call for value added educational delivery.
In a bid to shift the perspective of its learners from the straightjacket pursuit of certification to single-minded pursuit of relevance, the Aspire Symposium was organized by the University of Ibadan Distance Learning Centre. Specifically, the symposium was put together to motivate the learners to build a healthy mindset and self-esteem, spur them to take advantage of the time advantage which Open and Distance Learning avails and stimulate Career Prospect and Focus.
The event held on Thursday, 28 October, 2021 at the Professor Isaac Folorunso Adewole (PIFA) Hall, University of Ibadan Distance Learning Centre CBT Centre. It featured speakers who facilitated sessions from academic and professional angles with practical infusion on the following topics:
1. Leveraging ICT for Entrepreneurial Development: The Distance Learning Advantage
2. Planning your Professional Development
3. Unschooling for Entrepreneurial Development
It had an array of prolific and dynamic speakers which include Prof. Ayotola Aremu, an Educational Technologist and Director, Office of International Programmes, University of Ibadan; Dr. Adebayo Oluwole, a Counselling Psychologist and researcher in Department of Counselling and Human Development Studies, University of Ibadan and Adewole Williams, a career coach and Associate Member of Centre for International Executive Education and Development, United Kingdom.
The symposium emphasized the need for participants to think entrepreneurial development above a pursuit of paid employment. Unarguably, the value placed on certificates as a parameter for relevance is the reason why we retrogress as a nation and fail to get our educational priorities right. It is therefore apparent that certificates become stale achievements when the bearer lacks value for lifelong education. Professor Aremu pointedly shared personal perspectives and professional insights with practical experiences from budding and successful student entrepreneurs. She painstakingly explained and nudged participants to leverage online opportunities for skill acquisition and networking.
Dr Oluwole particularly urged them to go to school but be aware of their environment in order to evolve the spirit of entrepreneurship. He mentioned categorically that entrepreneurs are problem solvers but schooling has been revealed to be one of the ways by which subscribers are brainwashed. According to him, creativity and innovation is a product of critical thinking and self-discovery not a reflection of high grades. He also shared funding opportunities available for aspiring entrepreneurs.
Mr. Williams consolidated the thoughts of previous speakers with a mind blowing and energetic presentation which answered the question of schooling actually increasing the chances of graduates making it in life. He emphasized the need for participants to have a Personal Development Plan (PDP). He taught them how to develop their career pathway without basking in the certificate frenzy which breeds more mediocre graduates than purpose enthusiasts.
What is the way out? What are the piercing deductions from the symposium? Every youth should make up their minds not to allow their schooling to rob them of education. Schooling is time-bound, but education is life-long. Regrettably, our society's judgment of academic success is wrapped in mediocrity. The priority placed on academic qualification is defeated when upon getting a job; you still have to learn on the job. The reason is not farfetched: graduates are not trusted to deliver until tested. The years of pursuing a degree should be a defining period of a youth’s life, but many of them tend to be more confused after graduation than they were upon admission.
The value placed on education should be birthed in the place of personal discovery. If you do not discover your uniqueness, you do not deserve the spotlight. The spotlight is for people who have value to offer. Participants were nudged to reflect on how they can add value to the society because discovered value puts educational pursuit in perspective. Instructively, the certificate at this realm becomes a backup not a projection of who they truly are.
Consequently, the need to subscribe to Distance Education as offered by the University of Ibadan Distance Learning Centre should be emphasized. This is the 21st Century rescue from the schooling rot! If the conventional mode cannot accommodate the number of young people who seek tertiary education misconceived as schooling, it is believed that they can be positioned to become entrepreneurial undergraduates on the Distance Learning mode of educational delivery. The conventional schooling system gives little or no leverage for entrepreneurship. Open and Distance Learning (ODL) therefore affords its subscribers the opportunity for self-development, engagement in volunteering activities and learning a vocation or skill. The TIME ADVANTAGE is key on this pedestal. This is education which transcends schooling.
The well attended event was spiced with varieties which include a raffle draw. It saw some participants go home with cash prizes, recharge vouchers and gift items. With ceaseless requests for a sustenance of the symposium, UIDLC learners are to anticipate a bigger and better edition in months ahead
Dayo Olajide
Communications Officer, UIDLC