Topic: What an illusion! Growing up as a Nigerian Youth?  (Read 1764 times)

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What an illusion! Growing up as a Nigerian Youth?
« on: March 24, 2014, 09:47:48 PM »
What an illusion!
Growing up as a Nigerian
youth is not so pleasant. You finished your secondary education at
the age of 18 years old. Perhaps the system will try its possible best
either to seize the WAEC result, or they
trick you by giving you a pass in one
subject and cause you to write GCE as well
as NECO,thereby robbing you one or two
years more. Now you are 20 years old. You are asked
to write JAMB for you to get entrance to
the
university. After two or three trials, perhaps you got a
high
score, the respective university will use
quota and
catchment slogans to rob you of your
Nigerian dream again. Even if you succeeded in getting the right
score against all odds, you have to write
aptitude
test to get admission. Per adventure you
succeed
once more, you have to bribe your way in... If
not, your name will be omitted. Now you are 23 years old. You
attend university of 4 or 5 years duration,
within those years, you are subjected to
pass
through ASUU/ASUP/COEASU strikes
culminating up to a year of staying at home. Now you are 29 years old. Graduating, you
are told that graduate opportunities are for
young
people below 24 years of old. You are
threatened
to must have at least 5 years experience to your
dream career before you are employed . From where will you get experience?
Coming to one year youth service, they say
you are serving your fatherland. That is delay in disguise as I see to it. As
we are alive, we serve our fatherland
everyday. 30 years of a Nigerian youth robbed off
from him. What an irony.
Go to South Africa, immediately a learner
passed his/her matric, with good result,
that is straight admission to the university,
no gce, no
jamb, no aptitude test, and there university career
last only for 3 years and yet their education
system is rated high better than Nigerian
system. Why are you destroying Nigerian youths? Immediately after tertiary education, the
probability of the South African child
getting a job and living his/her SA dream
is 90 percent. What do we have here? Getting
a job is by luck and nepotism and
tribalism. Is this what the youth hope for? Why are our Nigerian youth
suffering and dying in foreign lands in
pursuit of greener pasture. South Africa pays her citizens grants of
different sorts every month, what about
this most populous nation? No skill acquisition centre for the youth.
Yet, Nigeria is richer than South Africa.
Who is auditing Nigeria? Is there any probity and accountability of
grand stance? No! No!No!.
Arise O' Compatriots! My Nigerian youth.
Join us to heal our nation. Jamb should be
abolished, Nysc should be abolished. 4 years
should be reduced to 3 years in our
institutions, and the youth should be taken serious from hence forth. GOD BLESS NIGERIA

 

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