The story of formal
education in Nigeria reads like a relay race. From the hands of the
missionaries the school system has passed to Nigerians. But the change of baton
did not happen overnight. It was a slow-grinding process spanning more than a
century.
At the dawn of the 20th century, western education was already
entrenched in the whole of Nigeria. However, it was more noticeable in the
Lagos colony and the southern protectorate than in the northern protectorate
where Islamic education was more widespread. In fact the northern Emirs did not
encourage Christian missionaries to set up schools in their domain.
Education was purely a
tool for evangelization and the Christian missions made no pretence about it.
Their primary aim was to convert and also train Nigerians who would facilitate
the spread of the gospel.
The colonial
government gave the missions a free hand in the running schools. The colonial
government first showed interest in education through the provision of
grants-in-aid to secondary schools and scholarships.
Education was entirely
British. British history and value systems were taught in Nigerian schools.
African traditions and culture were considered unfit to be incorporated in the
school curriculum.
But before
independence in1960 Nigerians who were products of the British colonial
education system began to challenge the colonial education policies. These
educationists questioned the inherent anomalies in the colonial system of
education.
By 1955, Alvan Ikoku,
president of the Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, led the union to demand for a
uniform education system for Nigeria. It was turned down by the colonial
government. When Kenneth Dike wanted to use oral tradition in his research for
Ph.D thesis he was refused but he didn’t give up. When he finished his work it
opened a new vista in historiography.
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