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Beyond the CGPA: Why a First-Class Degree Doesn’t Guarantee Job Readiness -By Jepson Pwamaddeino

Prioritize Portfolio over Paper: While grades hold institutional value, a portfolio proves capability. Students must focus on building a tangible body of work—whether through writing, design, technical projects, or management—that demonstrates exactly what they can deliver to an employer.

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Graduate students in Nigeria university

In the competitive landscape of higher education, a first-class degree is often heralded as the ultimate golden ticket to career success. However, a closer look at the contemporary job market reveals a stark divide between classroom excellence and real-world execution. Observation of university dynamics—even as early as the 200-level—reveals that excellent grades do not automatically translate to professional competence.

To bridge the gap between academia and employment, it is critical to understand why academic titles fall short, and how students can actively build true capacity.

The Pitfalls of Academic-Only Focus
Rote Memorization vs. Problem Solving: The academic structure often rewards students who “cram” their way through exams. Relying on past questions and memorized notes can successfully boost a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA), but it fails miserably in the workplace where critical thinking and adaptive problem-solving are required.

The Socioeconomic Barrier to Learning: Academic focus requires peace of mind. For many students in developing regions, the daily struggle for basic necessities—like food and stable shelter—takes precedence over studying abstract theories. When survival stress dominates a student’s life, classroom theory rarely sticks, creating an uneven playing field that a standard grading system fails to account for.

The Theory-Practice Gap: Most traditional university curricula are heavily skewed toward theory. Employers, however, pay for execution. It is increasingly common to see second-class or third-class graduates outperform first-class peers simply because they prioritized practical, market-ready skills over textbook perfection.

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Strategic Advice for the Modern Student
To graduate not just with a certificate, but with true professional value, students must treat their university years as a launchpad for practical execution.

Engage in Campus-Based Practical Training: Do not limit learning to lecture halls. Students should actively leverage campus facilities to build foundational skills. For instance, Mass Communication students should immerse themselves in campus radio stations—practicing scriptwriting, story composition, and live studio management to master fluency and technical clarity.

Seek Immediate Industry Exposure: Waiting until graduation to look for internships is a critical mistake. Students should proactively seek Industrial Training (IT) or volunteer positions at local firms and media houses near their campuses. Early exposure to reporting, project management, and daily operations provides raw, hands-on experience that a classroom cannot replicate.

Prioritize Portfolio over Paper: While grades hold institutional value, a portfolio proves capability. Students must focus on building a tangible body of work—whether through writing, design, technical projects, or management—that demonstrates exactly what they can deliver to an employer.

Grades are part of the academic journey, but they are not the whole story. The time to build industry capacity, refine communication skills, and establish a professional portfolio is right now. Do not wait for graduation to begin your career.

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