Connect with us

Education

The Unspoken Price of Success in Nigerian Higher Education -By Abdulsamad Danji Abdulqadir

If Nigerian universities are to reclaim their credibility, integrity must be non-negotiable. Education should never come with hidden demands, and no student should ever have to pay for grades with money, fear, or dignity.

Published

on

Cultural diversity in Nigerian schools - youths in university

Nigerian universities were built on a simple promise: that knowledge, character, and hard work would shape the future of the nation. From lecture halls in Zaria to campuses in Nsukka, Ilorin, Kashere, and Calabar, students arrive with the same expectation study hard, earn your grades, graduate with dignity. Lecturers, in turn, are expected to assess fairly and guide students with integrity.

But for many students, this promise nolonger feels secure.Across Nigerian campuses, there is an uncomfortable truth that is rarely spoken about openly. Stories move quietly from hostel rooms to corridors, from whispers among friends to warnings passed down to younger students. Stories of lecturers who demand money, gifts, or sexual favors in exchange for marks, project supervision, or protection during examinations. These stories are seldom written, rarely reported, and even more rarely punished yet they are widely known.

Transactional relationships between lecturers and students have become one of the most damaging, yet least confronted, problems in Nigeria’s higher education system.

At the center of this crisis is power. Lecturers control continuous assessment scores, examination scripts, project approvals, and sometimes the difference between graduating on time and being stuck in the system for years. In an environment where carryovers, extra years, and delayed graduation are constant fears, that power can easily be abused. Many students comply not because they are immoral, but because they feel trapped, scared, and without options.

Economic hardship deepens the problem. Nigerian universities are underfunded, and many lecturers struggle with poor remuneration, delayed salaries, and limited research support. While financial difficulty can never excuse exploitation, it creates an environment where unethical behavior is sometimes rationalized. On the other side, students facing poverty, family pressure, or the fear of repeating courses may see transactional arrangements not as success, but as a painful shortcut to survival.

Advertisement

The most disturbing form of this abuse is sexual exploitation. Despite official policies against sexual harassment, students  particularly female students  continue to report cases of coercion disguised as relationships. In reality, when one person controls another’s grades, genuine consent becomes almost impossible. What should be a safe academic space becomes one filled with fear, silence, and emotional trauma.

The consequences are everywhere. Academic standards suffer as grades lose their meaning. Employers begin to question the quality of Nigerian graduates. Society pays the price when institutions reward manipulation instead of merit. Beyond academics, many victims carry emotional scars long after leaving school scars made worse by shame, silence, and institutional indifference. Too often, universities protect their image by quietly transferring offenders instead of holding them accountable.

What allows this crisis to survive is silence.

Students fear victimization, blame, or being labeled difficult. Reporting systems are weak or not trusted, and disciplinary processes are slow and opaque. So many students choose endurance over exposure, while perpetrators grow more confident.

Lecturers are not just employees; they are mentors, role models, and custodians of knowledge. When they abuse their position, they betray not only their profession but the future of the nation. Students, too, must recognize that participating in transactional relationships even under pressure  damages the integrity of their education and devalues their certificates.

Advertisement

For many students, this experience changes how they see university life. They attend lectures not just to learn, but to watch for signs of favoritism or hidden expectations. Every submission, every consultation, every interaction carries a quiet question: What will be expected of me beyond academics?

The damage goes far beyond individual campuses. When grades can be bought or coerced, trust collapses. Merit loses value. And the moral cost the slow erosion of trust between students and lecturers  leaves wounds that cannot easily be measured.

Recent stories from campuses across Nigeria, with UNILAG often in the spotlight, show that transactional relationships are no longer just whispers in the shadows. They are part of the lived reality for some students. In these moments, education stops being a pursuit of knowledge and becomes a negotiation  a fragile game where learning takes a back seat to survival.

If Nigerian universities are to reclaim their credibility, integrity must be non-negotiable. Education should never come with hidden demands, and no student should ever have to pay for grades with money, fear, or dignity.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending Contents

Topical Issues

Malamin Daji Malamin Daji
Opinion4 hours ago

Six Years Since the Passing of Malamin Daji -By Hon. Abdullahi Mahmud Gaya

Since my election to the House of Representatives, my weekly visits to him in Gaya Town reminded me of his...

BLESSING CEO BLESSING CEO
Forgotten Dairies4 hours ago

Blessing CEO And The Girl Who Cried Wolf: A Viral Lesson On Credibility In The Age Of Social Media -By Isaac Asabor

Because the truth is, the world is watching. And more importantly, the world is remembering. The girl who cried wolf...

Femi Fani-Kayode and Peter Obi Femi Fani-Kayode and Peter Obi
Breaking News12 hours ago

‘You’ve Lost Your Mind’ — Fani-Kayode Slams Obi Over Abacha, NADECO Remarks

Femi Fani-Kayode criticises Peter Obi over remarks comparing Sani Abacha to NADECO activists, calling the statement offensive and warning it...

senior-home-nurse-wheelchair-woman-old people senior-home-nurse-wheelchair-woman-old people
Forgotten Dairies18 hours ago

When Protection Ends with Age: The Legal Abandonment of Older Women Worldwide -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

This gap is not just a technical problem. It is a feature of the current structure. Legal frameworks the world...

Hajia-Hadiza-Mohammed Hajia-Hadiza-Mohammed
Forgotten Dairies18 hours ago

The $6 Billion External Loan Request And The Critical Issues In The Tinubu’s Unbridled Loan Appetite -By Hajia Hadiza Mohammed

Added to these is the problem lack of transparency and accountability. The government is never accountable because the institutions and...

quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos quality-nigerian-flag-for-sale-in-lagos
Forgotten Dairies18 hours ago

A Broken Country And It’s Heartbroken Citizens -By Ike Willie-Nwobu

Nigerians have become a besieged people, and the incompetence of their leaders has become just as deadly to them as...

Sheikh Gumi Sheikh Gumi
National Issues19 hours ago

Sheikh Gumi’s Controversial Crusade: Peacemaker or Apologist For Violence? -By Isaac Asabor

Gumi’s defenders argue that his efforts have, at times, led to the release of hostages and temporary reductions in violence....

ADC Coalition ADC Coalition
Breaking News21 hours ago

ADC Challenges INEC Chair Over Court Order, Vows to Proceed with Congresses

ADC challenges INEC’s interpretation of a Court of Appeal directive, insisting its internal activities remain lawful.

BOLA AHMED TINUBU BOLA AHMED TINUBU
Breaking News22 hours ago

Ogun Hosts Tinubu for Commissioning of Airport, Airline and Infrastructure Projects

Tinubu inaugurates Gateway International Airport, aircraft, and major roads in Ogun, highlighting infrastructure and economic development.

NLC NLC
Breaking News22 hours ago

May Day 2026: NLC Calls for Nationwide Rallies Over Unimplemented Minimum Wage

NLC asks workers nationwide to stage peaceful rallies in states that have not enforced the 2024 National Minimum Wage Act.