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Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses - Education - Nairaland

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Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by BigCabal: 5:47pm On Sep 28, 2020
In 2013, Kola* wrote UTME for the first time. The plan was to study Computer Science at the University of Benin, one of Nigeria’s foremost universities. Unfortunately, he didn’t meet the cut-off mark for the course.

Every year, millions of Nigerian students sit for the exam organised by the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) as a prerequisite for applying to any Nigerian tertiary institution. Kola had two choices: try his luck with another university or wait until the following year to rewrite the exam.

“I couldn’t stay at home for an entire year,” he says.

He and his parents eventually found a seemingly perfect alternative. They decided that he would attend Igbinedion University in Okada, a town in Edo State, 51 kilometres from Benin.

“I didn’t even know the school existed before I wrote UTME, but it was a good alternative.”

Changing his university of choice from a federal university to a private university wasn’t a decision he took lightly. For starters, there was the tuition to consider. The average fees at University of Benin was ₦42,000 ($108) per session. At Igbinedion, he would have to pay ₦800,000 ($2,000). One thing was sure though. He wouldn’t have to worry about the crippling strikes Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and other staff unions embarked on every session.



What he didn’t know at the time was that there was something else he would have to worry about.

He was going back to his hostel after writing an exam in the second semester of his first year when he overheard a group of students talking about sourcing for money to give a lecturer.

“I was not bothered when I heard this. It wasn’t my problem. But I got to the hostel and more students were talking about it.”

His curiosity got the better of him, prompting him to ask someone what the fuss was about. He got his answer: lecturers in his university were demanding money from students before they passed them.

They called it “sorting.”

In several universities across the country, students and lecturers are in a symbiotic relationship of exchanging money for marks. More often than not, it happens at the prodding of the lecturer. While it is common and, maybe, not surprising to see this phenomenon play out at public universities, it is strange to see it happen at private universities like Igbinedion University where lecturers are relatively well-paid, aren’t owed salaries and have higher standards to follow. But if Kola’s story is anything to go by, this happens there too.

You either pay up or risk failing a course
Bianca*, a graduate of Ambrose Alli University, a public university at Ekpoma, also in Edo State, was certain that she wouldn’t pay money to any lecturer before she made good grades. She had known about this practice before she started at the school. Her sister had gone to the university and used to talk about it with their dad. At Ambrose Alli University, they called it “blocking.”

Bianca was so comfortable in her certainty that when a classmate advised her to block a course in her first year, she brushed it off.

“I always felt that it was for students who didn’t study and wanted to pass courses by any means necessary.”

She got an F in two courses in her first semester at the university. And instinctively, she realised that she had read the situation wrong. She got the message loud and clear.

“From that moment, anytime I heard that there was an opportunity to block a course, I went for it.”

Like Bianca, Kola was also indifferent about it until he failed a course he thought he should have passed in his second year. The truth stared at them — they had to play ball if they wanted to graduate with their mates.

How does it work?
Richard*, a postgraduate student at Kogi State university — the same school where he got his undergraduate degree — told me that the lecturers didn’t outrightly demand money from students. Instead, they relied on other students, whom they had relationships with, to do their dirty jobs for them.

This is the same mode of operation in Igbinedion University and Ambrose Alli University according to Kola and Bianca respectively: to maintain plausible deniability, the lecturers don’t handle the transactions directly.

“The deals are usually brokered by the class reps. They ask you to meet them if you’re not sure how you would perform in an exam, so you can ‘work’ it,” Bianca says.

She added that students, especially female students try to steer clear of the lecturers for fear of being propositioned.

Students who can’t pay in cash are expected to pay in kind. For female students, the lecturer may expect sexual favours in return for grades. Male students, on the other hand, are tasked with buying gifts or rendering some form of service to the lecturer.



After the payment stage, the lecturers gather the students into their offices and give them fresh answer sheets to rewrite the exam. Only that this time, they’re allowed to use their study materials to answer the questions.

Lecturers at Ambrose Alli University don’t always go through this trouble, especially when they’re dealing with 100 and 200 level students. They simply upgrade their marks. So, a potential D will change to an A, a B or a C, depending on how much the student paid.

“Starting from 300 level, the lecturers can’t stamp grades on scripts indiscriminately anymore because there are external examiners who go through scripts to ensure transparency,” Bianca explains.

The deal is usually upheld, but I wondered what would happen if a lecturer collects money from a student but doesn’t hold up to his or her end of the deal. Bianca and Kola don’t think this ever happens. However, Richard said that any lecturer who attempts this is making himself a target of violent attacks from disgruntled students.

“If a student pays a lecturer and he reneges on his promise, all bets are off. Chances are that the lecturer will be attacked.”

Sorting is not cheap
At Ambrose Alli University, students pay between ₦5,000 and ₦20,000 to sort courses.

“For a 2-unit course, you pay ₦10,000 for an A, ₦8,000 for a B and ₦5,000 for a C.” For 4 and unit courses, you could pay as high as ₦20,000,” Bianca breaks it down.

The minimum wage in Nigeria is currently ₦30,000 (about $77), which doesn’t cut it for a lot of people. Numbers from the National Bureau of Statistics suggest that about 40% (representing 82.9 million Nigerians) live in poverty. Yet, Nigerian lecturers don’t care that most students aren’t working and many of them struggle to get by.

Things are even more interesting at Igbinedion University. The lecturers rely on their own discretion to set a price tag, although the student’s relationship with them plays a role here.

“The average price to sort a course is between ₦15,000 and ₦40,000. But nothing less than ₦15,000. Students pay up to ₦90,000 (300% the minimum wage) to sort courses in a semester,” Kola reveals.

The grade a student also gets depends on their relationship with the lecturer. Usually, they settle on a B or a C. A student who sorts his or her course shouldn’t expect an A.

Students at Kogi State University pay the least amount of money to sort their courses. Richard said that the highest sum of money he ever heard anyone pay a lecturer was ₦4,000. The standard charge rests between ₦1,000 and ₦1,500.

“Most of the students at KSU simply cannot afford to pay huge sums of money. Even when I wrote final year projects for some of my classmates, it was a struggle before I got someone who agreed to pay me ₦17,000. I could have gotten up to ₦40,000 at another university.”



You may wonder how the students afford to pay the lecturers, considering that students register several courses every semester. Bianca’s dad knew about the arrangement and sent money to her every semester.

“My dad usually sent me about ₦60,000 every semester to take care of this thing.”

Kola had to handle it himself for the most part.

“I dipped into my savings to pay lecturers. It wasn’t until I got to 300 level that I told my parents about it. It was hard to convince them that it was just the way things were.”

Richard didn’t partake in sorting, at least not in the conventional sense. He built relationships with the lecturers and leveraged them to get out of paying money.

“I try to get the lecturer’s attention by asking them questions in class. Sometimes, I visit them at their offices and try to see how I can help them. I made sure to never ask them for favours. Basically, I developed mentor-mentee relationships with them.”

“Everyone knows it happens but no one cares”
Actions have consequences. The authorities responsible for sanctioning the lecturers for their offences are the university management boards. Kola, Bianca and Richard said that if the management knew about the practice, they did nothing about it. One could argue that the management of these schools are not on top of the situation because the students, who are directly affected, keep quiet about it. But it’s more complicated than it seems. Students are scared of reporting to the authorities for fear of retribution. They cannot know which members of the academic staff to trust.

“From the vice-chancellor to the porter, everyone seems to be corrupt. I don’t think that there’s a lecturer that hasn’t tampered with marks. All of them are guilty. Everyone in management used to be lecturers too,” Richard quips.



He noted, with sadness, that students have also contributed to the precarious situation.

“From my experience, the proportion of students who are willing to pay money to sort their courses are far greater than those who aren’t.”

This suggests that students also drive the demand and supply model of this practice. Here’s the thing — students want to pass their courses and want to get the highest grade possible. However, not everyone wants to put in the work. Conveniently, there’s another option they could explore: they part with some money and they pass. These kinds of students will not require a lot of convincing before they embrace grade sorting. In fact, they actively seek it out.

The Aftermath
Bianca, Kola and Richard are out of school, but they are still reeling from the experience.

“I hated giving those fuckers my money,” Bianca fumes. “Even though my dad sent about ₦500,000 in total throughout my stay at the school, I used about ₦130,000 to sort my courses.

Interestingly, Bianca isn’t even sure of the grade she graduated with.

“My statement of result states that I graduated with a 2.1. But I found my name under the 2.2 category in the convocation list. At the moment, I’m not sure of what I actually graduated with.”

While she might not know her final grade yet, she knows how much the whole experience affected her self-confidence and attitude towards learning.

“It really bleeped with me. At a point, I didn’t see the point of going to classes. But I studied for courses I knew that I didn’t have to block.”

Kola is also demoralised by the sheer insanity of paying to pass courses, especially in a university where he had to pay about ₦800,000 as tuition every year to remain a student.

“My attitude towards learning took a beating the more I paid to pass courses. The enthusiasm totally fizzled out. If you asked me to mention something useful I gained from the university, I would be at a loss for words.”

Richard is determined to not let the situation haunt him for the rest of his life. He wants to be a part of the system and fight the rot from inside.

“I want to be a lecturer. I want to bring my own principles and weird ideas to life. I’m not saying that I will be able to stop grade sorting in its entirety, but my students will know me as the lecturer that doesn’t partake in it.”

Source: https://www.zikoko.com/aluta-and-chill/sorting-in-nigerian-universities/

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Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Nobody: 7:31pm On Sep 28, 2020
Please, can we rely on this news. We have to move it, if you care and you want to join my movement, please signify. My heart bleeds reading through this. See the rot in our educational system. See the level we are, goodness God.

#SayNoToLecturerSortingCourses

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by SenR(m): 7:31pm On Sep 28, 2020
Honestly there's a need to purge our university system, it's one of the worst in the world.

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by BennyDGreat: 8:09pm On Sep 28, 2020
Na wa oo
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by midolian(m): 9:11pm On Sep 28, 2020
As much as these may be true, they are mere allegations by faceless people and should be treated as such. Another downside of write-ups such as this is that; it ends up making people see graduates from these schools as undeserving of whatever certificate they are carrying....

...And in the end, both the student that paid for his grade and the one that earned it through legitimate means will wait for mercy from their lord to make it in the labour market.

So to me, this makes no sense!

10 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by rxmusa(m): 11:03pm On Sep 28, 2020
Wonders shall never end
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by ClassicMan202(m): 11:24pm On Sep 28, 2020
Correction..... Inside ALL Nigerian Schools where students pay Money/S£X to pass.
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by DaInferno(m): 11:25pm On Sep 28, 2020
... so fucking true; remember vividly in 200lvl
one Thermodynamics lecturer in uni agric makurdi; popularly known as Victor will give an open test and tell us boldly that nobody will pass, even though most students saw the workings either in PDFs or on the net. not until some sorgi guys would meet him after submission to know what's the answers were supposed to be.

dude will open his dirty mouth to say; bring 3k to pass.
brethren ,since I swore never to give any Lecturers my money, I had to dedicate 40% of my entire reading to that course most especially at night, I carried it over that yearundecided. worse was seeing people I prepared better than and people who aren't really serious pass the course.

I was so mad when results were out , cus it was the only course I failed -33. wetin man go do, carryover na for students. guess what?! I didn't prepare at a for round 2, I just glanced through some definitions and went to the hall almost unprepared... I got 54 that year

till date, I can't explain how I was failed when I prepared thoroughly to how I passed when I didn't prepare at all?!

abi was it the fact that there were too many carry over students?

bottom line is, these crooks and our scripts need thorough scrutiny

9 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Pimpstar: 11:46pm On Sep 28, 2020
so mussh koropsan
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by tarantino1: 12:33am On Sep 29, 2020
You mean just 3?

Lol

Even Uniben dey sort too sef

3 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Nobody: 1:24am On Sep 29, 2020
°°°
Its not done in my department. I don't know for sure of the whole school

4 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by searchng4love: 4:22am On Sep 29, 2020
Biased reportage. Get both sides of the story. And not all students sort. I never did.
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by ashybabs(m): 4:40am On Sep 29, 2020
yet Too see the Great IGBENEDION
dont mean to Demarket my Alumni but this is one of the few things they deserve recognition for
Sorting is a nigerian thingy
students want it, sleazy lectures love it

edited
+ we made it sef

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by femi4: 5:29am On Sep 29, 2020
All federal and state Unis
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by sparog(m): 6:30am On Sep 29, 2020
Education is Nigeria is just a joke....
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by robinso01(m): 7:27am On Sep 29, 2020
This is very common in most tertiary institutions, if not all. This happens in my school also. When a student reports this, there's no action taken against the lecturer at all, but the student will even regret doing so. Nigeria education system is whack. What pains me most is that, you will see the set of lecturers that does the money for marks to be abusing our corrupt leaders and politicians of corruption, even when they are worse than them.

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by heykims(m): 7:41am On Sep 29, 2020
It was exam period then and I was going to write my paper in 100level. I saw my level mate neighbour going to town and I was wondering why she was not writing exam. I shrugged it off sha because I knew we are in Nigeria, she likely had an alternative route to writing and passing.

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by samuelpeters(m): 8:49am On Sep 29, 2020
Sorting is normal in all Nigerian Universities directly or indirectly.
For those that said " it doesn't happen in my department/Faculty" ,i laugh in Swahili.
Get very close to lecturers. If as a guy you haven't had a drink in a bar/beer palour with lecturers, then you really don't know what is going on. Bcx na for there some kind matter de happen grin

2 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by samuelpeters(m): 8:51am On Sep 29, 2020
robinso01:
This is very common in most tertiary institutions, if not all. This happens in my school also. When a student reports this, there's no action taken against the lecturer at all, but the student will even regret doing so. Nigeria education system is whack. What pains me most is that, you will see the set of lecturers that does the money for marks to be abusing our corrupt leaders and politicians of corruption, even when they are worse than them.
The only thing is to look the other way.
Do your own and leave others to do their own.
Most of us are no better than those in authority.
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by CodeTemplar: 8:53am On Sep 29, 2020
Sad but true tales.

This is why Oyedepo and the likes will continue to be relevant in the education sector. They simply fill a void no one is denying its existence. This thing has to be stopped or it will continue to impede our progress as a society. You cannot feign the acquisition of knowledge and expect what you don't have to profit you.
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by CodeTemplar: 8:58am On Sep 29, 2020
femi4:
All federal and state Unis
....and a substantial number of private uni.

If you ask me, I say all the unis, what differentiates some private uni is the will to fight this practice and that translates to justices if a student tenders good evidence to support claims of mark for money/favour.

2 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by CodeTemplar: 9:09am On Sep 29, 2020
robinso01:
This is very common in most tertiary institutions, if not all. This happens in my school also. When a student reports this, there's no action taken against the lecturer at all, but the student will even regret doing so. Nigeria education system is whack. What pains me most is that, you will see the set of lecturers that does the money for marks to be abusing our corrupt leaders and politicians of corruption, even when they are worse than them.
The bold is the fire behind the smoke. Greed is an untameable force but what happens when it manifests? The Justice system in this country and part of the world is a huge joke. The one reporting the real offender gets victimized the more and it becomes impossible to stop this practice. The is one huge advantage genuine visionary schools (mostly private ones) have over the public ones. All men's property is technically no man's property and that explains why those in charge of the public schools don't care about justice.

2 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Tonymegabush1(m): 9:48am On Sep 29, 2020
The aftermath is where we are now. No headway in sight.

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by dolphinife: 9:48am On Sep 29, 2020
I believe that almost all higher institutions in Nigeria(both universities and polytechnics) engage in sorting. But some institutions are notorious in this shameful act. I graduated from OAU and at no time did any lecturer told Us to pay money to pass. Even no textbook or handout was sold to us. However, some lecturers in social sciences in OAU back then are notorious in sex for marks. But at least, those doing this are less than 2% of the entire lecturers. Meanwhile of you go to the likes of OOU, Lead city University, Igbinedion, etc, this act is prevalent. In my office, some corpers and IT students are being posted to my office and you wouldn't but cry for the future of this country. Some of these Corpers can barely write their names, not to talk of writing a sentence. Its that terrible.

2 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by tarantino1: 9:52am On Sep 29, 2020
samuelpeters:

The only thing is to look the other way.
Do your own and leave others to do their own.
Most of us are no better than those in authority.


Beautiful advice there. Also extend it to the those in Authority from the Federal to the local level of government and in the next 60 years Nigeria will be a country to be proud of ---- or maybe you can just have a rethink and see that that's how this country has been run for the last 60 years, see where it has brought us, and yet we still give the same advice.


Almost like we don't learn from history

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Tookool(m): 9:58am On Sep 29, 2020
CRUTECH not on the list? ...I'm in shock. OP please do a fresh research

2 Likes

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by MightySparrow: 10:08am On Sep 29, 2020
Buhari must hear this! seriously speaking: nigeria is a failed state. those days under Buhari - Idiagbon, exam malpractice attracted 21 imprisonment. As a science student a P7 in English Language was required to study any science related course in the univerities without problems. Today, people with A1 are struggling to express themselves. I wonder what legacy this generation will leave for prsoterity.

1 Like

Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by MightySparrow: 10:11am On Sep 29, 2020
femi4:
All federal and state Unis
UI exempted.
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by KingAzubuike(f): 10:31am On Sep 29, 2020
MightySparrow:
UI exempted.
Lol it happens everywhere but low-key
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by Ayo2004: 11:22am On Sep 29, 2020
Only 3 ...all public universities are involved in this
Re: Inside 3 Nigerian Universities Where Students Pay Money To Pass Courses by samuelpeters(m): 11:26am On Sep 29, 2020
tarantino1:



Beautiful advice there. Also extend it to the those in Authority from the Federal to the local level of government and in the next 60 years Nigeria will be a country to be proud of ---- or maybe you can just have a rethink and see that that's how this country has been run for the last 60 years, see where it has brought us, and yet we still give the same advice.


Almost like we don't learn from history
The system is too corrupt.
If you can't stand it, just look for a sane country and migrate.
I

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