“Technology helps solves the problem of access and quality in education. It can go where good teachers will refuse to go and give students the benefit of the same quality of ed-ucation that the best schools enjoy.”- Adeboye Oshinaga (Co-founder Youngsoul Disrupt Af-rica — December 2014)
There must be something unique about the Nigerian DNA. That in-domitable Deoxy-ribo-Nucleic-Acid is creative, innovative, ingenious, resilient; solid and strong; always standing tall like the anthill in the eye of the global academic storm. If in doubt, consider the recent feats of both Miss Faith Odunsi and Nafisa Aminu. On her part, the former, a 15-year- old girl who represented Nigeria at the Global Mathematics competition beat the representatives of countries such as the United States of America, USA, United King-dom UK, China and several others to become the World Best. In fact so smart and confident she was at providing the answers that the judges who were awed by her fast and accu-rate answers dubbed her as “the Calculator”.
Not long after, the 17-year-old Nafisa Ab-dullah Aminu, a student from Yobe State, Ni-geria, emerged as the world’s best in English language skills at the 2025 TeenEagle Global Finals held in London, United Kingdom. Naf-isa, who represented Nigeria through Nigeri-an Tulip International College (NTIC), Yobe, outperformed over 20,000 students from 69 countries, including many from native En-glish-speaking nations.
Unable to hide his astonishment, world -renowned music star Akon.gushed: “This is not a fluke but confirms that Nigerians are one of the most intelligent people in the world”. That is the heart of the matter. The point being made here is that Nigeria boasts of some of the world’s best brains in virtual-ly all fields of human endeavour.
For instance, Nigerian team of five girls won the $10,000 Junior Gold Awards at the 2018 Technovation World Challenge. The girls from Regina Pacis Secondary School, Onitsha, Anambra State Nigeria represented Nigeria and Africa at the World Technova-tion Challenge in the Silicon Valley in San Francisco, USA.The girls included Jessica Osita,
Promise Nnalue, Nwabuaku Ossai, Adaeze Onuigbo and Vivian Okoye. The team, led by Uchenna Onwuamaegbu Ugwu defeated representatives of other technolog-ical giants including the USA, Spain, Tur-key, Uzbekistan and China to clinch the gold medal.
In a similar technological achievement, back in 2015, Ogbonnaya Bassey’s Solarkobo power generator won the prestigious Young Innovators Prize as the best out of 124 ap-plicants from 34 countries. The event was in Budapest, Hungary for the Telecommu-nications World event. But are we, as a na-tion making the best use of their astounding creative ingenuity? That is the million naira question. But the answer, sad to say is an em-phatic “no”! That is where the challenge lies.
Mention the names, Professor Philip Emeagwali, Prof. Gabriel Oyibo, Samuel Achilefu, Babajide Alo, Ayodele Olaiya and Col. OveimoOvadje (Retd) and they ring a crisp-clear bell in the hallowed halls of cre-ativity, globally. So are those of Jelani Aliyu, Brino Gilbert, Shehu Saleh Balani, Shaheed Adepoju,Seyi Oyesola and Ndubuisi Ekekwe. For instance, Emeagwali is regarded as one of the founding fathers of the internet as we know it today. For that feat he was awarded the Gordon Prize, normally reserved for 18 scientists. On his part, Gabriel Oyibo, the Kogi state -born genius who is an engineer, researches and physicist broke the thirty year jinx that Albert Einstein could not solve He unravelled the Grand Unified Field The-ory. That was in 2002. He is an expert that the United States Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) based in Massachu-setts Institute of Technology has immensely gained from.
In fact, it was the ground-breaking devel-opment of a set of high-technology cancer visualizing goggles made by the Nigeria -born Prof, Samuel Achilefu that assisted surgeons to view cancer cells in real -time while operating their patients. That won him the prestigious St.Louis Award in 2014. And another Nigerian, Jelani Aliyu who designed the Chevrolet Volt electric car that became General Motors’ leading brand based on its green energy policy now sweeping across the world.
Oh yes! It is good to note that our own Silas Adekunle, a 34-year-old Nigerian engineer, made history as the world’s highest-paid robotics engineer with MekaMon, the first intelligent gaming robot. Can you beat that? Not at all!
What with another Nigerian-American, Dr. Osato Osemwengie, known as the “US Drone Builder,” boasting of 4 PhDs and 7 Master’s degrees. The true academic heavy-weight, is now considered one of the most educated minds on the Planet Earth. Salute to this legend, a true Pride of Edo state. Most delighted as we are to be linked with these amazing talents with awesome capabilities, one’s persisting worry is that while the prod-ucts of their creative ingenuity are positive-ly impacting the techno-econonic space in other countries, Nigeria, their fatherland is being denied of such.
It would be recalled that yours truly has been consistently raising concern about this critical issue through several opinion essays since year 2002. First was: ‘ The Challenge of Local Intentions 1 and 2 ‘(Daily Times of October 18 and November 1, 2002 ) followed by ‘ Usually Our Best Brains’ 1 and 2 ( Daily Times, July 18 and August 1, 2003 ). That was before: ‘Turning Brain-drain to Economic Gain ( July 23, 2004). Between then and now there have been others such as ‘Making the Best Use of Our Best Brains’ ‘, ‘Maximizing the Potentials of Our Young Inventors and Jelani’s Challenge to Nigeria ‘ yet our politi-cal leaders are yet to see the wisdom in one’s clarion call!
Now is the time to start benefiting from Ogbonnaya Bassey’s Solarkobo, a renew-able power generator that costs six times less than the normal fuel generator. So we should from the invention of Saheed Ade-poju, the co-founder of Encipher Limited whose INYE-1, a 7-inch resistive screen tablet offers three hours of battery life and allows HDMI output to HDMI capable devices. And we should also gain from Ndubuisi Ezekwe’s microchips used in invasive surgical robots. He is the Founder of the First Atlantic Semi-conductors and Microchips Ltd. The list goes on.
While these Nigerian-born inventors are making their marks on the global landscape there are salient questions for our political helmsmen and policy makers to find solu-tions to. Can we keep making waves in the field of technology with the abysmally low funding of education? Can we maximize the hidden potentials from our youths with some 13.2 million out of school children out there roaming the streets and used as cannon fodders for all manner of insurgency? How do we avoid the embarrassment of the re-cent technical glitches in JAMB and WAEC results that have brought forth the need to institute sustainable infrastructural devel-opment here in the education sector?
To move forward out of the wood we must take the all-important issue of educational development seriously. A law to make the 26% allocation to education, as recommend-ed by UNESCO compulsory at both the state and federal government levels has become necessary. Also, the provision of funds for infrastructural development, recruitment of more teachers, their retraining on informa-tion technology and providing the enabling environment for talents to grow as well as funding of research institutes, and adequate grants for researches at the universities have become the sin qua non to our technological and economic development.
This is yet another clarion call on the gov-ernment in power, this time as led by Pres-ident Bola Tinubu, to constitute a bi-ennial Summit with our best brains in science and technology as innovators and inventors to fashion the solutions to our myriad of chal-lenges, to benefit Nigerians.
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