That hits hard, especially for Nigeria.
The paradox we live in
• Vibrant youth: 70% of Nigeria is under 30. Loud, online, entrepreneurial, building in tech, music, fashion, skits. The median age is 18. We have the energy.
• Memorization culture: WAEC, JAMB, university exams. “Define photosynthesis.” “List 10 causes of…” Rarely “Design a solution for…” or “Why might this fail?” • The result: We produce first-class graduates who struggle to debug a real problem, pitch an idea, or question bad policy. Not for lack of brains — for lack of training in thinking.
What we were taught vs what we need
*We were taught*- Recall Facts.
*What Nigeria actual needs*
Solve problem with scare resources
*We were taught*
One correct Answer.
*What Nigeria actual needs*
Navigate ambiguity “ it depends”
*We were taught*
Follow the marking scheme.
*What Nigeria actual needs*
Build the marking scheme.
*We were taught*
Theory first.
*What Nigeria actual needs*
Ship, test, iterate, fix.
The irony? Nigerians are thinking every day. The auntie running 3 businesses from her WhatsApp. The dev in Yaba learning Rust on YouTube at 2am. The farmer adapting to no rainfall. That’s critical thinking under pressure. We just don’t call it that, and school doesn’t grade it.
So where does that leave us?
If the system won’t teach thinking, we teach ourselves. And honestly, we already are. Twitter spaces, tech communities, apprenticeships, even TikTok explainers — that’s the new classroom. Messy, unaccredited, but it rewards curiosity over cramming.
Real question for you: If you could redesign one subject in Nigerian secondary schools to teach how to think instead of what to remember, which subject would you pick and what would you change?
Let’s think it through together and You can only find out as you journey with us with this life changing book
*”A Nation of Vibrant Youth”*
Get your copies from the links below 👇
*Hard Copies*
*e-Copy*
https://selar.com/207u70r673


