Six years after, FG reverses self, stops polytechnics awarding degrees

In a sharp policy reversal, the federal government has directed polytechnics, monotechnics and other allied institutions to stop awarding degrees.

The directive, announced via a circular marked TEB/ PRO/ E/ 12/ Vol. 11/132 and dated December 1, 2022, by the National Board for Technical Education, directed heads of the affected institutions to comply.

The directive was signed by the NBTE Director Polytechnic Programmes Department Ogoh Ngbede.

What it was in 2016
The policy reversal is coming about six years after the Muhammadu Buhari-led government approved some polytechnics and colleges of education as degree awarding institutions.

At the end of its Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting August 2016, the federal government had said there would be no more dichotomy between polytechnics and universities in the country.

It also said all the programmes currently being run by the polytechnics, which were not technology-based and constituted about 70 per cent of its curriculum, would be scrapped.

Under the policy then, the polytechnics became campuses of the proximate universities with the vice chancellors of those universities appointing provosts for the polytechnics, subject to the ratification of the universities’ councils.

The federal government also said the polytechnics would be limited to award of the National Diploma (ND), while those desirous of further education would be awarded the Bachelor of Technology (B. Tech) by the proximate university.

Addressing journalists after the FEC meeting, Minister of Education Adamu Adamu had said: “There will be no more award of HND. After we have exhausted the current students under the programme, there will be no more award of HND. This means that there will be no fresh admission for HND programmes. And in addition, any programme that is not technical will be out of the polytechnics.

“About 70 per cent of polytechnic graduates are in the non-technical courses. It is going to be a rigorous implementation programme.”

“The HND certificate will remain a legal tender in Nigeria and holders of such certificate will continue to be recognised as the equivalent of first degree holders without discriminatory remunerations and limit to progression in the work place. With education being on the concurrent list, the states may wish to consolidate their tertiary institutions. But if they do not wish to follow the federal example, their programmes will continue to be regulated by the relevant agencies of the Federal Ministry of Education,” he was also reported to have added.

The U-turn

But making a U-turn in a new circular, the federal government  expressed in strong terms its  dissatisfaction with the rising number of tertiary institutions in the country offering programmes they were not originally designed to undertake.

The board said the government had given the affected institutions four years to graduate the last set of students already admitted for such programmes.

“Polytechnics and other technical institutions in the country should immediately stop admitting students into degree programmes.

“Similarly, polytechnics and allied institutions awarding Nigerian Certificate in Education should restrict themselves to technical courses.

“However, already admitted undergraduates for these programmes should be allowed to round up the programmes into which they are already admitted.

“Institutions have been given a period of four years (up to 2026) to graduate their last set of students for such programmes,” the circular said.