The growing inability of government to strategically
implement a robust funding for libraries across the country, coupled
with the near lack of reading culture among Nigerian youths today is
giving educationists and industry watchers a cause for concern according
to BusinessDay finding.
Amidst this worrying trend, experts in the education
sector have called for a strategic long-term funding of libraries,
especially e-libraries, to arrest this trend.
A cross section of experts in their separate opinions
observe that university libraries across the nation are in deplorable
conditions with no books, journals and other reading resources, while in
some cases, standard libraries are non-existent owning to inadequate
funding by the government and the agencies saddled with such
responsibilities in the face of the country’s harsh economic situation.
Afolabi Adeyinka, a librarian in Lagos, observes that the
economic realities on ground and government’s apathy to library
development in the country have hampered the competitive push of
students and universities to be relevant on the global scale.
According to him, “in the absence of proper government
funding of e-libraries, it is not possible to encourage and maintain an
educated populace of which youths are in the majority.”
Adeyinka is of the opinion that in order to conceive and
cultivate good and systematic habit of reading among the students, there
is the need to hinge the success on the availability of quality books
and consequently, a library that is equipped with the modern reading
materials.
He affirms that the quality and standard a university can
be better judged by the content and quality of the service offered by
its library.
This, he however lamented, is not the case with Nigeria
owning to government’s apathy to education, a situation which has
affected the quality of the products of such institutions of higher
learning.
Eze Akachukwu, a research fellow, insists that without
proper funding for electronic libraries by the government, the country
risks the chance of being isolated from the global information system.
In his words, “libraries are expected to serve as
information delivery centres to enable universities to make development
impacts on research, teaching, learning and public service. It must be
realised that a university is as good as its library.
“There is an urgent need to transform these conventional
libraries into e-libraries which are cost effective and can empower
their universities for effective teaching, research, learning and
solving national problems and by so doing boost the reading habits of
students,” he added.
KELECHI EWUZIE
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