information and communication technologies and Igbo studies in tertiary institutions in Nigeria: issues and challenges.
Asogwa, Brendan Eze ; Asogwa, Martha Nkiruka
INTRODUCTION
Igbo is one of the indigenous Nigeria languages that is spoken by
over 16million (16,381,729) people in the South East Nigeria (Federal
Republic of Nigeria, 2007). Igbo language is the supreme expression of
the cultural heritage of the people of the South East Nigeria. Without
the language, it would be difficult to talk about cultural revival,
research, teaching and learning of Igbo in schools or in the world. It
is the language of tradition and cultural communication in the markets,
farms, village meetings and day-to-day transactions outside the offices,
in the churches, public gathering, and in Igbo social and political
arena. It is learned at home, schools, and colleges and in tertiary
institutions, but today it is being feared of extinction due to the
inversion of Western culture and the attitudes of Ndiigbo towards the
language. In teaching and learning Igbo in schools today, both the
teacher and the learner are no longer interested in the methodologies
that would stress them much. What they need is fast, accuracy and
transparency in getting information and information and communication
technologies is the best bet for Igbo studies.
By Igbo studies, we mean the process of acquiring knowledge and
proficiency in reading, writing, speaking, teaching, and researching in
Igbo. However, the origin of the word, Igbo is not known (Oraka, 1982).
Nevertheless, the word is used in Nigeria today and in this paper to
refer to four areas of meanings:
[check] as a geographical or geopolitical territory in
Nigeria--South East Nigeria;
[check] as a people inhabiting that geographical area--Ndiigbo/
Igbo people;
[check] as a language spoken by the people--Igbo language;
[check] and as a subject or course of study in schools and tertiary
institutions--Department of Igbo or Igbo studies.
Igbo studies has developed through five remarkable stages and
entered the sixth today. Those stages are:
* The period of collection of Igbo wordlist, 1766-1767. The
collection of the wordlist started in Germany and Pennsylvania by G.C.A.
Oldendorp, a German Missionary of the Monravian Brethren who took
interest in organizing and compiling the languages of the African slaves
he came in contact with. The wordlist, which was published in 1777
"contains thirteen (13) Igbo nouns and two sentences translated
into Igbo" (Nwadike, 2008). This appeared to be the first
documented records where Igbo and some other languages in Southern
Nigeria like Efik, Kalabari, Ibibio, etc were made.
* The period of translation--At this stage Igbo language was
inter-translated with foreign languages and literature. The Holy Bible
and other prayer books in foreign languages and literature were
translated into Igbo as a way of bringing the words of God near to the
people. To facilitate the project, a translation bureau was set up at
Umuahia between 1930 and 1940 by R. F. G. Adams where translations into
Igbo of many materials were carried out.
* Grammar period--This age started with writing of Igbo grammar
books for use in schools and colleges. The first Igbo primer to be
written was by S. A. Crowther in 1875, followed by the ones written by F
W Smart & W.E.L Carew; the 'Oku Ibo' by J. F. Schon, and
the Elementary Grammar of Igbo by J. Spencer (revised by T.J. Dennis),
and other grammar books that laid the foundation for modern Igbo grammar
texts.
* The standard Igbo period, 1972-2000 AD--a period that was
characterized by setting up of a committee in the South East known as
the Society for the Promotion of Igbo Language and Culture, the
inclusion and compulsory study of Igbo language as a subject of study in
schools, colleges and for public examination in the South East Nigeria,
* The standardization and commencement of Igbo as a course of study
and research in tertiary institutions in Nigeria. That was when tertiary
institutions in Nigeria (Universities of Ibadan and Nsukka, and the then
Alvan Ikoku (now Federal) College of Education, Owerri) included it in
their curriculum as a course of study, research, and degree awarding
certificate. This period also marked a serious effort in the writing,
publishing, sale, and collection of Igbo books in schools and university
libraries.
* The contemporary period, 2000- present is regarded in this study
as the 5th stage. It is the emerging period which is characterized by
the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) to enhance
the range and quality of speaking, writing, teaching, learning, and
researching in Igbo. For example, the internet and the web now provide
much wider access to variety of information making scholars to transcend
to the era of open learning and virtual environments. Learning can be
done at any time and place making us to move from the traditional method
of teaching and learning Igbo language as a subject in schools to web
based or e-learning.
* Electronic Igbo learning is an instructional content or learning
experiences enabled by information technology which may include
web-based Igbo learning, computer-based Igbo learning, virtual Igbo
classrooms, and Igbo digital collaborations. It will facilitate; greater
Igbo students' engagement and participation than the traditional
one way teacher talk, and students listen method; the provision of
greater opportunities for active learning; greater access to
globalization of learning with the possibility of online lectures or
joint classes with students in remote locations; enhancement of face-to-
face sessions and improved communication with students and peer groups.
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
Igbo, Information and Communication Technologies, and Pedagogy in
Nigeria
Afigbo (1972); Obi (1975); Emenanjo (1981); Oraka (1982); Ilechukwu
(2006); Omeje, (2008); and Nwadike (2008) observed that Igbo studies
started and passed through thorny roads and setbacks before it migrated
into the present era. For example, one of the major problems was that
the wordlist was from the beginning beset with the problem of
inconsistent orthography and therefore made publishing a comprehensive
and reliable Igbo dictionary very difficult. When Adams and Ida C. Ward
initiated in an effort to resolve the problem of orthography and in 1929
introduced a new Igbo orthography which generated a lot of controversy.
Obi (1975) cited Kay Williamson to have noted that the delay in
producing Igbo dictionary include dialectical variation in Igbo, lack of
a powerful Igbo personality to support and implement a standard Igbo
language learning, and the disputed orthography. He said that these
accounted for the background of poor advancement of Igbo literature. Obi
regretted that both Igbo language and their literature could have
benefited much through translation, but was not followed up to the
present period in Igbo studies. This is because very little attention
was paid to the translation in the modern period in spite of the fact
that translation is a means of enriching Igbo literature and inspiring
more Igbo readers and consequently encouraging more serious approach to
the study of Igbo in schools.
Another setbacks include Igbo dialectical variations, the negative
impressions held by the colonial imperialist scholars that Igbo language
was difficult to study because it "is a tone language that depends
more on the distinction or differences of sound for the meaning of its
words, and for the construction of its sentences" (Afigbo, 1972).
As many Igbo scholars acquired foreign languages and their culture,
there was lack of competent and trained people to handle the job of
teaching the language in schools; there was lack of schools and serious
disregard and respect for the language by the people. For example, many
Igbo parents, unlike their counterparts in Hausa in the Northern or
Yoruba in the Western Nigeria, preferred their children to have mastery
of English language at the earliest possible opportunity, instead of
Igbo language. This problem had its genesis in 1882 when the obnoxious
British Education Ordinance made the use of English language as a medium
of instruction in schools (Nwadike, 2008). Albert (2011) commenting in
support of this ugly development said "many parents (in Nigeria)
now introduce English language to their children earlier than they
introduce their native languages because it is considered to be a source
of pride to your (their) children to be able to speak in English
language". He regretted that we got it wrong when we accepted
western values without actually knowing why we did it and when we
encountered western civilization, we were not able to defend our own
culture thinking that we were experiencing something superior, and today
we are overwhelmed by that superiority. Oni (2011) in his criticism on
this western erosion of African culture said, "The painful reality
is that some Nigerian languages are going into extinction ...
shockingly, some Nigerian parents still believe that communicating with
children in a foreign language is a mark of elitism"
The repeated failure of early works in Igbo language was attributed
to lack of trained people in the language to handle the job of teaching
the language, lack of dynamic leader in Igbo who would pioneer genuine
interest in the progress of the language, and the uncooperative
attitudes of the Igbo people themselves. Others include poor regards and
remunerations for graduates of Igbo certificate holders which
consequently relegate them into inferiority complexes, lowers the
population of students of Igbo studies in tertiary institutions, creates
shortage of Igbo lecturers, researchers, writers, publishers, textbooks,
and therefore lack of interest in reading Igbo literature. The
contemporary problem is the challenges imported by the new information
technologies into the teaching and learning field.
However, there were some writers whose work had made great
contribution to Igbo language development. One of them was the book
titled Introduction to Igbo Study written by Miss Ida Ward in 1936. It
was one of the best works on Igbo grammar and today it has served as one
of the principal source of references for most modern studies on Igbo.
The book which was set up to analyze Igbo phonology and Igbo morphology
achieved wide distribution and readership. Another great contribution to
the development and study of Igbo language was the establishment of
tertiary institutions, the Universities of Ibadan and Nsukka, and the
creation and commencement of Igbo language studies in the Department of
Linguistics and African/Nigeria Languages. The collection and
preservation of Igbo books and literature in the Kenneth Dike Library
University of Ibadan, and the Nnamdi Azikiwe Library in the University
of Nigeria Nsukka, were another great service to early development of
Igbo studies in Nigeria.
Today information technology is rapidly changing the way learning
and teaching occurs. Liverpool's work (2002) on the introduction of
ICT in education noted that technology has included ICT as a subject of
study; as assisting tool for collecting data and writing assignments by
students; for communicating and conducting research; as a medium for
teaching and learning; as a tool for organization and management in
schools, (examples is the use of ICTs to handle school records and other
activities).
Slavin (2006) identified three general types of technology
applications in education namely: a.) lecturers use ICTs in the
classroom teaching to plan instructions and present contents to their
classes, b.) students use technology to explore, practices, prepare
paper for presentation and conduct researches; c.) teachers and
administrators use ICTs to accomplish administrative tasks associated
with their profession.
Davitt (2005) discussed how ICTs can be used in accelerated
teaching and learning and said that it lowers threats and provides
second and third chances of learning; allows teachers to create, store
and deploy multimedia resources and activities to work; provides
different points of access for learners with different learning styles;
and provides new ways of making connections.
On how ICT was used by lecturers for educational instructions
Tapscott and Caston (1993), Grabe & Grabe (1998), Zhao & Frank
(2003), Goldbeg (2003), Slavin (2006) demonstrated that word processors,
electronic spreadsheets and presentation software were the most common
electronic technologies that teachers use for numerous teaching tasks.
They have replaced typewriters and encyclopedias, and become the most
reliable technologies used by students today for a wide variety of data
presentation and storage purposes.
Nworgu (2008) carried out a study on the strategies for enhancing
the effectiveness of using computer assisted instruction (CAI) in
teaching and learning biology in the information age and found that CAI
has the potential to encourage students-students interactions, enhance
individual learning and peer group discussion, and increases the time
and speed with which students are involved in instructional activities,
among others
Mbakwem (2008) investigated on the undergraduates' and
lecturers' needs for information in the electronic age and
discovered that the new technologies have caused the walls of learning
space to shrink, making learners free to explore sources of information
from outside their own institutions, and thereby replaced the pervasive
face-to-face instruction and places the learner at the center stage
during teaching learning episode.
Olibie & Agu (2008) evaluated the virtual learning competences
among university lecturers in the South East Nigeria and found that
majority of them lacked virtual learning skills and are lagging behind
in optimizing the potentials of ICTs in the universities. Onuka &
Uko (2008) investigated on the constraints to the utilization of ICTs by
farmers in Eastern Nigeria. They found that scarcity of ICT experts,
inadequate telephone lines, lack of adequate funds, use of inappropriate
communication channel and irregular or absence of public power supply,
impose serious constraints on the application of ICTs to the farmers.
Statement of the Problem
Igbo language is the expression and identity of the people of the
South East Nigeria and there is no reason why Ndiigbo should not
preserve and promote their mother tongue. The mother tongue is the most
effective vehicle for cultural transmission. A lot of things, ideas,
philosophy which the Igbo people cherish would certainly perish if their
language is allowed to disappear and if they stop expressing and
codifying those ideas and knowledge. Today there is a paradigm shift in
learning method and for that within the education system, there are
evidences of change in teaching and learning method. Classrooms and
learning materials are no longer situated in one physical environment,
but on virtual, online cyberspace. "Online availability of
educational materials or digital resources has opened up new avenues for
teaching and learning" (Siddiqui, 2004).
The declining number of scholars yeaning to study Igbo language and
conduct research in Igbo demands that the approach for the teaching and
learning of the language in tertiary institutions in Nigeria needed to
be re-examined. Evidences of the positive impacts of information and
communication technology in the promotion of teaching and learning
English, French, German, Swahili, Yoruba, Hausa and other languages in
tertiary institutions abound, and Igbo language, the supreme identity of
the people of the South East Nigeria must not be by-passed. The
contending issue or question which this paper wish to address is whether
there are ICTs tools and programmes that could be applied in teaching
and learning Igbo in tertiary institutions in the South East Nigeria;
how these equipment can be used; the benefits and drawbacks.
Significance of the Research
This study is imperative because it would equip Igbo lecturers and
students on the possibility of integrating information technology in
their studies, give them job opportunity outside their region and make
them to stamp their feet in the electronic environment.
The result of this study will task Igbo education planners on the
inevitability of reviewing their curriculum and make ICT an inclusive
vehicle in Igbo studies in schools.
Studying Igbo with information technology will not only give more
recognition of the language to the outside world, it will restore more
prestige to the people and their culture.
It will shift the learning paradigm of the subject from traditional
method to a more challenging and interactive environment, thereby make
scholars to be proactive in the learning process.
Objectives of the Study
The objectives of this study are therefore to:
1. Examine the ICTs tools and programmes that are suitable for
teaching and learning Igbo language in schools in Nigeria.
2. Discuss how these hardware and software can be used or applied
in teaching and learning Igbo language in tertiary institutions in
Nigeria.
3. Look at the problems that may be encountered while using the new
technologies in teaching and learning Igbo language and culture in
Nigeria universities;
4. And suggest possible ways that will minimize the problems.
Research Questions
This study is guided by the following questions:
i. What kinds of ICT tools and programmes are suitable for studying
Igbo language in tertiary institutions in Nigeria?
ii. In what areas of teaching and learning Igbo language in schools
can these technologies be applied?
iii. What are the problems besetting the application of these
modern technologies in teaching and learning Igbo language in tertiary
institutions in the South East Nigeria?
iv. What are the various ways of minimizing these challenges?
METHODOLOGY
The design of this study was descriptive research. Questionnaire,
interviews, and observation were used to collect data for this study.
Oral interviews were conducted with the Heads of Department of Igbo,
Education, and Linguistics in the selected institutions. The researchers
observed with keen interest some of the ICT tools and facilities that
were available in the institutions and how they can be applied in
teaching and learning in schools. Due to the smallness of the
population, the researchers purposely sampled all the lecturers and
students of Igbo studies in the institutions studied. One hundred and
thirty (130) sets of the questionnaire were administered in the
Igbo/Education/Linguistics Departments of the six tertiary institutions
in the South East Nigeria purposely selected for this study as follows:
two federal universities, two state universities, and two colleges of
education. The questionnaires were administered and collected on
different occasions as shown in table 1 below.
The working population of the study was 118, comprising 87 students
and 31 lecturers of the Department of Igbo Studies who correctly
completed and returned their questionnaire. To analyze the data, item
mean, criterion mean (2.50), frequency tables and simple percentages
were used as benchmark for judgment. The decision was that if the
criterion mean is greater than the item mean (x) the statement is
rejected, if on the contrary, the statement is accepted; if the
percentage score of a tool/programme is 50 and above, the object is
accepted, if otherwise the object in rejected.
FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION
This article looked at some ICT tools or equipment and programmes
that are relevant to the improvement and promotion of Igbo studies in
tertiary institutions in the South East Nigeria; the techniques or
opportunities for applying these modern technologies in the promotion
and increased interest in Igbo studies in the South East Nigeria, and
the challenges ahead. To carry out this investigation, respondents were
asked to tick good (-/) against some ICT tools or equipment which they
considered relevant to the teaching and learning of Igbo language and
culture in their schools in this 21st century. Their responses were
presented in table below.
A greater number of respondents agreed that many of ICT tools and
programmes listed in the table above were relevant for improving Igbo
studies in tertiary institutions in the South East Nigeria. Three
conventional or traditional teaching aids were rated low as being no
longer relevant in this century for teaching Igbo. They were chalk-
duster (54; 45.8) and blackboard (56; 47.5).
APPLICATIONS & OPPORTUNITIES FOR USING ICTS IN IGBO STUDIES
Respondents were given Very Correct (VC), Correct(C), Incorrect
(I), and Very Incorrect (VI) as options, and asked to use them to
indicate their levels of rating on the usefulness of ICT tools and
programmes listed in the teaching and learning Igbo in tertiary
institutions. Table 5 below shows their response.
The above table shows that as the item mean(x) were greater than
the criterion mean radio, satellite, cassettes, global system for mobile
communications, GSM and television were useful technologies for
enhancing teaching and learning Igbo in tertiary institutions in the
South East Nigeria. Radio is excellent for listening to Igbo programmes
that are broadcast to millions of Igbo listeners. They are useful for
news in Igbo, education broadcast, music, drama, cultural activities,
and radio programmes such as radio links or radio conferencing in Igbo
(Ka Oha Malu) Igbo request programmes such as ozi ekele and ugbo ndioma;
dialectical variations like Afikpo jookwa, Owerri ndeewo, Imo unuabila,
Nsukka Deeje/alaa, Udi Ndee, Awgu Uleejee, Awka Deeme, Abakaliki Tokwee,
and others. Cassettes are very useful to students and lecturers of Igbo
studies because they "are multipurpose electronic devices for
recording and presenting Igbo lectures for (class) discussion"
(Ike, 1995). They are very good for teaching debating, oral Igbo, Igbo
pronunciations, reading and listening skills, as well as field works and
data collection. Television is found to be useful because it possesses
the ability to use audio-visual images in Igbo educational instructions
to appeal to the sense organs; creates curiosity on the students of Igbo
for drama presentation, spelling, pronunciations, festival shows and
quiz contests. It is capable of transmitting these programmes
simultaneously to millions of Igbo students and viewers in various
tertiary institutions in other parts of the country. Videotaped teaching
practices, seminars, workshops, conferences, and so on can be played
back and discussed in and outside the class room.
From the illustrations in table 6, it shows that as the item mean
was greater than the criterion mean, digital video disc (DVD), Video
compact discs (VCD), video cameras, and digital cameras are applicable
in teaching and learning Igbo in schools in the South East. They possess
greater chances in using them to improve teaching and learning Igbo in
the classroom because as electronic device for capturing moving objects
and sceneries, they are useful for data collection, storage,
preservation and presentation of events and researches in Igbo lectures.
They are excellent for recording and presenting Igbo ceremonies for
discussion in the class.
Table 5 and figure 1 shows that desktop and laptop computers can
perform the following operations in Igbo studies: PowerPoint
presentation; computer-assisted instructions; data collection, analysis
and presentation; writing of correspondences and term papers. Judging
with the observations of Best & Kahan (2006), these electronic
resources are capable of making complicated research design (in Igbo
studies) very simple. Because of its calculations at almost the speed of
light, this technology is considered as one of the most useful tools in
the teaching and learning Igbo in universities. PowerPoint packages help
lecturers and students to organize and design professional presentations
using computer in teaching Igbo phonology, syntax, stylistics, history,
and so on. It is an excellent instrument for summarizing paper
presentation and lecture notes using keywords.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
Table 6 demonstrates the various ways in which the Internet can be
used to improve Igbo studies. It shows that the Internet provides
opportunities for students and lecturers of Igbo to send and receive
e-mails; it permits access simultaneously, to vast stores of information
including databases on every imaginable subjects. Students and lecturers
can use the Internet to perform web quest in which they can search the
web for the subject contents of a specific document. Students, lecturers
and parents can make payments, register courses, access results and
choose research topics online through the Internet. Mahajan (2006) and
Adogbeji & Tayo (2006) in their respective studies found that
majority of lecturers and students at Punjab University, Chandigarh, and
at the Delta State University Abraka, Nigeria mostly use the Internet in
their departments for academic purposes. The Internet is a tremendous
educational resources for Igbo studies which enables researchers to
communicate with students in other universities, and through this
capability, they can carry out co-operative research with other scholars
in other parts of the world. Students can visit the museum, the library
and many other interesting places without leaving their classrooms.
As illustrated in table 7, the criterion mean was less than the
entire item mean and therefore, all the statements were accepted as true
opportunities for students of Igbo education to apply the new
technologies in Igbo studies. Compact disk read only memory (CD-ROM),
floppy disk, flash drive, and electronic whiteboard are data conveying
computer software which enable Igbo scholars to carry large volume of
information such as dictionaries and encyclopedias to their homes. Their
capability of importing and exporting data into and from the computer
make them creditable tools for Internet and www navigation. CD-ROM
allows users to carry out in-house access to large store of databases
that are formally in print only. Schamber (1989) described it as "a
mass storage device that is capable of holding about 550 megabytes of
data" (about 300,000 pages of A4 size text information). "One
CD ROM disk has a storage capacity that is equivalent to 300,000 printed
pages" (Kao, 2003).
Electronic white board has the potentials of recording and keeping
information of what lecturers discussed in the class. It also permits
opportunities for students to recover such information especially when
they are lost during the lecture.
These devices are relevant to students in the study of history of
the Igbo, Igbo encyclopedias, dictionary, Igbo who is who, census,
voters list, and other documents that are adjudged worthy of permanent
preservation.
CHALLENGES TO THE APPLICATION OF ICTs IN IGBO STUDIES
Table 8 above shows that the entire statements were accepted as
constituting impediment to the application of ICT in Igbo studies in the
South East. An exception was that students and some lecturers lack
interest in the study of Igbo with information technologies which has
item mean 2.34, and was negatively rated and therefore rejected.
In view of this result, this paper has empirical facts, backed up
with observations that the environment of ICT is precarious for Igbo
education is the South East Nigeria. Eze (2002) found that the physical
and psychological environment of learning in public schools in Nigeria
was not adequate to support the integration of new ICTs in our school
system. Also inadequate, is good telecommunications networks required
for appropriate sharing of information and service delivery in the area.
There was weak human capital development and lifelong learning for ICT
initiatives in the institutions. Employee resistance to change is still
the biggest barrier to the use of ICT in schools. Most lecturers and
students have weak disposition to the use of ICT facilities, may be
because they lack the skills and competences required to use these
technologies in teaching and learning Igbo.
Tertiary institutions in the South East were not adequately funded.
The Nigeria government seems not to be willing to allocate 26 percent of
her annual budget to education, the minimum percentages recommended by
the UNESCO. The consequences include, poor funding of education, lack of
space, infrastructural facilities and poor maintenance of existing ones,
inadequate laboratory equipment, inability to procure quality equipment,
absence of competent technicians, and incessant closure of our tertiary
institutions. A lot of money is required for digital or e-learning
because computer software and hardware are never constant like hard
copies. They change and become inaccessible in the long run. This
therefore requires adequate financial support to keep on updating them
if they are to be useful in future
Most tertiary institutions used in this study have no strong ICT
policy, a framework or blueprint that makes for mandatory training
programmes in ICT for the benefit of every staff and student. South East
is known for epileptic electricity supply and high cost of running
generator where one is available. Erratic power supply can cause serious
damages on ICT equipment. "It can destroy computer hardware and
crash databases" (Bakpo, 2005). Mabawonku, (1990); and Eze, (2002)
in their studies noted this adversities and predicted that lecturers who
are confronted with intermittent power supply is less likely to plan for
the use of information technologies for teaching in their subsequent
classes, since electricity is basically needed for the use of ICTs.
CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
This paper has revealed that the first documentary records about
formal studies for Igbo language began outside Igbo land. Beginning in
Germany, it passed through five, tortuous stages and setbacks before its
present study. Many forces were responsible for this: colonial legacy,
controversial and inconsistent orthography, its complicated dialectical
variations and tones, weak translation bureau, lack of dynamic Igbo
language leadership, the roles of some Igbo parents who do not teach
their children Igbo language at the earliest possible opportunity, it
richness in prefixes and suffixes, poor reading habit of Ndiigbo, use of
traditional teaching methods in this electronic age, and other.
In view of these setbacks, information and communication technology
has come to rescue the language from total collapse and extinction
because there are ICT programmes and facilities that could be integrated
into Igbo studies to energize interest, make it prestigious and
internationalize the study and research. These technologies have made
the chalk- board approach to be out of model, and lecturers and students
in our tertiary institutions are no longer comfortable with the
tradition. Some of these equipment that these learner approved and which
are the acceptable tools in the electronic classrooms today include;
radio, television, digital cameras, scanner, word processor,
spreadsheets, short message services (SMS), CD-ROM, DVD, databases,
electronic whiteboard, flash drive, etc. These modern ICTs could be used
for instructional games and simulations, Computer Assisted Instructions
(CAI), Drill and practices, field works and research, etc.
Using ICTs for Igbo studies in tertiary institutions in the South
East Nigeria was at a crossroads due to poor ICTs infrastructures and
under funding of universities in the area. In the face of this
educational innovation, if Igbo language and culture, and their scholars
are not going to be extinct; if the teaching and learning of the
language in schools and tertiary institutions are to survive (the
threats brought in by ICTs) in tomorrow's world educational order,
it must be prepared to move with the inevitable changes in today's
international learning environment.
Thinking about the future is very important for educators, and
preparing students for that future requires some consideration of skills
which students will need. In view of these inevitable challenges, the
following recommendations are submitted.
* Since information technologies have the potentials to widen
access to learning opportunities and improve the quality of Igbo studies
and Igbo scholars, ICT-based teaching and learning in tertiary
institutions is seriously needed since it will produce school leavers
who are better placed to cope with the global challenges in the
education sector.
* Based on this therefore, computer education/literacy should be
highly emphasized and made compulsory in Nigeria schools right from
primary school to university level. Nevertheless, the new 9-year basic
education curriculum caption Computer for All Nigeria initiative (CANi)
that took effect in Nigeria in the 2007/2008 session and which has
computer studies as one of the core compulsory subjects is a welcome
development. In view of this laudable objective, every tertiary
institution in the South East Nigeria and indeed other tertiary
institutions in country deserve to own computers and benefit from the
federal government CANi project.
* Curriculum planners and educational policy makers in the South
East Nigeria should enact ICT policies that will favour
electronic/technology applications in schools. New information
technologies should replace the conventional talk-to-class, chalk-board
approach in the teaching and learning Igbo in Nigeria universities so
that instead of being told about things and how they occur, Igbo
scholars and learners would be able to apply ICTs in researches by
themselves and report about their discoveries.
* Experts in ICT should be employed in tertiary institutions in the
South East to handle the procurement, installation, repair and
maintenance of frequent break down of ICT facilities in the
institutions. In addition to providing adequate funds and
infrastructural facilities for the new technologies, and training or
employing competent administrators in that field, encourage and sponsor
regular workshops, conferences and seminars on ICT in Igbo research is
very imperative.
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Caption: Figure 1: Mean score showing opportunities for ICT
Applications in Igbo studies
Brendan Eze Asogwa
Senior Librarian
Nnamdi Azikiwe Library
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
E-Mail:
[email protected];
[email protected]
&
Martha Nkiruka Asogwa
Department of Education, Igbo Linguistics
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
E-Mail:
[email protected].
Table 1: The Distribution and Total Return of Questionnaire.
S/N Institutions Students Lecturers Total
1 University of Nigeria, 21 9 30
Nsukka (UNN)
2 Nnamdi Azikiwe 11 5 16
University, Awka(NAUA)
3 Imo State University, 15 7 22
Owerri (IMUO)
4 Ebony State University, 10 3 13
Abakaliki (ESUA)
5 Alvan Ikoku Federal College 13 3 16
of Education, Owerri.
6 Federal College of 17 4 21
Education,
Eha-Amufu(FCEE)
Total 87 31 118
Table 2: ICT Tools and Programmes for studying Igbo in
tertiary institutions in the South East Nigeria
S/N ICT Tools & Programmes Respondents % of
Responses
1 Cassettes and Tape recorders 94 79.7
2 Chalk and duster 54 45.8
3 Desk top, and Laptop computers 81 68.6
4 Digital and video cameras. 67 56.8
5 Electronic white board. 65 55.1
6 CD-ROM, flash drive, & floppy. 98 83.1
7 Photocopier, printer, 93 78.8
and scanner,
8 Television & Satellite. 112 94.9
9 Radio & wireless phone. 110 93.2
10 Blackboard and white board 56 47.5
11 The Internet & www. 101 85.6
12 Word Processor and 73 61.9
PowerPoint presentation
13 Electronic Spread Sheet/excel. 78 66.1
Table 3: Mean score of Applications and opportunities
for using cassettes, radio, Gsm, satellite, and
television in Igbo Studies.
S/N Opportunities Mean Decision
(x)
1 Radio, GSM, and television are used 2.76 Accept
in sending and receiving on
Igbo studies.
2 To make announcement or broadcast 2.67 [check]
in Igbo language
3 For conducting education radio 2.71 [check]
and TV programmes, Instructional TV
4 Promotion of e-Igbo 2.63 [check]
learning or distance education.
5 Organize studies and 2.55 [check]
teaching skills in Igbo.
6 Field work, data collection 2.62 [check]
and presentation
7 Teaching large class and 2.51 [check]
organize lectures in Igbo.
8 Scanning & photocopying notes 2.77 [check]
and documents by Igbo students
and lecturers
Table 4: Mean Score of Applications and Opportunities
for using DVD, VCD, Digital and Video Cameras in
Tertiary Institutions.
S/N Opportunities Mean Decision
(x)
1 They are good for data collection, 2.61 Accept
data storage and presentation
2 For recording and preserving events 2,56 [check]
in Igbo language and culture
3 Recorded events are represented 2.51 [check]
in the classroom.
Table 5: Mean score of Applications and Opportunities for
using personal and laptop computers in Igbo studies in
tertiary Institutions in the South East.
S/N Opportunities Mean Decision
(x)
1 For Internet browsing 2.64 Accept
2 For computer networking 2.56 [check]
of Igbo departments
3 Typing term papers, memos, 2.61 [check]
and other correspondences
4 For computer assisted 2.58 [check]
instructions (CAI)
5 PowerPoint presentation 2.51 [check]
6 Data collection, data analysis, 2.73 [check]
data presentation and storage
7 Attend seminars, workshops 2.52 [check]
and conferences
Table 6: Mean Score of Applications & opportunities
for using the Internet in Igbo Studies in Tertiary
Institutions in the South East Nigeria.
S/N Opportunities Mean(x) Decision
1 Sending and 2.71 Accept
receiving e-mails
2 Allows access to enormous 2.63 [check]
stores of information
in Igbo
3 For e-Igbo books and e-Igbo 2.76 [check]
journal publishing
4 For payment of school fees, 2.52 [check]
registration of courses,
publication of, and access
to students results.
5 For web quests on specific 2.56 [check]
Igbo topic
6 Helps in choosing research 2.65 [check]
topics and conducting
of research
Table 7: Mean Score of Applications and Opportunities for
Using CD-ROM, Flash drive, and Electronic white Board in
Igbo studies in Tertiary Institutions in the South
East Nigeria.
S/N Opportunities Mean(x) Decision
1 Storage of massive data 2.74 Accept
or information
2 Helps in data communication 2.52 [check]
and data transfers/transportation
3 Convenient for Internet browsing 2.61 [check]
4 Records and keeps information on 2.59 [check]
what the lecturers says and
writes in the class
5 E-white board permits recovery 2.54 [check]
of discussed and erased
notes and information on
previous lectures
Table 8: Mean Score of Challenges to the use of ICT
in Igbo studies in the South East Nigeria.
S/n Challenges Mean(x) Decision
1 Environment of ICT facilities 2.91 Accept
in the South East is not
conducive.
2 Electricity supply is erratic. 2.94 [check]
3 Most lecturers and students 2.96 [check]
are deficient in computer knowledge.
4 Poor funding of tertiary 2.87 [check]
institutions in the South East Nigeria
5 Most of the tertiary institutions 2.67 [check]
have no ICT policy.
6 Lack of interest in the study 2.34 Reject
of Igbo with information technology
7 Difficulties in translating 2.65 Accept
ICT books into Igbo
8 Inadequate number of ICT technicians. 2.60 [check]
9 Graduates of Igbo studies end up as 2.58 [check]
teachers, television/
radio broadcasters.
10 Lack of interest in offering the 2.72 [check]
language as a course of study in
higher institutions.
11 Computer obsolescence, and constantly 2.63 [check]
changing hardware and software make
access to Igbo literature in
electronic version difficult
in the long run.