Updated May 26, 2025 • 1-min read
Posted by Anonymous
May 25, 2025
1 answer
Posted by Anonymous - May 25, 2025
This might sound weird, but I've heard people argue that asuu strikes might actually help Nigerian universities in the long run. Like, think about it: if the government really listened and gave more money for stuff like labs, buildings, and paying lecturers properly, schools could actually get a lot better for everyone.
I read somewhere that ASUU is always asking for things that would make education way better like more funding, paying owed salaries, and not letting politicians mess with how universities are run. If their demands were actually met, I feel like universities could finally become more modern and students would get a way better experience. But that's the big "if"—right now, the strikes mostly end up making things rough for students and nobody trusts the system. So yeah, asuu strikes could possibly improve things if the government actually keeps its side of the agreements. If not, it probably just keeps hurting everyone, especially students. Would you risk current pain for long-term gain? It's a tough one.
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