A class of none: Students go 0 for 25,000 on University of Liberia entrance exam
The failure by even a single student to gain admission underscores the difficulties still facing Liberia 10 years after its civil war ended.
The failure by even a single student to gain admission underscores the difficulties still facing Liberia 10 years after its civil war ended.
The math was alarmingly simple. Nearly 25,000 students took the entrance exam for the University of Liberia this year, and every one of those nearly 25,000 failed.
In a sheepish press conference last week, the university announced that not a single applicant received a passing mark to attend one of the West African country鈥檚 flagship institutions, and that they would be required to lower their standards in order to populate a new freshman class.
"In English, the mechanics of the language, [our students] didn't know anything about it,鈥 said Momodu Getaweh, a vice president for university relations at the school, in an interview with the BBC. 鈥淭he government has to do something.鈥澛
It was an unmitigated public relations disaster for a university at the center of an educational system that President Ellen Sirleaf Johnson bluntly declared in March is still 鈥渁 big mess,鈥 10 years after the end of a vicious civil war that killed more than 150,000 people and sent 250,000 fleeing to neighboring countries.
And from the West, it read as yet another bad news Africa story. Here, after all, was a country so hobbled by the aftershocks of conflict that it couldn鈥檛 produce a single college-ready high-school graduate.
But numbers can be slippery, and university officials say there鈥檚 another, less obvious explanation for the 100 percent failure rate: They were trying to root out a grinding culture of corruption in the country鈥檚 higher education system.
鈥淭here is a perception in our society largely that once you take the University of Liberia admission exam, if you do not pay money to someone, or if you do not have appropriate connections, you would not be placed on the results list,鈥 said James Dorbor Jallah, who was hired by the university to administer the entrance exam, in an interview with Voice of America. 鈥淭he University has been grappling with how they could manage the process whereby people鈥檚 abilities would be truly measured on the basis of their performance on the examination.鈥
This year, he said, was the first time in the university鈥檚 history that admissions were to be determined by score alone, guaranteeing 鈥 at least in theory 鈥 that a spot at the school couldn鈥檛 be earned through a bribe or family connections. In a country with a long history of closely policed social hierarchies, the new exam was meant to be the beginning of a Liberian educational meritocracy, he said.
But that plan backfired when not a single student met the rigorous new standard 鈥 a score of 50 percent on the math section of the exam and 70 percent in English. (Several hundred students, however, passed at least one section of the test.)
Scrambling to fill the open seats, the university announced that it would offer admission to some 1,600 students with lower scores, requiring them to complete two remedial courses before beginning their program of study.
Meanwhile, the 鈥淔reshman Class of Zero鈥 headlines have drawn renewed attention to Liberia鈥檚 halting transition to peacetime. Its former president, Charles Taylor, was the first sitting head of state to be indicted for war crimes (for his role in the civil war in neighboring Sierra Leone) since the Nuremberg trials. He was convicted last year.
Meanwhile, the administration of the current president 鈥 and Africa鈥檚 first elected female head of state 鈥 Ms. Sirleaf Johnson, has been riddled with charges of corruption and inefficiency, with many critics complaining that she has done little to improve the shattered educational system she inherited. As The News, a Liberian newspaper, wrote in a recent editorial, in many arenas the country鈥檚 stalled progress has led to an uneasy nostalgia for the wartime administration.