Sylvester’s Death: Moral Decline In Nigerian Boarding Schools, The Unanswered question

December 8, 2021

While investigations are still ongoing, and a lot of questions begging for answers, we must pauseto do the needed drill-down on these critical questions.

In a parenting forum, parents were asked if they would like to put their wards in a boarding school in Nigeria, the consensus was No. Some shared their childhood experiences stating how unpleasant it was and more from others.

Based on the feedback I got from three educationists  I spoke with, the boarding system is worse than what it used to be. With eroded moral values, parents wielding their influence and affluence as a tool and the school management being focused on financial sustainability of their business, character development of the child is lost.

Join our WhatsApp Channel

While the issue of morals affects both day and boarders, the impact is felt more by the boarders who spend time away from home and their parents.

Could the situation have been better managed if Sylvester was a day student? Was he really bullied? How should schools handle bullying? What should a school management do when threatened by influential parents?

READ ALSO: Sylvester Oromoni’s Torture-to-death And The Dowen College In Us

Bullies have different ways of getting their prey to submit. They use threat, blackmail or lure them to a secluded area. Sylvester mentioned he was threatened hence he kept mute at the expense of his life. He only spoke when he couldn’t bear the pain any more.

Parents who use boarding services are encouraged to periodically visit the school. They should observe their children and check out for unusual behaviours such as withdrawal, timidity, loss of weight, poor academic performance, body injuries, and a poor outlook. Watch out for changes in tone or mood especially when speaking on the phone. Be Observant, it is skill the 21st parent must master.

Pay visits. No amount of money can make up for the loss of time or the loss of a child. For goodness sake, we are talking about a Child, a human being. If the school cannot answer questions or give you satisfactory responses when you make observations, please remove your child from such a school. Make your findings before putting your child in any school especially if the school is in a different state from where you reside.

We cannot leave the responsibility of raising our children to the school, they can only do as much. They have all manner of children on their hands, children who are poorly behaved, children who have been conditioned by wrong parental modelling, children with no sense of positive values.

The government has done well in indefinitely closing the school. But this is one school of many. How many Sylvester have to die before we put the right measures in place. We must not always utilize reactive measure but more of preventive ones.

Olufunke Giwa
+ posts

Funke, or Coach FG (as she is widely known), is a certified life and parenting coach. She is also a therapist.

A business consultant, she provides strategy, training and human resources and marketing communications services to micro, small and medium sized businesses.

Due to her love for raising tomorrow's leaders, Olufunke served as a child mentor with EduAid, an education intervention initiative for public schools across Lagos State, Nigeria.

Over the years, she has spoken on various platforms to share parenting and allied tips, and also to help women deal with issues relating to the the home-front.

She is the author of “Parenting With Purpose”, her first published book, to share insights on becoming an intentional parent.

Married with 2 kids, she lives in Lagos, Nigeria.

Olufunke Giwa

Funke, or Coach FG (as she is widely known), is a certified life and parenting coach. She is also a therapist.

A business consultant, she provides strategy, training and human resources and marketing communications services to micro, small and medium sized businesses.

Due to her love for raising tomorrow's leaders, Olufunke served as a child mentor with EduAid, an education intervention initiative for public schools across Lagos State, Nigeria.

Over the years, she has spoken on various platforms to share parenting and allied tips, and also to help women deal with issues relating to the the home-front.

She is the author of “Parenting With Purpose”, her first published book, to share insights on becoming an intentional parent.

Married with 2 kids, she lives in Lagos, Nigeria.

DMO
Previous Story

DMO Supports Naira Exchange Rate With $15.4bn

Nigerian Senate
Next Story

Senate Urges FG To Sanction AITEO Over Nembe Oil Spill

Featured Stories

Latest from Opinion

Comparing Fela Kuti With Any Nigerian Musician

By Promise Adiele In the title of this essay, I have carefully avoided mentioning any Nigerian musician with Fela’s name. It is deliberate. I cannot, in good conscience, insert the name of any Nigerian or African musician alongside Fela’s name. Doing so
Why This Moment Frightens

Fueled by Grace 

For thirty years, without break, a major public lecture or talkfest, as I prefer to call it, has marked my birthday. Thirty years ago the main speaker was a Revered Father called Matthew Hassan Kukah, now Catholic Bishop of Sokoto. He likes

𝗥𝗶𝗴𝗵𝘁 𝗼𝗳 𝗥𝗲𝗽𝗹𝘆: 𝗢𝗻 “𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗦𝗰𝗿𝗲𝘄𝗱𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿 𝗦𝗮𝗹𝗲𝘀𝗺𝗮𝗻 𝗕𝗲𝗵𝗶𝗻𝗱 𝗧𝗿𝘂𝗺𝗽’𝘀 𝗔𝗶𝗿𝘀𝘁𝗿𝗶𝗸𝗲𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗡𝗶𝗴𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗮”

By Emmanuel Orjih Join our WhatsApp Channel Dear Ms. Ruth Maclean, On January 18, 2026, The New York Times published your article titled “The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes in Nigeria.” The piece has since been republished and widely circulated in Nigeria and
DMO
Previous Story

DMO Supports Naira Exchange Rate With $15.4bn

Nigerian Senate
Next Story

Senate Urges FG To Sanction AITEO Over Nembe Oil Spill

Don't Miss

Nigerian Newspapers: Top 10 Business Stories Set Off Your Thursday

Top 10 Stories From Nigerian Newspapers Today, 25th April 2023

Here we present to you the top 10 stories from
Naira Falls Against Dollar Across FX Markets

Naira Appreciates To ₦1,600 As Dollar Supply Rises

The Nigerian naira appreciated to ₦1,600 per dollar at the