|
Written By Yushau A. Shuaib
SUCCEEDING IN NATIONAL YOUTH SERVICE
Bayero Beacon August 1998*
Being a published Speech Delivered at a farewell
dinner for the
Final Year Students of Mass Communication
Department, Bayero University, Kano.
Let me first affirm how
honoured I am to be invited to this farewell dinner for the outgoing students of
the Mass Communication Department and to be in the midst of my highly educated
and responsible lecturers of this citadel of knowledge.
As some of you may have known
my experience and progress so far, which is the will of Almighty God, all these
are due to the tremendous theoretical and practical training I received from the
ever accommodating and learned lecturers of this department. Our frank but very
friendly atmosphere with the lecturers has been in the great tradition of this
enviable department. To our lecturers, you’re most gracious and very
understanding - I do thank you for imparting in us this rare knowledge.
I would like to also commend
the effort of the executive members of Mass Communication Students’ Association
(MACOSA), organisers of this dinner, whom I have envied in recent times for
their many programmes and activities which compelled some of us, with pride, to
make some humble contributions, to the development of the Department in the
small ways that we could. The outgoing executive, under the leadership of Malam
Abubakar Alhassan, served the Association with compassion, vision and honour.
They have performed wonderfully with driven force to succeed.
Since my speech is to share my
experiences with you during my undergraduate days and the NYSC scheme, it is
imperative to recall the contributions of MACOSA during my tenure as PRO in
1991. Due to inadequate funds, we limited activities around the campus where we
made progress in organising MACOSA Week, produced and directed a programme for
Kano State Radio Broadcasting Service, made mandatory contributions of at least
seven feature articles to major newspapers on monthly basis and the indirect
participation of mass communication students in the production of Campus Voice,
the magazine of which I was the Editor-in-Chief. We also had an excursion to
some selected media houses not beyond Kaduna and witnessed the installation of a
satellite dish, the first in any Nigerian university, mounted in the department.
With all the aforementioned, I have to admit that there is a lot of improvement
in MACOSA activities in recent times - I hope the incoming executive will
improve the tempo.
In an effort to improve my
future carrier as a journalist, I wrote feature articles, short stories, and
poems for the print media and joined Bayero Literary Society where members
contribute and critically analyse literary works submitted to the workshop and
published in a literary magazine called “The Parakeet.” My participation in all
these extra curricular activities was to demonstrate and practise what I learnt
in the classroom which I believe today, with God’s will, assisted me greatly to
the present position I find myself.
Since tonight’s dinner is in
honour of outgoing students of this department, I find it necessary to inform
you that your knowledge of Public Relations - a segment of Mass Communication,
will be a great asset to you in your daily activities. As you are aware, PR is
associated with exchange of goodwill. First and foremost, you must appreciate
the value of communication as you have learnt its sciences, its technical
contractions and how to direct it. And you have acquired the knowledge about
human beings, what they like, dislike, cultural background, hopes and
aspirations, the various endeavours people engage in for a living or for
recreation, philosophical bends, language peculiarities, the level of
socioeconomic developments which influence political tendencies and preference.
With this background knowledge, you are well equipped to relate easily with
anybody in mutual and beneficial relationship of goodwill. With demonstration of
higher sense of humility and due respect to others, you are more acceptable in
the society.
The Public Relations techniques
I learnt in school did assist me when I found myself in the NYSC camp in Asaba,
Delta State. Due to the way I related with everybody, I was in fact nominated by
the NYSC state director to be the Director of Orientation Broadcasting Services
OBS with other corps members as members. I used the (OBS) to run interview
programmes, sport commentaries, a request programme, drama, news items and many
others. At the end of the one-month orientation exercise, the Corpers were
well-informed and peace did reign in the camp. Some OBS members were rewarded
with lucrative postings.
But for some reasons, I was
posted to the ministry of information, Asaba where I wrote a feature article on
the plight of corps members and on the political and societal problems of the
young state. Those articles drew the attention of the state government and
solutions were proffered. My technique was to criticise today and praise
tomorrow (call it balanced journalism) but it paid off at the end. One of the
problems of the newly created state was lack of information machinery for
adequate information dissemination. There was no state owned newspaper. They
relied on neighboring states’ media to reach the citizenry and the Delta
Broadcasting Service (DBS) was limited to Warri, where the station is situated,
leaving the capital and other councils in the dark. It was in view of these
problems that I undertook research work round the Local Government Areas in the
State titled “Alternative Media Information for Delta State Government” where I
proposed how the state could effectively have its own newspaper and expand a
booster station to improve the reception of DBS to all nook and crannies of the
state. The research was officially received and commended by the state
government
Still on information
dissemination. In my singular effort to make sure that corps members in the
state were well informed, I proposed to the state NYSC Secretariat the need for
a newsletter - a cheaper medium of communication, in information and
entertainment of corps members, wherever they may be, on the happenings around
them and the scheme’s activities in the state. Approval was given and I became
the Editor-in-Chief and successfully published it monthly.
The above were just some of the
programmes a mass communication graduate can embark upon or participate in
during the NYSC exercise.
If you intend to be a
successful corps member, as you are about to go for your service, kindly note my
little recommendations:
1. Don’t influence your
redeployment to another state, unless where necessary, for example, marriage and
health problems.2. Don’t reject your place of primary assignment, unless where
necessary.3. Think about embarking or participating in the under listed
programmes.
a. serving in major committees
in the camp, for example, sports, food, theatre groups, information committees
and many others.
b. participate regularly in the
sanitation exercise and you may initiate new areas for concentration.
c. organise a rag-day or any
form of an appeal fund to raise money for the less privileged in the society,
fire victims, patients, prisoners, motherless homes, psychiatric hospitals or
organise party for them during Xmas/Sallah days.
d. organise evening classes for
students about to sit for exams or adult literacy programmes.
e. organise/participate in
seminars, workshops, conferences to enlighten the public or campaigns, like tree
planting, WAI campaign, anti smoking, AIDS, Road safety campaigns etc.
f. embark on landscaping,
beautification of places of your primary assignment or any other place like the
palace, state secretariat and hospital.
g. to minimise road accidents,
you can create police stands, make zebra crossing, sign post too can be very
good.
The above are some of the award
winning projects corps members could undertake. But all these can be attained
with fervent prayer to God and striving hard with all sense of commitment and
the will to act at the right time.
In conclusion, I wish to state
that the way we analyse projects and implement what we learn today should
reflect the future circumstances and status. The best years for us as mass
communicators are yet to come. This will happen only if we as mass communicators
hold fast to professionalism by developing and applying appropriate
communication knowledge and skills that will make us dynamic leaders of
tomorrow.
Once again, thank you very much
for your invitation and attention and God bless.
*Beacon is the official
newspaper of the Department of Mass-Communications, Bayero University Kano. This
paper was a speech delivered by the author at a Dinner Party for graduating
students of the department in August 1998.
|