Education
FUOYE: Students seek improved infrastructure, others
• This article is culled from The Nation Newspaper
As fees continue to rise, daily life on campus raises uncomfortable questions about what students are truly paying for. Nevertheless, students at Federal University Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE) are desirous of improved infrastructure on campus.
This, they said, would make the entire academic exercise worthwhile, FATHIA OMILEYE (FUOYE) reports.
Every academic session begins the same way for many students. They queue to pay fees, calculate balances, borrow where necessary, and make sacrifices with the belief that education is an investment worth the cost. For students at Federal University Oye-Ekiti (FUOYE), Ekiti State, that belief is becoming increasingly difficult to hold on to. As fees continue to rise, daily life on campus raises difficult posers about what students are truly paying for.
The issue is no longer just about money; it is about trust. Students are required to pay tuition fees, development levies, and other compulsory charges every session, yet many struggle to see how these payments translate into improved facilities or better learning conditions. Instead of progress, students are confronted daily with overcrowded spaces, neglected infrastructure, and basic needs that remain unmet.
Slowly, frustration replaces optimism.
“We pay development levy every session, but honestly, we don’t see the development,” said Elizabeth Tijani, a 200-Level Sociology student.
“Every year, fees increase, but nothing really changes. We are taught accountability in class, but in reality, it feels like nobody is accountable to us. At least, they should show us what our money is being used for.”
For many students, the reality of campus life becomes most visible during examinations, particularly the recently concluded Computer-Based Test (CBT) examinations. The journey to the CBT centre itself is a challenge. There is no asphalted road leading to the facility, forcing students to walk on bare ground. During harmattan, dust fills the air, clinging to clothes and affecting breathing. In the rainy season, the same path becomes muddy and slippery, turning what should be a short walk into a risky and uncomfortable experience. Students often arrive at examinations already stressed, not only from academic pressure but from the physical strain of the environment.
“Before you even sit for the exam, you are already exhausted,” Elizabeth added. “You trek through dust or mud, then enter a hall that is overcrowded. How are we supposed to concentrate like that?”
Inside the CBT centre, the strain deepens
The building is not large enough for the number of students who rely on it. During examinations, students are packed closely together with limited ventilation and little personal space. Heat builds up quickly, anxiety rises, and concentration becomes difficult. There have been reports of students feeling physically unwell, with some fainting due to overcrowding and exhaustion. These incidents are not isolated; they point to a system stretched beyond its limits.
“The CBT hall is not fit for the number of students using it,” said Awwalliyyah Abayomi, a 200-Level Mathematics Education student. “Sometimes it feels like an endurance test, not an examination. The heat, the crowd, and the lack of enough computers add pressure. We understand that running a university is hard, but at least let the facilities work. We are not asking for luxury, just functionality.”
The shortage of computer systems adds another layer of stress. With thousands of students depending on a limited number of computers, delays and rescheduling have become common. Students wait for hours, sometimes unsure when their turn will come. What should be an organised and efficient process often feels chaotic, leaving many exhausted before they even begin their examinations.
“You can wait for hours and still not know when you will write,” Awwalliyyah said. “By the time you finally sit down, your energy is completely drained.”
The pressure students face is not limited to the CBT centre. Across campus, the effects of a rising student population without corresponding expansion are visible. Lecture halls are overcrowded, with students standing throughout lectures, sitting on windowsills, or squeezing into corners. Learning under such conditions becomes a struggle. Students miss important points, lose focus, and feel disconnected from the academic experience they are paying for.
“Sometimes you stand for the whole lecture,” said Farian Sanusi, a 300-Level English student. “You can’t hear properly, you can’t even see the board well. University should be about learning, not just managing to survive.”
Electricity supply remains another persistent challenge, particularly in hostels and student living areas. Power outages disrupt reading, completing assignments, charging devices, and other essential daily activities. In an academic environment that increasingly depends on technology, unstable power in hostels adds to student stress and frustration.
Internet access, now essential to modern education, is also unreliable across campus. Many students are forced to spend extra money on mobile data to submit assignments, access research materials, or attend online academic activities. This additional expense increases the financial burden already created by rising fees.
Transportation within and around campus poses its own difficulties. Long distances between hostels, lecture halls, and examination centres force students to rely on paid transport services. With transport fares rising, daily movement becomes another financial strain. Students who cannot afford transport are left to trek long distances under harsh weather conditions.
Beyond academics, student welfare continues to raise concern. At many lecture areas, bathrooms are locked or unusable. During long lectures or examinations, students are left with no option but to relieve themselves in nearby bushes. This is not merely inconvenient; it strips students of dignity and raises serious hygiene and health concerns, particularly for female students.
“It is embarrassing,” Elizabeth said. “We are adults in a university, yet sometimes we have no access to toilets. That is not how students should be treated.”
Safety is another pressing issue. Despite the collection of development levies, functional security cameras are absent in many lecture halls. Students worry that incidents such as theft or harassment may go unresolved due to lack of evidence. Evening lectures and late examinations have become sources of anxiety, especially for students who already feel vulnerable.
“If something happens, there is no evidence,” Farian said. “It makes students feel unsafe, especially at night.”
Accommodation challenges further deepen students’ frustrations. On-campus hostels are insufficient, forcing many students into off-campus housing where rent continues to rise. In existing hostels, overcrowding, water shortages, broken facilities, and poor sanitation remain common complaints.
Water supply itself is inconsistent in several parts of campus. Some students report going days without running water, forcing them to fetch water from distant locations or buy water at additional costs. This affects hygiene, health, and overall quality of life.
The main issue is not only the facilities, but the lack of transparency,” said Felix Madu, a 200-Level Public Relations student. “When students don’t know how their fees are being used, they start losing trust. We only ask for accountability. As a PR student, I believe the school should respond by communicating better, being more open about finances, and engaging students more. Good public relations is about listening and building trust, not keeping silent.”
Students living with disabilities face even greater challenges. Poor road networks, lack of ramps, and inaccessible lecture halls make movement difficult and sometimes unsafe. Many argue that development levies should prioritise inclusive infrastructure that allows all students to participate fully in academic life.
As these challenges accumulate, frustration is worsened by limited communication from the university. Fee increases are announced, but detailed explanations rarely follow. Students seldom receive breakdowns of how development levies are spent, what projects are ongoing, or why long-standing problems persist.
“They will just announce a new fee and that’s all,” Farian said. “No proper explanation, no breakdown. It feels like we are just told to pay and keep quiet. These are not luxury needs, just basic things.”
On accountability and transparency, the students called for better communication from school authorities.
Happy Ojo, a 100-Level Law student said: “We pay high fees, but sometimes it feels like we are left in the dark. The school should make sure the money we pay goes into improving facilities and safety. We need transparency, especially for things that directly affect students.”
Ephraim Ojolo, a 200-Level Mass Communication student said: “The school must communicate better with us. Students should be informed regularly about where our fees are being spent. That will help reduce frustration and build trust between management and students.”
Morenikeji Giwa, a 200-Level Guidance and Counselling Education student added: “We are aware that running a university is expensive, but we deserve updates. Even small improvements should be shown to the students so we know our contributions matter. Transparency will make everyone feel valued.”
As a result, calls for accountability are growing louder across campus. Students are not demanding luxury buildings or unrealistic standards. They are asking for functional facilities, safer spaces, transparent financial reporting, and visible improvements that reflect the money they contribute each session. Attempt to speak with the Dean of Students Affairs proved fruitless as his mobile was not reachable.
Every dusty walk to the CBT centre, every overcrowded lecture, every locked bathroom, and every insecure hall reinforces the same unresolved question: where do university fees really go?