Nigerians
are the most educated in the U.S., surpassing whites and Asians - by Rice
University
According to analysis of surveys conducted by Rice University, Nigerian
immigrants have the highest levels of education in Houston and the entire U.S.,
surpassing whites and Asians.
The survey was the 2006 American Community Survey conducted by the
U.S. Census Bureau.
The analysis of the Census data was conducted by Rice University and
the story was published in 2008 by the Houston Chronicle, it remains relevant today
as a great plus to Nigeria and Nigerians.
Houston
Chronicle:
Nigerian
David Olowokere, chairman of TSU's engineering technologies department, says
the goal for his children is to do "as good as us — if not better."
For
Woodlands resident David Olowokere, one of Nigeria's sons, having a master's
degree in engineering just wasn't enough for his people back home. So he got a
doctorate.
His
wife, Shalewa Olowokere, a civil engineer, didn't stop at a bachelor's, either.
She went for her master's.
The
same obsession with education runs in the Udeh household in Sugar Land. Foluke
Udeh and her husband, Nduka, both have master's degrees. Anything less, she
reckons, would have amounted to failure.
"If
you see an average Nigerian family, everybody has a college degree these
days," said Udeh, 32, a physical therapist at Memorial Hermann-Texas
Medical Center. "But a post-graduate degree, that's like pride for the
family."
Nigerian immigrants have the highest levels of education in this
city and the nation, surpassing whites and Asians, according to Census data
bolstered by an analysis of 13 annual Houston-area surveys conducted by Rice
University.
Although they make up a tiny portion of the U.S. population, a
whopping 17 percent of all Nigerians in this country held master's degrees
while 4 percent had a doctorate, according to the 2006 American Community
Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau. In addition, 37 percent had
bachelor's degrees.
In
comparison
To put those numbers in perspective, 8 percent of the white
population in the U.S. had master's degrees, according to the Census survey.
And 1 percent held doctorates. About 19 percent of white residents had
bachelor's degrees. Asians come closer to the Nigerians with 12 percent holding
master's degrees and 3 percent having doctorates.
The Nigerian numbers are "strikingly high," said Roderick
Harrison, demographer at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a
Washington, D.C., think tank that specializes in researching black issues.
"There is no doubt that these are highly educated professionals who are
probably working in the petrochemical, medical and business sectors in
Houston."
Harrison analyzed the census data for the Houston Chronicle.
Stephen Klineberg, a sociologist at Rice University who conducts the
annual Houston Area Survey, suspects the percentage of Nigerian immigrants with
post-graduate degrees is higher than Census data shows.
Of all the Nigerian immigrants he reached in his random phone
surveys 1994 through 2007 — 45 households total — Klineberg said 40 percent of
the Nigerians said they had post-graduate degrees.
"These are higher levels of educational attainment than were found
in any other ... community," Klineberg said.
There are more than 12,000 Nigerians in Houston, according to the
latest Census data, a figure sociologists and Nigerian community leaders say is
a gross undercount. They believe the number to be closer to 100,000.
Staying in
school
The
reasons Nigerians have more post-graduate degrees than any other racial or
ethnic group are largely due to Nigerian society's emphasis on mandatory and
free education. Once immigrating to this country, practical matters of immigration
laws get in the way.
The
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 made it easier for Africans to enter
the U.S., but mostly as students or highly skilled professionals — not through
family sponsorships, Klineberg said.
So
many Africans pursue higher levels of education as an unintended consequence of
navigating the tricky minefield of immigration, said Amadu Jacky Kaba, an
associate professor at Seton Hall University in South Orange, N.J., who has
done research on African immigrants in the U.S.
"In
a way, it's a Catch-22 — because of immigration laws you are forced to remain
in school, but then the funny thing is you end up getting your doctorate at the
age of 29," Kaba said. "If you stay in school, immigration will leave
you alone."
Although
Kaba, who teaches Africana Studies, is not from Nigeria (he is Liberian), he
said he, too, found himself pursuing a master's and then a doctorate to remain
in this country legally.
But
not all Africans have to go this route. Some say their motivation is driven by
their desire to overcome being a double minority: black and African.
Take
Oluyinka Olutoye, 41, associate professor of pediatric surgery at Baylor
College of Medicine. He came to this country already as a medical doctor but
decided to pursue his doctorate in anatomy to help set himself apart.
"Being
black, you are already at a disadvantage," said Olutoye, whose wife, Toyin
Olutoye, is an anesthesiologist at Baylor. "You really need to excel far
above if you want to be considered for anything in this country."
Family
expectations
All
this talk of education creates high expectations for children of Nigerian
immigrants. The eldest child of David Olowokere, chairman of the engineering
technologies department at Texas Southern University , for example, is already
working on her master's degree in public health in Atlanta; the middle child is
pursuing a bachelor's in pre-medicine. His youngest, a son, attends The
Woodlands High School . He already has aspirations to go into engineering, just
like his parents, Olowokere beams.
"The
goal is for them to do as good as us — if not better," he said.
Oluyinka
Olutoye put it another way.
"The
typical saying in a Nigerian household is that the best inheritance that a
parent can give you is not jewelry or cash or material things, it is a good
education," he said. "It is expected."
LESLIE CASIMIR,
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle
Published 5:30
am, Tuesday, May 20, 2008
leslie.casimir@chron.com
Breakthru Nigeria:
Documenting and promoting the successes of Nigeria and Nigerians.
Celebrating the heroes and heroines of our nation.
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