Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy

Across Nigerian tertiary institutions, Islamic Studies is one of the prominent studies in humanities and social sciences. This is due to its quadratic leanings towards religion, sociology, ethics and anthropology. Despite these extensive leanings however, higher studies in Islam is ignorantly percei...

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Main Author: Khalidu Adewale Afolabi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung 2023-11-01
Series:Khazanah Pendidikan Islam
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.uinsgd.ac.id/index.php/kp/article/view/29942
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author Khalidu Adewale Afolabi
author_facet Khalidu Adewale Afolabi
author_sort Khalidu Adewale Afolabi
collection DOAJ
description Across Nigerian tertiary institutions, Islamic Studies is one of the prominent studies in humanities and social sciences. This is due to its quadratic leanings towards religion, sociology, ethics and anthropology. Despite these extensive leanings however, higher studies in Islam is ignorantly perceived and conceived by a mass Yoruba Nigerians as exclusive training for clerical duties in mosques and Muslim evangelism. This derogatory perception has overtime built inferiority complex in students of Islamic studies in Yoruba region of Nigeria as they query their professional relevance beyond religious evangelism in the society. This paper therefore seeks to measure the preponderance of this trait in Islamic students of Yoruba region of Nigeria and investigate its implications on Islamic pedagogy. The paper uses descriptive research method, adopts questionnaire survey design for data gathering and frequency counts and percentages for analysis. It uses multistage sampling for random selection of respondents cutting across extant tertiary institutions in Yoruba region of Nigeria. The paper submits inferiority complex is often extant in students who were offered Islamic Studies without applying for it and argues lack of career focus, economic relevance of Islamic studies and ignorance of course contents are factors responsible for inferiority complex in Islamic studies undergraduates, and this has affected the efficiency and passion for Islamic pedagogy in Nigerian universities.
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spelling doaj.art-61eca57f04f74749bcc11e0636775a322024-01-10T14:27:54ZengUIN Sunan Gunung Djati BandungKhazanah Pendidikan Islam2715-968X2023-11-01529811110.15575/kp.v5i2.299428260Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies PedagogyKhalidu Adewale Afolabi0University of IbadanAcross Nigerian tertiary institutions, Islamic Studies is one of the prominent studies in humanities and social sciences. This is due to its quadratic leanings towards religion, sociology, ethics and anthropology. Despite these extensive leanings however, higher studies in Islam is ignorantly perceived and conceived by a mass Yoruba Nigerians as exclusive training for clerical duties in mosques and Muslim evangelism. This derogatory perception has overtime built inferiority complex in students of Islamic studies in Yoruba region of Nigeria as they query their professional relevance beyond religious evangelism in the society. This paper therefore seeks to measure the preponderance of this trait in Islamic students of Yoruba region of Nigeria and investigate its implications on Islamic pedagogy. The paper uses descriptive research method, adopts questionnaire survey design for data gathering and frequency counts and percentages for analysis. It uses multistage sampling for random selection of respondents cutting across extant tertiary institutions in Yoruba region of Nigeria. The paper submits inferiority complex is often extant in students who were offered Islamic Studies without applying for it and argues lack of career focus, economic relevance of Islamic studies and ignorance of course contents are factors responsible for inferiority complex in Islamic studies undergraduates, and this has affected the efficiency and passion for Islamic pedagogy in Nigerian universities.https://journal.uinsgd.ac.id/index.php/kp/article/view/29942inferiority complex, islamic studies, undergraduates, pedagogy, nigeria, yoruba, university
spellingShingle Khalidu Adewale Afolabi
Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
Khazanah Pendidikan Islam
inferiority complex, islamic studies, undergraduates, pedagogy, nigeria, yoruba, university
title Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
title_full Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
title_fullStr Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
title_full_unstemmed Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
title_short Inferiority Complex in Students of Islamic Studies in Yoruba Region of Nigeria and Implications on Islamic Studies Pedagogy
title_sort inferiority complex in students of islamic studies in yoruba region of nigeria and implications on islamic studies pedagogy
topic inferiority complex, islamic studies, undergraduates, pedagogy, nigeria, yoruba, university
url https://journal.uinsgd.ac.id/index.php/kp/article/view/29942
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