Walk into any Nigerian mechanic workshop on a busy Monday or any other day of the week, and you will find hands covered in grease, but minds sharper than many lecture halls. These men and women are fixing cars efficiently, solving real problems, fast, and on the spot.
Yet, walk into some university classrooms offering mechanical engineering degrees, and you may find students who have never touched an engine.
While this may be controversial, many roadside mechanics today are indeed more valuable than some mechanical engineering graduates. This is not because education is not important, but because skills, not certificates, keep the economy running.
What’s the use of a degree if you can’t apply it?
Nigeria produces thousands of mechanical engineering graduates every year. But how many can fix a modern-day car? How many know what to do with a faulty CVT gearbox, a damaged ABS module, or a hybrid battery? Too often, the answer is “very few.”
The problem lies in our outdated university system. Most engineering departments still rely on 20-year-old textbooks and broken-down labs, there is little hands-on experience, and graduates leave school with impressive CGPAs but no clue how to diagnose a real-world engine problem. Meanwhile, mechanics, some of whom never finished secondary school, are learning directly from the street, YouTube, online forums, and trial-and-error. They may lack formal polish, but they know what works.
Who keeps Nigeria moving?
Let’s be honest, when your car breaks down, do you call a mechanical engineer or a mechanic? Mechanics keep Danfo buses, Keke Napep, interstate transport vehicles, and delivery trucks running daily. Without them, small businesses, schools, hospitals, and transport companies would grind to a halt.
They are frontline problem-solvers in Nigeria’s deeply informal yet vital economy, work long hours, deal with dangerous conditions, and often self-learn everything from carburetors to electric vehicle diagnostics. While their value isn’t printed on paper, it is proven under pressure.
This is not an attack on education
This piece is not about shaming university graduates but about reality versus rhetoric. Nigeria’s education system must evolve, and Mechanical engineering programs must stop treating practical skills like electives. They must partner with auto tech firms, invest in simulators, and get students under the hood, not just behind a desk.
What needs to change
Why is a mechanic seen as “lesser” than a graduate who can’t repair a basic alternator? Why do we give titles more respect than results? We need a mindset shift and society must stop looking down on skilled workers.
- Vocational Training Needs Respect: Mechanics should be offered structured apprenticeships, certification programs, and recognition in policy frameworks.
- Universities Must Upgrade Curricula: Enough theory. Start building real labs and auto diagnostic centres.
- Industry Partnerships: Auto firms should train both students and mechanics directly.
- Government Support: Support upskilling, provide tools, offer credit schemes to mechanics to modernize their workshops.
Skill is the new degree
In today’s world, what you can do matters more than what you studied. Mechanics may not wear gowns or speak engineering jargon, but many of them are more useful in Nigeria’s auto sector than mechanical graduates who may have never held a wrench.
Respect degrees, yes, but respect skills more because when your car fails on the Third Mainland Bridge at 9 pm, you won’t be looking for someone with a BSc, you will be looking for someone who can fix it.
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