Abstract
This opinion paper challenges the overreliance on test scores as indicators of academic excellence with a focus on the Nigerian educational landscape. While tests serve important functions, they often fail to capture the full complexity of students’ intelligence and potential. Rather than act as reliable indicators of excellence, test scores frequently reduce education to rigid benchmarks that ignore cognitive, emotional, and creative dimensions of learning. The discussion is anchored around major themes that expose the limitations of a test-centric system. It begins with an exploration of cognitive diversity and learning styles, emphasising how test-centric assessments marginalise learners whose strengths lie outside conventional academic formats. The paper further critiques the culture of memorisation over mastery, showing how students are trained to recall facts rather than develop deep understanding. Creativity suppression emerges as another concern, where rigid curricula undermine imagination and independent thought. Inflated academic metrics and deflated talent are discussed to illustrate how high scores often mask shallow learning and ignore real-world competencies. The section on dehumanised education portrays how reducing students to numbers compromises their emotional well-being, self-worth, and identity. In addition, the paper delves into the misalignment between academic results and real-world skills, revealing a growing workforce mismatch in Nigeria, as graduates emerge with excellent test records, yet lack practical problem-solving skills. The human cost of this broken system is grave, as the obsession with grades leads to the mass production of graduates trained to memorise definitions that are of limited use outside academic settings. This culminates in a broader decline in innovation, creativity, and national development. The paper concludes that equating test scores with academic excellence is harmful. It proposes a paradigm shift toward holistic education, one that values multiple intelligences, critical thinking, emotional intelligence, creativity, and lifelong learning. Academic success must be redefined to reflect not just what students can reproduce on a test, but what they can contribute to society.