Tuesday 16 August 2016

Yemi Oshibajo On Yaba tech Crisis

The Vice President Yemi Osibanjo and some delegates from the Federal ministry of Education, including the honorable minister of Education Mallam Adamu Adamu, will pay a complimentary visit to yaba college of technology now city university, yaba, to commemorate the official upgrade of the institution to a University status and  also to  personally see to the resolution of the College internal strike which commenced a week earlier as a result of the removal of staff's allocation and allowances . This was announced by the President's special aid on media and publicity Mr. Femi Adesina in the early hours of Tuesday 16th August,2016 on behalf of the presidency. The visit is scheduled to take place between  Friday, 19th August,2016 to Tuesday, 23rd August 2016 and the college staff seem pleased with the visit.
    However, the college wishes to announce that the part-time 1st semester examinations which was scheduled earlier last week remains on hold till further notice UNTIL their terms and demands are met.

Friday 12 August 2016

Board did not impose candidates on university


Joint Admission and Matriculation Board registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, on Friday, said it was untrue that the board was imposing candidates on universities for admission.
Oloyede told journalists in Benin, Edo, when he visit the JAMB’s zonal office that the board had resolved all issues of admission into tertiary institutions after due consultation with all stakeholders.
prof oloyede said, ”I know many of you are bothered and you want to hear from me about the admission.
“There is no stalemate; after due consultation with the Senate, House of Representatives, because they were worried and invited us, the matter was totally resolved.”
He added that education and examination regulatory institutions “like NBTE, NCCE, NUC and JAMB itself, were also duly consulted’’.
He said the Minister Education has announced that there would be no written examination, no written Post-UTME examination by any institution.
He said, “Apart from that, every other thing remains as it used to be, because the authority, autonomy and independence of the academic boards or the Senate of the respective institutions remain sacrosanct.
“They should determine their criteria, following the directives of the Federal Executive Council to all Federal universities about what should be merit, catchment areas, educationally-disadvantaged states and other things.
“Things remain the way they used to be. The only addition this year is, for now, there should be no written Post-UTME examination.
“Every Senate and academic board should determine its own admission policy.
“We must be fair to all; we must be federal in our attitude; we must be equitable in whatever we do. We must not extort the students.

Wednesday 30 March 2016

Violence Is Not Student Activism

The resort to violence and wanton destruction of property in the name of student protests requires a strong response from school authorities and the government. Recent outrages include rampages by students in Osun State and at the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti. While student activism and peaceful agitation are legitimate activities in institutions of higher learning worldwide, lawlessness cannot be tolerated, least of all from those expected to become leaders in due course.
When students resort to arson, vandalism and physical assault, they transit from youthful exuberance to criminality. The laws of the land should apply to such deviants: they should be identified, arrested and prosecuted in the courts.
Lawlessness was in evidence last month at ABUAD, when some students who flouted the institution’s regulations and were duly excluded from taking the semester examinations, went wild. They damaged buildings, vehicles and other infrastructure in an orgy of violence. Assessing the damage at millions of naira, the institution alleged that the students looted shops and attacked innocent persons. But this was nothing compared to the mayhem wrought in Osun State by students of the Southern Nigeria Institute of Innovative Technology, Ifewara, who vandalised school property and burnt some structures. Female students of the college reported that they were violently evicted from their hostel, their phones, laptops and other belongings stolen before the mob set the main female hostel ablaze. Their grouse? They claimed to have found out that courses being run at the school were not accredited by the National Board for Technical Education. Did that warrant the violence?
Also last month, borrowing from their undisciplined seniors, some secondary school students in Osun State reacted to a reported decision by the state government to restrict payment for the West African Senior School Certificate Examinations to only a fraction of pupils, rioted in Ile-Ife, crowning their vandalism by setting fire to the building housing the state-owned
Orisun FM radio station. Similarly, a protest over amenities at the Yaba College of Technology, Lagos, turned ugly with a group allegedly inflicting damage on property. The police need no prompting before moving in to apprehend offenders or to prevent crimes being carried out.
Student activism and protests have a chequered history everywhere and have often been forces of progress. Youthful and idealistic, students, through lecture boycotts, occupations, rallies and marches, have influenced progress both on the campuses and in the larger society. A strike lasting two years at the University of Paris in 1229-30 is regarded as the earliest significant student strike. It led to reforms at the university and in clerical administration of education. In May and June, 1970, four million students from over 450 universities, colleges and high schools, staged street protests across American cities to protest the US invasion of Cambodia and the Vietnam War, part of the pressure that eventually led the government to withdraw from the war. A student strike in Hong Kong seeking greater political freedom attracted global attention in 2014 and was remarkable for its peaceful, orderly conduct despite skirmishes with police much later.
Our students need not be violent and lawless. The quality of student activism has diminished greatly over the years. Today’s students should familiarise themselves with the legacy. When Ladipo Solanke and others founded the West African Students Union in London in 1925, they created an intellectual and activist vanguard whose members played leading roles in attaining independence and after throughout the sub-region. Sadly, the idealism, patriotism and global world view that marked Nigeria’s student movement have given way to mercantilism, gangsterism and political prostitution.

Monday 28 March 2016

Delta Poly Rector Assures on infrastructural Development in Otefe

Delta State Polytechnic, Otefe-Oghara, has denied allegations against the rector, Dr. Clara Sogbaike, faulting her commitment to the development of the institution.
“Dr. Sogbaike has remained irrevocably committed to the academic and infrastructural growth of the polytechnic since her appointment as rector of the institution,” Public Relations Officer of the polytechnic, Mr. Wilberforce Ofotokun said .
she has successfully piloted the affairs of the polytechnic to a higher pedestal with the active support and cooperation of staff and management.
He urged the public to be wary of detractors whose covert activities are born out of frustration, malice, envy and jealousy, reiterating that Sogbaike cannot be intimidated but remains determined, and focused more than ever to bring to fruition, her vision for the institution in line with the education policies and programmes of the Senator Ifeanyi Okowa-led administration in the state.

Friday 18 March 2016

National Assembly Reps Criticize Computer-Based UTME

Hon. Oghene Egoh.addressing the National Assembly
The National Assembly has urged the federal government to direct the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board (JAMB) to suspend the computer-based 2016 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
This followed the unanimous adoption of a motion under matters of urgent public importance by Hon. Oghene Egoh.
"There was need for JAMB to revert to the paper examination until the board was ready to conduct a hitch-free Computer Based Test (CBT)",said Egoh.
He expressed worry that over a million candidates who sat for the computer based UTME recorded various degrees of technical faults. Egoh pointed out that the technical hitches jeopardized the candidates’ chances of gaining admission into the universities.
“Already serious admission problem is rocking the nation because already JAMB receives huge allocation from federal government every year.
Hon. Oghene Egoh.
“Yet they charge candidates all manner of fees and majority of the children do not gain admission either because of the technical hitches of the CBT or the post UTME introduced by various tertiary institutions,” Egoh said.
He said that while some candidates are getting conflicting scores in the ongoing exercise, others are complaining of malfunctioning computers.
“There were instances of double-option answers, computers were malfunctioning and suddenly short down causing absurdity that place some candidates in disadvantaged position,” the lawmaker said.

Hon. Aishatu Dukku insisted that JAMB was not ready for the computer based option. “JAMB should make it optional for students on whether to use computer based or pen and paper,” Dukku said. However, Rep. Muhammed Zakari said there was need to consider students in diaspora who are participating in the examination.