Category: Campus Life

  • AAPOLY matric’s tomorrow

    AAPOLY matric’s tomorrow

    From Caleb Ijioma

     

    Abraham Adesanya Polytechnic (AAPOLY), Ijebu Igbo, Ogun State, will tomorrow hold her matriculation at the institution’s main auditorium.

    However, matriculating students are expected to be seated by 9:00am

    According to a release signed by the Director of Students Affairs Opeyemi Otuewu, and made available to CAMPUSLIFE, matriculating students are expected to pay a sum of N5000 through POS at the polytechnic bursary unit.

    The statement reads: “All new full time and part time students are expected to pay matriculation fee of five thousand naira(5000) through POS at the bursary on or before the close of work on Thursday, 5th of March 2020.”

     

  • MAPOLY graduate dies  of cardiac arrest

    MAPOLY graduate dies of cardiac arrest

    From Fasilat Olawuyi

    fresh graduate of Computer Engineering of Moshood Abiola Polytechnic, Stephen Soetan AKA Surplus is dead.

    Soetan was said to have been playing football with some friends when he suddenly suffered cardic arrest and slumped.

    He could not be revived and eventually died. He has since been buried

    CAMPUSLIFE learnt that until his death, the deceased was a promising rapper and former social director of his department.

    He was said to have completed and also defended his final year project and awaiting mobilisation from the National Youth Service Corps.

  • Much ado about  02/02/2020

    Much ado about 02/02/2020

    By  Murtala Abdullahi

     

    Geography has proven it that it is just once in a century!

    Calendar has shown that the second day of the second month of the decade 02-02-2020, makes similar meaning when read forth or back. It is an exciting day to be remembered; and the next to happen would be in another 907 years.

    According to English dictionary, the aforementioned an an adjective is called ‘palindromic’ meaning any word that can be read forward and backward with similar meaning respectively. There is a lot of meaning that need to be attached on this day because it cannot be seen any more. It will only be remembered in the book of history.

    Interestingly, the world will record many occurrences on this day. The day witnessed some births, while many others celebrated their birthdays.Some had funeral ceremonies. Some also bid the world farewell. Some hosted friends to lavish parties having built a home or bought exotic cars.

    Do not forget that yesterday would become your past and today would be referred to as yesterday. Tomorrow will continue to replicate till eternity.

    Read Also: IMPACT 2020: OPEN DOORS!

     

    Palindromic day would be memorable when you make use of it well; try to hustle and strive hard to achieve so that you struggle would pay off eventually.

    This would be repeated tomorrow and statiscally could be up 907 years to come. However, my question is: ‘Can this contemporary generation live till that aforementioned year? Certainly not! Nonetheless, our deed and contribution toward the development of humanity and the world itself would be registered in the book of history and forever remembered and celebrated.

    Gear up and work so that when another palindromic day 03/03/3030 hits the world, you wouldn’t be forgotten in the history of mankind.

    I know it not everyone that would certainly be remembered.  Therefore, strive hard to be among those that will be reconised, like the great prophets in the holy books, as well as renowned  scientists whose inventions registered their names in the world consciousness many years after they had gone.

  • ‘Bad leadership, corruption threaten co-operatives’

    ‘Bad leadership, corruption threaten co-operatives’

    From Oladele Oge

     

    President, Staff Thrift and Credit Co-operative Society, Federal College of Education, Eha-Amufu, Enugu State, Malam Yahaya Musa Baba, has identified bad leadership, greed and corruption as the factors that threaten the smooth operation of thrift and credit co-operative society in tertiary institutions nationwide.

    Yahaya said that the essence of establishing co-operative society in tertiary institutions is to alleviate the financial burden usually encountered by the workers, adding that its existence has, to a large extent, provided relief through normal loans with minimal interest to members.

    Yahaya addressed reporters following his victory at the election of the cooperative society FCE Eha-Amafu.  He was elected alongside his deputy, Dr Emmanuel Idu; treasurer Dr Eunice Anumudu, as well as four management committee members and three scrutinisers.

    According to him, saving for future purposes is what many civil servants do these days, adding that it would be unfair and indeed painful for workers to invest and expect nothing at the end because one unscrupulous element decided to eat their sweat.

    “Co-operative society has failed in many institutions of higher learning because of the insincerity of their leaders,” he began.

    Read Also: Sambisa forest as metaphor for corruption

    “A leader of staff co-operative society holds a position of public trust and should adhere strictly to the rules of the game.

    “He should embrace the virtues of a good leader because bad leadership breeds greed which also metamorphoses to corruption.

    “So, a leader should be disciplined to avoid getting involved in the mismanagement of workers hard earned financial contributions.

    He stated that the college co-operative society started with strong footing as its foundation was laid by staff members with integrity, fear of God and innate background of what it takes to form a formidable staff co-operative society.

    He stressed that members have benefitted immensely from the society through loans for the purchase of household items, acquiring homes, and paying their children/ wards’ school fees, among others.

    Similarly, Mr Chikwere Chinedu, the institution’s co-operative scribe, lamented how staff thrift and credit society has failed in some institutions because members elected some characters with questionable pedigree, who end up dipping their hands into the cooperative treasury.

  • CAMPUSLIFE reporter to attend NEF event in Kenya

    CAMPUSLIFE reporter to attend NEF event in Kenya

    From Mubarak Al-Amin

     

    A CAMPUSLIFE correspondent in Minna, Mr. Abdulsalam Mahmud, will  attend this year’s ‘Next Einstein Forum (NEF) Global Gathering” in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.

    The science-oriented event will attract distinguished scientists, award-winning researchers and prolific science journalists, across the world.

    It will take place at the Kenyatta International Conference Centre, between Tuesday and Friday  next week.

    Kenya’s President, Uhuru Kenyatta, is expected to declare the event open.

    The goal of the gathering is to bring together stakeholders in science and innovation, business and policy in Africa to review trends and create concrete roadmaps on key questions.

    The NEF Global Gathering 2020 programme will have sessions that will unpack the underlying theme ‘Connecting science to humanity’ with four sub-themes: ‘Connectivity, ubiquity and mobility’; ‘Climate, energy, food and growth’; Precision health’; and ‘Building a nation’s scientific capacity’.

    Read Also: The Nation reporter bags fact check award

     

    There will also be an ‘Innovation Salon’ which will feature panels and fireside chats on how to move from lab to market, innovation competitions and investor speed dating.

    Mahmud, who is a regular contributor to CAMPUSLIFE in Niger State, will join 19 other African journalists to participate in a ‘Science journalism training and script writing workshop’ which forms a segment of the event.

    The workshop will explore the challenges facing science reporting in Africa, while also affording delegates techniques for delivering engaging and impactful science stories to the media.

    Mahmud, who is a Fellow of both Africa Arts Media Earth Initiative (AAMEI) and African Science Literacy Network (ASLN), is a distinction graduate of Mass Communication from the Fati Lami Abubakar Institute of Legal and Administrative Studies (FLAILAS), in Niger State.

     

  • College holds matriculation

    College holds matriculation

    From Oladipupo Ibraheem

     

    Sixty-seven new students of Wavecrest School of Hospitality, Surulere, Lagos has taken the oath of matriculation.

    The students were admitted for the National and Higher National Diploma programmes in Hospitality Training, Culinary Courses, Home Management, and National Skill Qualifications.

    Addressing the new students, Provost of the all-girls Monotechnic Rosana Forsuelo, said the nation’s lopsided education system which produces skills that are not aligned with industry requirement, constitutes unemployment and under employment. Worse still, Forsuelo said it results in brain drain, skill gap and entrepreneurial incompetence.

    Forsuelo said the institution operates under Women’s Board International Cooperative Society, a non-governmental organisation which identified a shortfall of skill in hotels and restaurants nationwide; hence took it upon itself to address that lacuna.

    She said: “We do trainings on hospitality for hotel owners because we realised that when our students go for their industrial attachment, they are faced with a big problem as some hotels and restaurants don’t have the standards. So we had to design programmes for Nigerian hotel owners to have the basic training on hospitality.

    Read Also: UNICAL matriculates 12,240

     

    Further, she described Wavecrest as a specialised Monotechnic approved by the regulatory body, National Board for Tertiary Education, adding that students are offered admission via the Unified Tertiary and Matriculation Examination, (UTME) and are mobilised for the mandatory National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, upon completion of their programmes.

    She said many of the students are from less privileged backgrounds, the more reason the NGO takes care of a huge part of their tuition.

    “The NGO’s aim is basically to empower and develop women, because there is cultural bias in the country that leads to gender inequality,” she added.

    She urged the students to be law-abiding and abide by the dictates of the oath they had taken.

    On her part, Registrar of the institution, Veronica Esode, described hospitality as the largest and most dynamic sector of the modern economy providing not only jobs but a myriad of other opportunities.

    She said some of their students are already one leg into entrepreneurship even while in school because they have been empowered with life skills and a business sense in several areas of hospitality.”

  • IBBUL, others get fire service units

    IBBUL, others get fire service units

    From Aliyu Abubakar Tafyan

     

    Fourteen workers of Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai (IBBUL), have  undergone firefighting training at the headquarters of Niger State Fire Service, courtesy of the state government.

    Giving the report of the training to the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Abu Kasim in his office, IBBUL Acting Director of Works Nabala Danlami, described the process as ‘smooth and easy going’, saying the government also complemented the gesture by providing vehicles and other firefighting equipment to the institution.

    Read Also: Niger, Kuwait Foundation partner on IBBUL

     

    Now that the government has provided the school management with thequipment, Danlami urged the school authority to make judicious use of it within the school environs and its host community.

    Prof Kasim, in his message, thanked Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello for the contribution. He congratulated the firefighters for a successful training, tasking them to always be above board as their work requires emergency.

    He urged them to make good use of the opportunity given them by the university to be diligent and dedicated to duty.

    Some other institutions in the state similarly enjoyed the training and donations.

     

  • Tech firm for Orange  Corners incubator

    Tech firm for Orange Corners incubator

    From Adekanye Owoeye

     

    Nigerian education technology startup, Afrilearn, has been selected for the Orange Corners Incubator Programme. The initiative was developed and funded by the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and implemented by FATE Foundation.

    In 10 countries across Africa and the Middle East, the programme supports 20 aspiring entrepreneurs every six months with designated work space, capacity building and business incubation services, funding for prototype development and mentoring opportunities.

    Of the 668 applications for the second stream, 30 entrepreneurs were shortlisted to attend the Orange Corners Nigeria Bootcamp after which Afrilearn co-founder, Isaac Oladipupo emerged one of the top 20 entrepreneurs finalists for the Orange Corners Nigeria Business Incubation, following his outstanding pitch.

    Read Also: Firm introduces new technology to drive tax compliance 

     

    Said Oladipupo: “Since my great friend Gabriel Olatunji-Legend and I started building Afrilearn over a year ago, it’s been a very interesting and challenging experience working to solve arguably the greatest challenge of our continent-quality education. But as big as the challenge is, so are the opportunities that lie therein.

    “For this reason, I’m delighted, not only to have been selected one of the top 30 entrepreneurs, but also to have emerged one of the 20 finalists.

    “Congrats to other amazing entrepreneurs who made it. Looking forward to unlearn and relearn as we build Africa’s future.”

    Registered in April last year, Afrilearn is an education technology company actively integrating a network of quality teachers, software developers and animators to deliver richly-animated and curriculum-based secondary education for Africans .

  • Students to pay for late registration at UDUS

    Students to pay for late registration at UDUS

    From Olokooba Abdulwasiu

     

    Students are to pay N500 or N5000 for late registration at the Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS), depending on the time of the registration.

    The management through a circular released on Tuesday, last week announced an extension of registration for the third time with the charges, depending on the time of payment.

    However, some students have described the new levies as ‘exploitative’ and  ‘inconsiderate to students’ plight’.

    One of the aggrieved students, Dan Adam, described it as a way of exploiting the less-privileged students. He believed the fine would majorly affect poor students, noting that hardly would students from rich background delay in paying for registration on time.

    “To me, I strongly disagree with the school on this. It is a way of exploiting only the poor. I believe there is no rich student who could not have sorted out his registration,” ‘Adam, a 400-Level student of Law, said.

    Also, Harajat (full name withheld), expressed similar sentiment, admonishing the authority to review its stance by either reducing the charges or removing them totally.

    Read Also: UDUS appoints students as library assistants

     

    She said: “I blame the school for not being considerate to students’ struggles to pay their school fees. I beg the school to reduce the charges or remove them totally if possible.”

    Despite being a victim, AbdulAziz Olademiji, applauded the decision, describing it as a means by which more development could be driven.

    “Even though I am a victim of this, I will still praise the management for imposing sanction like this. This is what other schools as well do to bring development into their school. I think UDUS also needs this, Oladimeji stated.”

    Oladimeji further hinged his inability to pay on time to his I-don’t-care disposition to deadline. He said with the new rule, he and people of his ilk would henceforth come to terms with the reality that new times are now here in UDUS.

    “For someone like me, I should not say money is the problem. Students are already addicted to no deadline for registration. For instance, I personally thought the management would not apply that (deadline) rule when they fixed a date for this session.  It is now very clear that management is now determined to enforce that directive.”

  • Mixed reactions trail KSU new policy

    Mixed reactions trail KSU new policy

    Management of Kogi State University (KSU), Anyingba, a fortnight ago, directed  that lecturers henceforth should obtain permission to use lecture theatres. With an unstable Students Union (SU) and a proscribed Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) of KSU, hope now seems to rest on a thread. AROGBONLO ISRAEL AND JACOB SIMON report.

     

    Kogi State University (KSU), Anyingba has a reputation for controversy. In recent times, the institution has been plagued by a series of crises, such as cultism, workers-management face-off and strikes, among others. It seems there is no end to the controversies.

    Last month, there was a directive by the school management that lecturers should obtain permission before using lecture halls.

    Against this backdrop, it will be a herculean task for the student to have their lectures, tutorials and group studies under the trees, on benches and other places within the campus rather than the lecture halls.

    Established over two decades ago with the motto: Knowledge for self reliance, the institution has over 19,000 students. It also has about 30 departments spread across eight faculties that offer diploma, bachelor’s and post-graduate programmes.

    According to information gathered by  CAMPUSLIFE, only the Faculty of Social Sciences is exempted from the measure. CAMPUSLIFE learned that the faculty is the largest and the commercial nerve of the institution, hence, the concession.

    Though the directive was given via a memo by management last month, CAMPUSLIFE gathered that most of the lecturers were not informed because of the proscription of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) of KSU. A committee of some key principal officers, headed by the Dean of Social Sciences, Prof Ogideolu Adesola, was reportedly set up to supervise the process.

    Students are already lamenting the after effects of the new measure. Although management has made a verbal promise to open the classrooms from 7am to 6pm daily, students and lecturers took the promise with a pinch of salt, because of such unfulfilled promises in the past.

     

    What informed the directive?

    The measure, according to the management, is aimed at checkmating the mismanagement and abuse of classrooms by students. It would equally stem the tide of illicit and immoral activities perpetrated in the classrooms in the guise of reading.

    Besides, the policy would also make indolent and playful students get ready for lectures between 7am and 6pm stipulated time.

    Some students admitted to  CAMPUSLIFE that their action may have triggered the management’s decision.

    Further checks by CAMPUSLIFE revealed that long before the directive, students took advantage of the free access to lecture halls. They often damaged electrical equipment, messed up the halls or, worse still, engaged in sexual intercourse and other vices at the dead of the night in the lecture halls.

    Christian organisations also conduct their fellowship in the evening, with some dragging such gatherings into midnight, a situation the management felt was not healthy for them.

     

    What the directive states

    The measure requires that a lecturer must personally apply for keys from either the Head of Department or non-academic staff. The lecturer then signs in for the collection of keys and also signs out upon completion of lecture.

     

    Lecturers react

    Due to the proscription of KSU ASUU, some lecturers who spoke to CAMPUSLIFE pleaded that their identities should not be disclosed.

    A source from the Faculty of Arts, who said the measure was not helping scholarship, lamented that students now received lectures under trees. The source said the classrooms were always locked, leaving the students with no choice than to look for venues for group study. The source said the directive has encouraged indolence among many students who found it difficult to study in their hostels due to distractions.

    Another lecturer from the Faculty of Social Sciences countered his colleague.

    The source recalled how students indulged in sexual activities at the Idachaba Twin Theatre, one of the prominent theatres in school. “The classrooms served as a meeting point for students at night” said the source.

    “They (students) claim to come there for studies, but in the real sense they come only for ungodly activities. They litter the classrooms with dirt so much that lecturers who come in the morning will have to wait for cleaners to sweep all the rubbish. It is that frustrating. Some come there with the intention to charge their phones, classrooms are meant for lectures and not reading. If they want to read, the library is there.”

    One of the lecturers from the Department of Mass Communication, Mallam Muhammed Onakpa, doesn’t see much issue with the measure, as long as his colleagues can comply to the rule.

    “Lecturers can get key at any time as long as it is within the time provided by the management. The classrooms are usually opened between  7am and 6pm. I think the whole idea of this policy is to sanitise the system.”

     

    ‘We want a review of the policy’

    One of the student-leaders, who identified himself as Michael, from the Department of Sociology, threw his weight behind the management.

    He said: “As you can see, we are all waiting for lectures because the classroom is closed due to the students that often gather there.

    Actually, this (measure) has not been in existence before. When I gained admission into the university in 2016, the lecture theatres were always opened, and no law was in place that a lecturer or student must sign in and out before a lecture must hold. Recently, it came to management’s attention that some students were involved in unethical conducts in the guise of coming to read for exams.  Also, holding of fellowships at the various classrooms in the school was causing distraction to students and lecturers. These, among other reasons, brought about the implementation of this policy to help guard against unethical activities.”

    Another student from the Department of Natural Sciences believed the management was wrong in its decision.

    “KSU is a very large school with many lecturers, so, giving them a few keys to share would be very difficult,” the source said.

    He continued: “Just imagine, how can you allocate four keys among 28 lecturers; this will just cause division among them. What I’ll advise is that since the security unit is active, a security officer should man each door of classrooms and provide the key. Anytime they need to use the classroom, the security is there to always attend to them. You don’t expect a lecturer to be looking for a cleaner because he wants to use the classroom.”

    Umar Tahi from the Department of Geoplanning said the situation required that students pour into the streets in protest.

    Read Also: Obaseki to unveil new policy on education

     

    “Though we the students are meant to abide by every law enacted by the management because they are superior to everyone. In spite of this, I think we need to protest against this policy.

    “For instance, one may have a lecture for let’s say 7am. He gets to the venue only to discover the venue is still under lock, even when the lecturer is ready for the class. I am not happy with this policy and if there are other provisions to change that, I would really advise the management to do so in good faith.”

    Vice President of Mass Communication Students Association, Dorcas Alafiya Ojonimi, said securing classrooms for lectures had been herculean until this week when things began to take shape. Nonetheless, she said she could not guarantee how committed management was this time going by past episodes.

    Said Ojonimi: “As at last two weeks, we went for a lecture at the Department of Mass Communication, but no classroom was opened. We heard the management set up a policy to streamline the usage of facilities in the classrooms.

    Some were even of the opinion  that it was as a result of the students using the venue for fellowship on Fridays. I was even saying the management should have left the classrooms open for other days of the week if that’s truly the core reason for such policy.

    “There was an occasion where we supposed to have a class in the morning, which was later cancelled because there were no available classrooms for use. But things are beginning to gradually normalise. I even had meeting with some of my executive members in one of the classrooms.”

     

    Students Union reacts

    The Public Relations Officer of Kogi State Students Union, Oluwafemi Yinka, said the new measure was affecting their members; yet, there was little the union could do because it had been compromised over the years by its predecessors.

    In a chat with CAMPUSLIFE, Oluwafemi said the students were affected by the new policy as a result of the bastardisation of the union by the previous governments.

    “The (Students) Union has long been bastardised. How do I mean? Before I was involved, the union has often failed the very students who elected them into offices either because they were too scared to offend the management or that the rules were made by their godfathers.

    “Also, there seems to be no synergy between the union executives, hence, they can’t even come together to deliberate and reach a consensus on how to address such issue,” he said.

    Efforts made by our reporter to reach the union president over the issue were futile.

     

    Management: policy will be reviewed  

    Dean of Students Affairs, Prof Arogba Samuel, told our reporter to go through the school Registrar, declining to speak on the matter.

    Also, Prof Adesola refused to comment when asked about the policy. He insisted that the management has not given him the audacity to speak to the press.

    All efforts to reach the Registrar proved abortive at the time of filing this report.

    Meanwhile, the Acting Vice Chancellor of KSU Prof Taiwo Oluwagbemi, has urged the students to bear with the management, saying a committee set up to that effect would soon submit its report.

    According to him, the new measure is to encourage students stay in class within the stipulated period, adding that extracurricular activities can then be held thereafter.

    “I am very much in touch with the situation in the Faculty of Social Sciences. What is happening now is temporary,” he said.

    “The essence of the policy is to put things in order and a committee has been set up to handle that.

    “The policy was enacted to encourage students stay in class from 7am to 6pm, while they are allowed to have their lectures outside the slated time. You can get more details from the Dean of Students Affairs.”