Tag: Education

  • Fed Govt urged to raise funding on education

    The Federal Government has been urged to increase the funding on education, to enable the country attain technological development.

    The Chairman of Omotayo College (Junior and Senior School)), Ogijo, Ogun State, Sir Tayo Opanubi, who spoke at the weekend at the 4th Graduation/Valedictory Ceremony of the institution, said without a vibrant educational sector, no nation could attain greatness.

    Opanubi, an engineer, said if government increases funding on education , incessant strikes by the academic and non-academic workers of universities, polytechnics and colleges of education would stop.

    He enjoined individuals and corporate bodies to support government in funding education.

    The chairman of the occasion, Alhaji Ayuba Bolaji, the Project Manager/Chief Executive, Ogun State Forestry Plantation Project, urged the graduating pupils to choose a career they have a flair for, so that they would contribute to the country’s development.

    “Parents and guardians should not force their children and wards to choose a career. They should allow them to go into the professions they have a passion for,” he added.

    The Vice-Chairman of the college, Lady Sarah Opanubi, said: “Our goal is to provide high quality education in a conducive environment. We have a passion for excellence and zero tolerance for exam malpractices and indiscipline.”

    The Head Teacher, Mr. Mike Odubote, said: “Excellence is a by-product of determination, perseverance, discipline, diligence and courtesy; the core values upon which Omotayo College was built.

    “We teach our pupils in moral values, academic excellence and leadership prowess to become total children, who are poised not only to become leaders, but also to revolutionalise the world.”

    The Best Graduating Pupil Award for the 2013/2014 academic session was won by Nwaduba Uzochikwai. The Best Graduating Pupil, Science and Maths dept, is Ojo Oluwatobi. The Best Graduating Pupil, Business dept, is Okeowo Omolola. The Best Graduating Pupil, Humanities dept, is Isaac Janobest; while the Best Behaved Graduating Pupil is Okeowo Omolola.

  • Private school owners seek education bank

    The National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools (NAPPS) have called for the establishment of the Education Development Bank (EDB) in Nigeria.

    NAPPS urgED the Federal Government to set up the bank to enable promoters of education access loans easily. The demand was contained in a communiqué by NAPPS after its maiden three-day education summit at the Dr. Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    They also want the government to include private school teachers in the teacher re-training programmes; extend free enrolment for standardised certificate examination and waive or reduce taxes levied on private school operators.

    It was also resolved that the provision of Section 122 of the National Policy on Education (NPE) be fully implemented by government.

    The stakeholders further urged the government to include private school pupils/students in the distribution of educational materials.

    Presenting the communiqué after the summit titled: Repositioning private schools for quality education, the Chairman, Central Planning Committee, Chief Diekivie Ikiogha said the event was timely.

    He said the purpose of the event was to brainstorm and review the numerous challenges facing the education sector.

    He said it would also help to provide solutions and develop the implementation plan to bring about the desired change.

    He noted that private schools have “the capacity to promote and sustain quality education in Nigeria.”

    He, however, maintained that all private education providers should ensure strict compliance to educational policies in order to achieve qualitative education.

    Delegates at the summit identified some challenges facing private schools, such as poor managerial skills by proprietors, school managers and administrators and double taxations by the national, state and local government.

    The stakeholders also discussed preservation of values and ethics among pupils, teachers and other school personnel.

    The communiqué read: “Deliberations at the summit further resolved that proprietors should develop business, financial and operational plans and create a governing board for sustainability of school operations.

    “Proprietors should also focus more on the challenges of indiscipline amongst children, parents and teachers as well as sponsor education advancement related bill at the National Assembly.”

  • The dilemma of tertiary education (II)

    Some of the challenges confronting universities in Nigeria, especially in the 21st century include, among others, university administration, admission of students, teaching and learning using ICT, violence among students and the increasing wave of crimes in university campuses, coping with the increasing demand for university education as well as funding for research by scholars and equipping universities with facilities to meet the yearnings of the universities communities and beyond.

    Of these challenges, the increasing demand for university education, funding for research by scholars and equipping universities with facilities are critical. Varsities often resort to constantly reviewing fees charged as a way out, but the fees issue – as has become evident – has economic, moral and emotional components which we have been unable to successfully disentangle in Nigeria. In some cases, fees are reviewed without recourse to detailed explanations to why.

    In my piece The fees palaver (June 12, 2014), I did mention the case of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Ile Ife, which was closed recently following protest over fees hike which the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Bamitale Omole, said had become inevitable. He said the N5, 300, which the university charged for 10 years was no longer realistic because inflation and the current economic realities had made the charges “ridiculous.”

    OAU, it would be recalled, recently increased the charges of its newly admitted students from N37,150 and N42,150 to N 82,400, N92,700 and N95,700 (acceptance fee inclusive), depending on the faculties. The fees for old students of the institution were also increased from N5,300, N7,800, N10, 300 and N12,800 per session to N19,700, N30,700 and N33,700 for different faculties respectively.

    Unlike other institutions who do not take the pains to explain the rationale for whatever action taken, the OAU authorities at least tried to give reasons – even though those reasons might not go down well in some circles – for the new fee regime. The VC had explained that high inflation rate and efforts of the management to sustain the academic standard in the university necessitated the increment.

    “Precisely during 2004/2005 academic session, the university administration reviewed the charges paid then, which were in line with the economic realities of that time. The charges are still being paid to date after 10 years. It is evident that the current economic realities have made those charges unrealistic and unsustainable.”

    He also dwelled on the issue of purchasing diesel, paying electricity bill and comparing fees paid in other federal universities which made “charges paid by students in OAU not only ridiculously low but have become very unsustainable if our university is to survive.”

    These are cogent reasons unless we pretend not to live in present day Nigeria. Weeks later it appeared the university authorities finally put on their thinking caps and started exploring other ways of grappling with its own dilemma. Cashing in on the enormous goodwill – especially from its alumni members – it sent out emails soliciting for support.

    ”Do you know that Great Ife has over one hundred thousand (100,000) graduates? Imagine if every one of us gave at least N1000 a year, there would be N100 million available annually for the development of our alma mater. Just imagine the ease with which we would build a 500-seater lecture theatre which costs N75 million (approximately)…” part of the email read.

    To me, that is thinking even though it is not a guarantee that all the 100,000 graduates would give or that all the 100,000 are still alive today, but at least someone conceived the idea which might end up addressing some critical needs. Things are changing so rapidly that we need creative tools to address these challenges as is becoming evident that government alone cannot solve all problems.

    The Economist report I made reference to last week pointed out that America government funding per student fell by 27% between 2007 and 2012, while average tuition fees, adjusted for inflation, rose by 20%. In Britain tuition fees, close to zero two decades ago, can reach £9,000 ($15,000 a year). This goes to show the problem is universal, but the critical issue here is others are looking for solutions while we simply abhor change thinking the world is static or waiting to move at our own pace.

    The myriad of unemployed graduates we have in the country has been a wakeup call for years and from all indications, the government has not done enough to address this crisis. We are where we are because policy makers fail to see into the future, especially in the area of employment dynamics. In the same report, the newspaper also pointed out that in the standard model of higher education, people go to university; earn a degree which guarantees them an entry ticket to the professional classes and ultimately a climb up the corporate ladder.

    But as it rightly pointed out, automation is beginning to have the same effect on white-collar jobs as it has on blue-collar ones. It quoted a study from Oxford University which says, 47% of occupations are at risk of being automated in the next few decades. As innovation wipes out some jobs and changes others, people will need to top up their human capital throughout their lives. But a critical look at our varsities and polytechnics show clearly that we are still stuck in the past as the curricula of most of the courses offered in our institutions show. Most are totally at variance with current realities.

    I had the shock of my life recently when a graduate of computer science told me he has never used a computer before! When I probed further to know what instructional material he used during the course of his studies he said they were mainly notes from his lecturers and some textbooks if he had the fortune of coming across them. He is however job hunting looking for the “highest paying” company to work in.

    It is only an individual who lives in denial that would question how technology has forever changed the way things are presently done. But it is sad that most of our institutions are still in the analog age. But the world has moved on, thanks to technology, especially the internet which the magazine predicted “will upend higher education.”

    This is how it described the scenario: “Now the MOOC, or “Massive Open Online Course”, is offering students the chance to listen to star lecturers and get a degree for a fraction of the cost of attending a university.”

    Some readers would be familiar with Coursera, which says it has over 8 million registered users. Though its courses are free, it reportedly bagged its first $1m in revenues last year after introducing the option to pay a fee of between $30 and $100 to have course results certified. Another, Udacity, has teamed up with AT&T and Georgia Tech to offer an online master’s degree in computing, which is less than a third of the cost of the traditional version. Harvard Business School will soon offer an online “pre-MBA” for $1,500.

    This is where the change gets dicey. If this trend catches there is the likelihood it will disrupt different universities that are not fully prepared to embrace the change. The prediction is that the big names will be able to sell their MOOCs around the world. But mediocre universities may suffer the fate of some in the newspapers industry.

    Were the market for higher education to perform in future as that for newspapers has done over the past decade or two, universities’ revenues would fall by more than half, employment in the industry would drop by nearly 30% and more than 700 institutions would shut their doors. The rest would need to reinvent themselves to survive.

    Though painting the scenario from a western perspective, we have a lot to learn here because we now have more federal and state varsities that still depend fully on over stretched public sector funding. The crises we’ve been witnessing in the sector should serve as a wakeup call to creative action.

  • Photo: Malala visits Aso Rock

    Photo: Malala visits Aso Rock

  • NANS aspirant makes case for free education

    A Vice-Presidential aspirant of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Oluwafemi Williams, has advised government at all levels to make education free. Oluwafemi said the present crop of leaders enjoyed quality and free education, but said none of them reciprocated the gesture to the generation after them.

    He said education was being seen as a privilege, which made managements of universities increase fees without considering the plight of the students. He said public institutions should be affordable for the poor.

    “This set of people that constitute the management boards were children of blacksmiths, hunters, farmers and so and became what they are today because of the cheap education they enjoyed. Now, they are big men and have failed to realise that all fingers are not created equal,” he said.

    He decried the poor standard of education in the country, saying: “It is a big shame for this kind of education to be made expensive. Why would you have over 80 students in a department and a lecturer teaching over 1,000 students in a classroom without teaching aids and so on? If this kind of education of little quality is made expensive, then I fear for the future of this country. Making it expensive should be termed extortion and corruption.”

    Oluwafemi urged other students’ leaders to rise against the problem of rising tuition in the country.

  • The dilemma of tertiary education (I)

    Two weeks ago, the mug shot of a felon in California, the United States of America (USA), Jeremy Meeks was posted on the internet by the police department’s Facebook page. A few hours after it went viral, the mug shot earned him hoards of admirers with mainly ladies commenting on how “handsome” he is.

    If that was the end to the story it would have been better; but wait for this, it secured him a Hollywood agent who is already negotiating modeling contracts for him even though he is a felon and still in jail! Can you beat that!

    Perhaps I need to point out that Jeremy Meeks was arrested as part of a sweep of gangs in Stockton, California, and faces a felony weapons charge. It was reported that the agent, Gina Rodriguez has signed Meeks, 30, as a client and he joins a roster of her other notorious celebrities.

    So what are the prospects for a modeling career for the “handsome” felon? “Jeremy has an amazing look and has received international attention which I feel can only help him flourish in the entertainment industry,” Rodriguez was quoted as telling ABC News in the US.

    Not done with her high hopes, she added: “Jeremy could make somewhere between $3,000 to $100,000 per month through endorsements and modeling. We are also speaking with several production companies about following Jeremy’s foray into the entertainment industry.”

    As “good” as this may sound, there is one big hurdle preventing any immediate modelling windfall; Jeremy is behind bars on $1.1 million bail. The story gets interesting when it was also reported that a woman claiming to be Meeks’ mother launched a “GoFundMe” campaign to raise money to pay for his release.

    In the description, she insisted that he has no gang affiliations in spite of the charges filed against him. “He has old tattoos…which cause him to be stereotyped. He’s my son and I’m just trying to raise funds to help him in any way. Please help him to get a fair trial or else he’ll be railroaded,” his mother Katherine Angier wrote. So far, they have raised over $5,000.

    You might be wondering what this has to do with tertiary education in Nigeria. I recounted this true story to drive home the fact that the postmodern society we live in is a complex one that defies logic and reasoning in some cases. I have discovered that society often place premium on things that in most cases add little or no value toward progress. The story I just recounted may have happened in the US, but some of the people that admired the “handsome” felon were Nigerian youths. The world is now a global village without barriers.

    For some time now, there have been rumblings in Nigeria’s tertiary education sector. From Lagos to Ife, Anyingba to Keffi and elsewhere students have taken to the streets to protest upward review of fees charged by their respective institutions. Authorities in some of these institutions have tried to give reasons for these reviews, but they often met a brick wall of resistance in the process. What then are the issues?

    In answering this question, I’d like to come back to the issue of the society. The society sees nothing wrong in building a multi-billion naira entertainment centre, but will struggle if asked to contribute to the building and equipping of a science laboratory. The same society will also see nothing wrong in the sponsorship of a beauty pageant, but will struggle if it comes to the sponsorship of a readers’ club, for instance. The list is endless.

    This was what made Oscar Wilde to say that we humans are not rational but sentimental beings. I quite agree. What would make young ladies “fall in love” with a character like Jeremy Meeks?

    Now back to the rational world. With series of strikes and other internal crises bedeviling the sector, there is little doubt that tertiary education is at a crossroad in Nigeria whether we choose to accept it or not, and we have to think fast on how to start putting it back on the right track otherwise we’d be doomed as a nation; some say we are doomed already.

    One thing is very clear here, we all seek a good education, because a good education is the root of a prosperous society, but how this “good education” metamorphoses is the million naira question. The dilemma we face in Nigeria is this: Do we want a cheap education that makes mess of progress or do we seek an expensive education that restricts access? That is the dilemma of tertiary education in this country. While we are grappling with this dilemma, hundreds of thousands of ill equipped and unemployable graduates are being churned out annually.

    While in the university, I joined fellow students as we marched to the office of the Dean of Student Affairs to protest hike in library and other fees – tuition was absolutely free back then, and the increase was not more than N100! The dean took his time to educate us that the paltry fees we pay were not up to a fraction of what he is paying for his daughter in kindergarten! You guessed right if you say the students almost stoned him. That mindset has not changed to date.

    Against this backdrop however, it will be pertinent to point out that all the great universities in the world are not cheap. But that they are not cheap does not foreclose the fact that indigent but brilliant cannot have access to them. There is a reason why they are accessible to the brilliant and ambitious: The government invests and the society plays its unique part in form of scholarships, infrastructure upgrade, provision of books and teaching aids alongside other sundry funds.

    While this is the norm in sane societies, ours is farther from the truth because those that often secure these scholarships are those ‘connected’ to the powers that be, no matter how dull they are. It will shock many Nigerians the number of foreign scholarships that are awarded in the country to people who least deserve them. Herein lay another dilemma.

    In Nigeria, the rich are not investing in our education because they claim they have no stakes, or where they have stakes, they invest for selfish reason of boosting their ego. They are least concerned because their children attend the Oxfords, Cambridge, Harvard or Yale of this world.

    While the rich shy away, the government is equally bereft of ideas on how to make education qualitative and to some reasonable extent affordable. Where the idea thrives, the “political will” to carry it out is a different ballgame altogether. In the US, for instance, many students have access to loans that often see them through the university. They pay back when they start working, President Obama paid off his loans when he was a senator! But I can hear you laughing and saying where is the work in Nigeria? I agree, but can we at least try it as a pilot project?

    Toward the end of last month, the Economist magazine ran a cover story titled “creative destruction.” It centers on how universities can reinvent themselves and remain relevant in a rapidly changing world. This goes to show that the problem is global and not restricted to Nigeria. But the difference here is that other are already thinking ahead of time.

    In the report, the magazine argued that a cost crisis, changing labour markets and new technology will turn an old institution on its head. Higher education – it rightly pointed out – is one of the great successes of the welfare state which most western societies adopted to cushion the harsh effects of unbridled capitalism. What was once the privilege of a few became a middle-class entitlement, thanks mainly to government support.

    It said that “in the emerging world universities are booming: China has added nearly 30m places in 20 years. Yet the business has changed little since Aristotle taught at the Athenian Lyceum: young students still gather at an appointed time and place to listen to the wisdom of scholars. Now a revolution has begun thanks to three forces: rising costs, changing demand and disruptive technology. The result will be the reinvention of the university.”

    Is Nigeria ready for such reinvention?

  • Photo: Education sector transformation

    Photo: Education sector transformation

  • Open letter to Jonathan on state of education

    To begin with, I appreciate and praise, with open heart, some strides your administration is making especially with your transformation agenda. It will amount to developmental blindness and one will also be needlessly uncharitable to disparage the tremendous progress your administration and, ultimately above all, the country are making presently. At the same time, it will be a generational betrayal, genocide to the popular realities on ground, and a deceptive sycophancy to say your administration, thus far, is impeccable. There are many areas we expect you to do more or even have done better. The most important of them all, to me and many of my colleagues in the tertiary institutions, is the state of our education.

    With due respect, the education system in the country has not been productive as it should be. And if your Transformation Agenda, in my opinion, is to be completely successful, the nation’s human resources must be enriched. Of course, one of the factors responsible for this is the inadequate productivity of our tertiary institutions. There is partially no existence of real research in our tertiary institutions as plagiarism is the order of the day. This, inter alia, is because of the inadequacy of grants from the Federal Government. People now talk about basic learning facilities with delight only during the reminiscence of the heyday of Nigerian tertiary education. Incessant and protracted industrial actions that are avoidable are now considered normal in the system. Also pathetic is the astronomic increment in school fees, especially in Federal tertiary institutions.

    Besides, it saddens one’s heart when one realises that education is now being commercialised. It saddens one’s heart the more when one sees that school fees are increased at the expense of the poor which make up a large percentage of our population. One looks into the nation’s future and that of Africa with trepidation when one discovers that the poor people, who form parts of the building blocks of the ship that will navigate our dear nation and continent through the turbulent and unstable oceans, are consequently denied tertiary education.

    Moreover, a case that refuses to go out of my consciousness anytime the issue of increment is mentioned is the case of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. I am a student of this great citadel of learning. It was to our dismay and consternation to discover that our poor parents will be made to pay some astronomical amounts of money. It was even more surprising to know that some increments were about 320 per cent. The fresh students’ fees were increased from N17,000 and N22,000 to about N100,000 without acceptance and accommodation fees. Some stale students who pay below 10,000 naira will now be made to pay close to N35,000. The post graduate students who pay N80,000 are now made to pay out of their coffers is the unjustified amount of N250,000.

    The management’s only justification is that the government is under-funding education. Although everyone knows your administration is making great strides in the education sector, there is still a need to allot 26 per cent of our budget to education for proper and adequate funding as directed by the United Nations and also to ensure the proper and efficient use of these funds. Despite that, I think it is of equal importance for me to say that the school has other sources of funds that can sustain it effectively over a considerable period of time.

    According to the comprehensive appraisal done by our Students’ Union leadership, some other sources of funds the school has, in addition to grants and donations from the Federal Government, the alumni association and other non-governmental bodies with which the school has been efficiently administered pre-2004, are the payments of about 40,000 students’ fees for registration and result checking for the post-UTME, the N15,000 registration fees for the pre-degree programme, of which close to 3000 students eventually admitted then paid close to N17,5000 each. Just a few months ago, the World Bank voted $8 million to finance projects in the school for being the 1st in Nigeria and the 8th in Africa.

    In addition, the school had already increased the acceptance fee before this from N2,000 to N20,000, which they have collected for three years and that is running into N300 million . There are also investments run by the school via its bread making and water factories. Then, about N7 billion has been allotted to the school as proceeds of the six-month ASUU strike. The list is just endless.

    Mr President, although we urge the government to go in line with the UN standard for education financing in the budget, we still do not see the need for an increment in our fees. Needless to say, we should not bear the burden of the underfunding because education is a right, not a privilege. I hope my colleagues and I will not be victimised for saying the truth and voicing out our sincere concerns. I’m writing this because I believe your administration is always concerned about the poor and will consequently lookinto this serious issue.

     

    Temitayo, 400-Level Psychology, OAU

     

  • How to save education, by don

    How to save education, by don

    All roads led to Lapai in Niger State when the state-owned Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU) held its first convocation. YINKA OLATUNBOSUN (400-Level Chemistry) reports.

    What is the magic formula for universities to do well? It is by the provision of adequate infrastructure and good remuneration for lecturers, says emeritus professor of Language and Education, Thomas Adeyanju.

    Delivering the maiden convocation lecture of the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU) in Lapai, Niger State, Prof Adeyanju, an education consultant, blamed the decline in the quality of education, from primary to tertiary level, on the insensitivity of government and the importance they attached to education.

    While primary school teachers in the United States and England enjoy a monthly salary of $3,000 (N480,000) and £2,500 (N655,000), the don said their counterparts in Nigeria earn less than N20,000.

    He described the salary package as demoralising, describing it as a factor encouraging exodus of professionals from the country.

    Prof Adeyanju said if Nigerian certificates must be acceptable globally, a minimum of National Certificate of Education (NCE) qualification should be set for teachers at basic level; Second Class (Upper Division) degree for secondary school teachers and PhD for tertiary institutions.

    To salvage education, Prof Adeyanju said Higher School Certificate (HSC) must be re-introduced, adding that the 60:40 admission policy for science and arts must be followed.

    Pro-chancellor and chairman of Governing Council Mallam Suleyman Ndanusa praised the lecturer for “scholarly dissection” of the problems facing education, urging stakeholders to learn from the lecture to restore the glory of education.

    The Vice-Chancellor (VC), Prof Ibrahim Adamu Kolo, applauded the “insightful academic approach” of the guest lecturer, saying the paper contained workable solution to help policymakers in tackling the problem.

    The following day, graduating students filed out in academic gowns, beaming with smiles. They were the first set of graduates of the institution. Eight of the 1,732 graduands got First Class.

    The Visitor, Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, urged the graduating students to be models for measuring the academic and moral quality of the university.

    Aliyu warned students to shun violence and unruly conducts that could undermine the peace of the university’s host community. He reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to adequately fund the university, praising Gen. Ibrahim Babangida and Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar for aiding the institution’s development.

    While launching the University Endowment Fund, Abdulsalami, who chairs the Board of Trustees, said the institution need about N3 billion to complete its facilities. He urged wealthy indigenes to contribute to the endowment fund.

    Gen. Babangida promised to complete the Senate Building; Mrs Modupe Alakija , an oil magnate, donated N100 million to the fund.

    Prof Kolo said the state government had spent over N19 billion to consolidate projects in the university since inception. He highlighted the management’s efforts to improve infrastructure, stressing that his administration had laboured to provide human resources and facilities needed for the school to compete with other institutions.

    The VC said research and knowledge-driven innovation were being pursued, appealing to stakeholders to have faith in the university.

    He urged the graduands to be good ambassadors of the institution praising staff and students for the development under his watch.

    The Registrar, Mallam Samaila Muhammad, thanked stakeholders and friends of the university for making the occasion a success.

    No fewer than 327 graduated with Second Class (Upper Division), 902, Second Class (Lower Division), 476 with Third Class and 22, Pass.

  • Education is a priority, says ex-council chief

    Education is a priority, says ex-council chief

    The immediate past chairman of Kuje Area Council in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Hon. Danladi Zhin has said impact of the investment by the administration of Hon. Shaban Tete on education is a long-term one whose benefits would be realized later, even as he said that education is the best form of poverty alleviation in any society.

    Zhin, who is aspiring for the House of Representatives to represent Kuje, Abaji, Gwgwalada and Kwali Federal Constituency in the FCT, revealed this in Abuja at the dinner and award night organised by Nigerian Universities Education Student Association (NUESA), University of Abuja chapter in Gwagwalada Area Council Abuja. The event was tagged “Youth for Peace and Unity.”

    According to Zhin, as long as he remains a member of PDP, he will never compromise the education programme of President GoodLuck Jonathan for Nigerian youths, saying that he believed in the concrete development of the youth through quality education.

    “Some political opponents are calling the youth leaders of tomorrow, but still turn round to frustrate the education sector which is targeted at the youth. I vow to maintain the path of destiny of the youth, because it is in the hands of the leaders to make it work. So, I want to urge the youth to be law-abiding citizens in their future endeavours,” he said.

    Also speaking, the Special Adviser to the President on Ethics and Values, Mrs. Sarah Jibril said the only legacy parents could bequeath to their children is sound education, adding that the youth could be empowered through sound education and their good involvement in political activities, as well as embarking on various projects that could be of benefit to them.

    She told the outgoing students that men without women cannot achieve much in their various professional callings. She therefore appealed to men to give recognition to women to enable them to contribute to nation-building for the good of every Nigeria.

    The occasion featured awards presentation to some students and distinguished Nigerians, among who were Pro-Chancellor of the institution, Dr. Samuel Ogbemudia, Special Adviser to the President on Ethics and Values, Mrs. Sarah Jibril and the immediate past chairman of Kuje Area Council, Hon. Danladi Zhin, among others.