Tag: ICT

  • Lagos spends N500 million  on teachers training

    Lagos spends N500 million on teachers training

    Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola said yesterday that his administration spent over N500 million on the training of teachers in public schools.

    He said the training was aimed at improving the standard of education.

    The governor spoke at the Lagos City Hall at a breakfast meeting and Corporate Social Responsibility awards organised by the Support Our School Initiative of the Ministry of Education.

    He urged individuals and corporate organisations to support his administration’s effort to improve education, adding that 33,000 teachers need to be retrained in Information Communication Technology (ICT).

    Fashola said: “At the primary school level, about 12,000 teachers need to be trained, while 21,000 secondary school teachers also need training. If you look at our annual training budget between 2010 and 2013, we have spent about N500 million on teachers’ training.”

    He urged teachers who have acquired additional knowledge to approach the government, adding that his administration would employ them and give them commensurate remuneration.

    Fashola said: “With the support of the people and corporate organisations, the milestone that has been achieved can be built upon. I want you to join me in facing the challenge we are facing in the sector.

    “We have alluded to the declining standard of education today, compared to the past. The question I ask myself is: Is it true that there were public schools in the past? I find it difficult to say there were public schools in the past because most of the schools I remember in the past were mission and private schools.

    “The truth is that at that time of prosperity and educational success, the schools were not run by the government. They were run by the missions and private sector. What the government did was to regulate, set standards, set calendars, set the rules and the examinations.

    “Now, the government has realised that it is not a one-man show. That is why Christians and Muslims have some of their schools back, but the challenge endures. We urge the private sector to work with us to do what it did before.

    “That is the brain behind the ‘Adopt-a-School Initiative’, but unlike before when there were predominately Christian and Muslim missions, corporate organisations and individuals can now intervene.”

    Commissioner for Education Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye thanked the awardees and those who have bought into the Adopt-a-School Initiative, saying their contribution to the development of education was remarkable.

    The awardees included Group Managing Director Rose of Sharon and Executive Vice-Chairman of Famfa Oil Limited Mrs. Folorunso Alakija; Chief Kessington Adebutu; Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB); First Bank, Mr. Femi Okunnu (SAN) and Elegant Twins.

     

     

  • SUBEB trains teachers on ICT

    The Nasarawa State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) yesterday began training on Information Communication Technology (ICT) for 62 teachers and education secretaries.

    The board earlier trained over 1,500 primary school teachers on classroom management.

    State Chairman Abdulkarim Abdullahim said: “ICT and school management knowledge were needed to achieve government education policies and programmmes.

    “You cannot be a teacher, lecturer, education secretary and work in other professions without being computer literate, “ he said.

     

  • Indian firm, Linkserve partner

    Indian firm, Linkserve partner

    An Indian information communication (ICT) firm, Talentedge, has signed an agreement with Linkserve Group, a Nigeria-based internet firm, to expand into Africa.

    Founder/Chairman, Linkserve Group, Mr.Chima Onyekwere signed for his firm, while Talentedge’s Managing Director Mr. Aditya Malik, and Head, International Business, Ms Sreedevi Sreekumar signed for their firm in Mumbai, India.

    According to a statement, Talentedge (formerly known as KarROX), through its multiple product lines, offers a bouquet of learning courses such as individual learning programmes, campus learning programmes, corporate education programmes and government training programmes.

    It added that the deal will bring a rich bouquet of ICT training applications that have already helped change IT learning in India and other developing nations. The agreement would also allow Linkserve to open training centres and work with other sub-franchisees to increase the educational knowledge base in the country for a better trained employment workforce.

    Speaking on the occasion, Malik said: “We are extremely delighted to sign an agreement with Linkserve Group as part of our endeavour to change the landscape of education in Nigeria by introducing affordable and quality education for millions of students. Even though we have been operational in Nigeria as karROX, we are now re-entering the country with renewed vigour by partnering with a strong player in the IT industry like Linkserve. We hope to replicate the high standards of education set by us in India in Nigeria.”

    Onyekwere said: “This partnership is in line with the company’s vision to bring to the Nigerian market quality educational training matched with the innovative spirit of Linkserve as a true IT pioneer in Nigeria. Talentedge and Linkserve would help the Federal Government improve the quality of IT education and to ensure that Nigeria truly benefits from the increased advancement in this field.”

     

    Talentedge aims to set the benchmark for quality and accessible education in both India and abroad. Whether it is about providing executive education from leading universities or certifications from the best colleges in India and International certification bodies, Talentedge is always on the forefront of providing quality education to students.

  • Expert decries high cost of internet service in Nigeria

    Expert decries high cost of internet service in Nigeria

    An Ilorin-based Information and Communication Technology (ICT) expert, Mr Rasheed Olajogun, said high cost of Internet service was affecting businesses in the country.

    Olajogun stated this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) over the weekend in Ilorin.

    He said a lot of businesses could be done if there was “affordable, steady and stable Internet service”.

    He said students in various institutions of higher learning in Nigeria would also boost their studies if Internet service was affordable.

    The ICT expert noted that affordable cost of the service would also improve research work in the nation’s universities, as well as improve data collection, which he said the country was lagging behind.

    “The fact that the country’s education system now revolves round Internet usage means that the service must be affordable.

    “The federal government must also ensure that Internet is available in rural areas too.

    “This will mean that candidates from there need not to come to the city to register for their JAMB, NECO and WAEC examinations,” he added.

  • Legislative perspectives on technology convergence

    Oftentimes, human nature bestows on us the instinctive and sprawling capacity and capability to vacillate between extreme options of bad and good demeanour under varying circumstances, but the reality of modern society requires and demands that caution, restraint, modesty, monitoring supervision and reward system are needed and compelling – to establish peace, guarantee orderliness, encourage civility, imbibe fellowship, pursue egalitarianism and promote justice for the smooth, modest, organized and unfettered cohabitation and coexistence of humans everywhere.

    Thus, to all intents and purposes, various forms of governance are devised and put in place for the proper management of society to enhance peaceful coexistence, equitable distribution of resources and opportunities, engender smooth interaction within and across borders and foster unity and harmony amongst the people. The basic irreducible minimum required for the smooth running of society is the establishment of the “rule of law” to guarantee peace, order and good governance. Such an arrangement manifests in the “legislation” of virtually every sphere of human endeavour. These legislations manifest as a body of laws, rules, regulations, acts, bills, statutes, enactments and ordinances – all of which form the barometers to drive all the various sectors of society – social, economic and political.

    Please observe that all such legislations derive their potency, legitimacy, authority, inspiration and strength from the constitution of the country that ideally and ab initio represents the will, yearnings, aspirations, inspiration and resolve of the hoi polloi. Whilst giving verve to the citizenry and support to all established institutions, the essence of legislation therefore, is to observe, monitor and regulate not only the behaviour of the people as they interact – to avoid skirmishes or breaches of the rule of law, it is also designed to ensure and manage overall best practices in governance, commerce and business – thereby stimulating progress and fostering growth and sustainable development in its full ramifications. This stance and gift of legislation is even more so relevant when the popular and well-acknowledged sanctuary that could underwrite and give succour to the yearnings and aspirations of the people, is the government of the people by the people for the people – this arrangement happens to be the government of the day, here. In fact, political pundits relish and extol democracy as the best form of government currently known to man – the world over.

    In the end, every sector of society relies on legislation to operate or function well and be part of world order that is the harbinger of international best practices in all perspectives. Technology and its evolving convergence are surely part of this legislative wholesomeness.

    The foregoing is to acknowledge and underscore the incontrovertible importance of legislation as the live wire of a nation more so a developing one as Nigeria. Its impact on the concomitant services generated by the development and deployment of technology – distinct or convergent, is invaluable, as the purpose of technology itself, is to bring about welfare, security, comfort and fulfilment to the citizenry – culminating in growth and sustainable development for the country, at large.

    In the quest for comfortable, luxurious, safe and secured living especially, since the outset of industrial revolution, man has constantly and irrepressibly toiled in the cumulus waters of research, dynamic innovations and creativity to discover, develop and deploy technology – the scientific knowledge behind machinery and equipment that are meaningful and useful to humanity in time and space. The continual efforts of researchers – in the ambience of an ever-increasing demand for cognate services at the marketplace, have brought about gargantuan and meaningful developments in various fields across the globe – thus, enhancing growth and sustainable development for the socio-economic and political advancement of society. Incidentally, Information and Communication Technology (ICT) has been at the frontiers and over time, at the front burner of development – steering and managing every sector of human endeavour. Today’s ICTs are the drivers of the current global connectivity that has turned the world into a converged global village. Indeed, this growth vehicle (ICT) has turned around small and big economies and still enhancing the fortunes and prosperity of its developers and those that imbibe the culture which Information and Communications Technology (ICT) revolution brought in its trail.

    As ICT presents an indomitable and inescapable footprint and launching pad for the development of all socio-economic and political sectors, it is therefore the chosen technology on which platform we could examine technology convergence and its interplay with legislation and regulation at the marketplace. Given its sprawling impact on technology development, economic and commercial influence coupled with its widespread use across the globe, the telecoms technology as epitomized by the mobile cellular phone technology especially the GSM

    extraction, is leading the way and direction in the ICT family. The shrinking and ongoing convergence of the erstwhile distinct sectors of telecoms, computing and broadcasting or multimedia, in the face of flourishing broadband technology (fixed and mobile) is the case at issue. It is no longer flummoxing to observe that with a single piece of mobile device you could talk (voice), send text messages (data), browse the Internet (data), watch football matches or drama (video), discuss on live television and radio (media streaming), do online shopping (data), engage in mobile banking (data) or mobile music (voice), enjoy location-based services (data) like personalized weather service or real-time traffic data and also have the benefit of other information services like stocks or horoscope etc. Indeed, the list is virtually endless.

    THE CONVERGENCE ISSUE

    Technology convergence is the fusion of erstwhile distinct or separate technologies and indeed, technical entities to achieve a desired synergy of functionalities, management and more diverse and bespoke services. Thus, heterogeneous or separate technologies, systems and networks are continually brought together and implemented using common protocols to enhance uniformity, seamlessness and interoperability – thereby, providing a wider range of diverse services whilst, achieving savings in capital (CAPEX) and operational costs (OPEX) for the network and service providers. A very glaring and incontrovertible front-burner case at issue, is the Information Communication Technology (ICT) in which networks merge, markets merge, services merge and users even merge – all, eliciting a total convergence in the evolutionary ICT domain. Indeed, the convergence between fixed and mobile networks and services often referred to as Fixed and Mobile Convergence (FMC) in the ambience of robust broadband technology that is rapidly diffusing and closing the hitherto, distinct boundaries of Telecoms, Computing and Broadcasting or multimedia sectors, has brought about a number of policy, legislative and regulatory issues.

    LEGISLATION AND REGULATION

    The aftermath of globalization of the recent past culminated in the deregulation of the entire marketplace albeit, in varying degrees and also laden with geocentric hue across the globe. Whilst deregulation encourages and promotes competition thereby allowing markets forces to determine pricing regimes and other market processes and procedures, the need to protect consumers from unwholesome and unbridled practices of some industry practitioners – for instance, incumbent or dominant operators, however, has become exceedingly necessary and imminent.

    To all intents and purposes, legislation gives the regulation of ICT – both in its distinct forms and divergent character, the empowerment and teeth with which to bite and reprimand any erring network or service provider who contravenes any provision of the licence conditions in the course of providing services, irrespective of location – within and across borders. Essentially, such sanctions and penalties that regulators impose for market abuse as a post-licence oversight responsibility, range from monetary fines – a percentage of company’s turnover, modification of licence and additional licence obligation, to outright licence revocation.

    The policy, legislative and regulatory challenges that are thrown up at the instance of ICT convergence are mainly on licensing with its attendant reverberations. Ab initio, specific services or a generic group of services were deserving of separate licences but with convergence, a service provider can now deliver multiple services (converged) to a customer with a single subscriber number on which one bill is raised, and the customer is also served from a single integrated network rather than two distinct (fixed and mobile) terminals. Incidentally, such a flexible service provisioning that obliges a consolidation of different services in a generic categorization or the unification of all services under a single licence or concession referred to as a “Unified Licence” also promises a reduction in operational costs and complexity.

    This convergence posturing that is being adopted worldwide, as opposed to the traditional service-specific orientation, is based on the principles of technology and service neutrality.

    There is also the so-called licence-exempt case that is a total departure from the erstwhile licensing procedures. Here, most administrative and traditional formalities are jettisoned giving way to ordinary registration or even simple notification to the regulator of the intent to offering services.

    Although a wider range of services have been brought into the fold through these over-simplified and flexible reforms, policy-makers and legislators alike are still mulling over the reverberations these reforms are gradually seeping into the industry and marketplace. However, this challenge does not detract anything from the recognition the reforms are giving the rights and obligations of network and service providers. Other important areas of interest where consideration is essential include, spectrum assignment and use, interconnection and numbering scheme.

    •Bello, A former Managing Director of NITEL presented this paper at West Africa Convergence Conference in Lagos

  • ICT institute graduates 90

    Ninety students have graduated from the Lomket Computer Institute, Ibafo, Ogun State.

    The students, who trained in computer appreciation, computer science, computer engineering, advanced computer graphics, desktop publishing and special certificates courses celebrated with their friends and families at the institution’s hall.

    Speaking at the Sixth Convocation of the institute, its Director Mrs Olusola Olomola, said one of its aims is to educate the youth on how to make use of computers in line with global trends.

    She said: “We are passionate about our students and what they learn; that is why we use updated software in all our tutorials. We give them qualitative and quantitative education and hope they will make use of it to improve (ICT) in Nigeria.”

    With the high rate of unemployment in the country, chairman of the occasion, Mr Olanrewaju Olayokun counselled to think out of the box, and create jobs, thereby exploiting their talents.

    At the end of the event, outstanding students were presented with awards and prizes. Eighteen-year-old Onyichi Kanayo emerged overall best student for the session and also best in computer science.

    The Computer Engineering prize went to Nwafor Peter; Desktop publishing, Mohammed Sani; Computer Appreciation, Daudu Seun; while Jamiu Daudu clinched the computer graphic award.

     

  • Group targets 10,000 pupils for ICT contest

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Talent Hunt in partnership with Siama Technologies Limited and Nova Strategy for School Growth, has pledged to involve about 10,000 pupils from both public and private primary schools in Lagos State in its 2014 talent hunt computer competition.

    The group’s National Coordinator, Mr Kingsley Kalu spoke at the second annual presentation of prizes to winners of 2013 talent hunt competition.

    Kingsley said the 2012 and 2013 editions were restricted to private schools because of limited resources, promising that with the two partners coming on board, more pupils would participate in 2014.

    A pleasant surprise for Kingsley and other judges was that the best contestants did not come from elitist schools.

    This means that pupils have what it takes to prevail irrespective of where they are from if given the necessary assistance and exposure, he also said the competition, though only in its second edition, has helped to expose the innate abilities of the children, none of whom are above 12 years.

    He urged other Nigerians and corporate bodies to work together to invest in children and stop waiting for the government to do everything.

    Five schools were presented with prizes at the event. The first prize of a laptop computer went to Evans Happy Home Nursery/Primary School, Ojodu. Double Glory Nursery/Primary School won a desktop computer for coming second; while Yemkem International Nursery/Primary School got a standing fan for placing third. The fourth and fifth placed prizes were taken by Children Home Nursery/Primary School and Spring flower Nursery/Primary Schools which got wall clocks.

    The chairman of the programme and proprietor of Barachel Group of Schools, Pastor Joshua Alonge, who was represented by Mr Agidi Albert Kayode, Head Teacher, admonished all school owners to take the issue of computer education seriously stressing that no meaningful development can take place without effective use of the computer.

    The Managing Director of Siama Technologies Limited, Mr Iyke Nwaneche assured schools in the state that the firm has a flexible policy aimed at assisting them acquire computers – including free installation of application and educational softwares, and free internet installation.

    Addressing school proprietors at the event, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Nova Strategy for School Growth, Mr Samuel Sayo Ajayi, said running a successful school business has gone beyond acquiring classrooms and gathering children and teachers together.

    He underscored the importance of relationship building and management to the success of schools.

    “To win and keep relationships, your sentences have to be appealing, you have to put in empathy, place yourself in the shoe of the clients. The modern school success is not only dependent on teaching of ABC but equally on relationship building and management. Thought on how to make your life a center of attraction and the way you present and relate with your clients (parents and staff members) is the key to the success you want for your school”, he said.

     

  • ASUU strike: Whose interest really?

    ASUU strike: Whose interest really?

    SIR: They say when two elephants fight the grass suffers. On July 3, academic life in Nigerian public universities was interrupted as ASUU commenced their indefinite strike. It’s the fifth month now and we’ve observed daily as ASUU and our government play hardball over who’s right or wrong, while students – the grass in this case – languish at home, hoping that the two elephants will have mercy on them.

    For those who do not know, ASUU is on strike again because Federal Government has not yet implemented all the terms of the agreement it ‘willingly’ entered with ASUU in January 2009 and subsequently re-negotiated in 2012.

    Well, as a product of the university system, I fully understand ASUU’s plight. Over 2000 engineering students squeezed into a 750 capacity lecture theatre, listening to a single lecturer and still expected to assimilate and pass is a sham. Having obsolete equipment in a technical workshop, or teaching a technology student to make a hoe and write computer programs using FORTRAN 1977 in the year 2013 is simply iniquitous.

    So in essence ASUU seems to be saying: Our schools are underfunded; our allowances must be paid; our union must be respected and our demands met.

    The Federal Government on the other hand has said neither it nor ASUU knew the exact cost implications of their agreement before signing. Yet 66 capable hands from both sides worked on that agreement!

    As this catfight goes on, the third and the most important party in this university business, the students have been conveniently forgotten! They’re not in the negotiation committee; they’re not involved in the debate!

    In chapter 2 of the 2009 agreement, the issues for renegotiation were clearly stated by ASUU as Conditions of Service, Funding, University Autonomy/Academic Freedom and then Other matters. Under conditions of service they stipulated their salary and listed lots of fringe benefits by way of welfare packages and earned allowances (e.g. graduate supervision allowance, field trip allowance, etc); allowances that represent payment for rendering the very service that makes them lecturers! There wasn’t much about the students and their welfare demands. My question is; is ASUU really fighting because students are having a substandard education or is this all about ‘unionism’ and monetary benefits? In any case, their salaries will still be paid for the months they did not work, unless the government is keen on implementing the no-work-no-pay policy which ASUU will definitely reject. Theirs is sweet vacation.

    What is in it for the students? How come students pay huge fees and still register courses manually, pay ICT dues, health insurance etc. A pre-degree student pays roughly N50,000 as school fees, and another N25,000 as acceptance fee in a federal university. My alma mater takes N10,000 to send a transcript to an institution abroad, and N5000 within Nigeria. Where are all the post UME fees and the IGR, the TET fund, PTDF fund, ETF, alumni dues, private sector contribution; what are they used for? And with all the injustices listed above, students have not shut down their schools. Their union has not held ASUU and federal government by the jugular to demand better education. Should ASUU not learn from the students? Now who is ASUU really fighting for?

    • Anyiam Nnaemeka,

    Abuja.

  • Why telcos shun indigenous software, by NCC

    Why telcos shun indigenous software, by NCC

    THE Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has described indigenous software as pedestrian, saying that is a major reason telecoms operators do not patronise them.

    Director, New Media and Information Security at the NCC, Dr Sylvanus Ehikioya, blamed this development on the dearth of relevant modern development tools and a few tertiary institutions offering computer science in the country.

    He said one reason local software are not patronised by telcos is that software skill is a technical skill and you do not just put any software. Most computer science graduates are incapacitated because of the environment they find themselves; majority of them don’t know how to create applications using modern development tools.

    “Two, those of them that know how to use modern development tools do not go beyond the mundane software. What I call the mundane is the inventory system or point of sale. All these are local things. Telecoms is a specialised technology that requires some specialised skills and unless you work in that environment you will not be able to fit in,” Ehikioya said at a forum on Confirmation of Reasonableness of Services for Foreign Exchange Transaction in the Telecommunication Sector: Trends, Challenges & Way Forward in Lagos.

    According to him, to grow indigenous ICT capacity, the NCC has made it clear to the operators that those things that could be handled by Nigerians must be exempted from the invoices presented to the NCC for foreign exchange (forex) approval.

    “From the NCC perspective, in order to help us grow local capacity, we are saying that things that involve inventory, human resource management, event management and ticketing, those can be created locally,” he said.

    He added that the regulator encourages local capacity building through training offered at the Digital Bridge Institute (DBI) and support to the Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria (ISPON)

    He said: “We are reviewing submissions from academia in terms of the project we want to fund. We at the NCC are doing everything possible to ensure that local content in telecoms sector is enhanced.

    “If you look at the position of the NCC, we said that it is not all software that we will allow payment for any longer. There are certain software that can be created by boys from Otigba (Computer Village) if we encourage them and that is where the ISPON into play.”

    They interact with the NCC most of the time to help in the development of Nigeria local content.”

  • Kcee, Chindinma, Don Jazzy for MTN Chat Room

    Kcee, Chindinma, Don Jazzy for MTN Chat Room

    As a fall-out of its successful digital marketing of Nigerian artistes’ songs, MTN has hit another landmark, with overwhelming social media engagement, within the space of two weeks, with record tweets and interaction following its ongoing musical concert and tour, tagged MTN ‘Loud in Naija’.

    According to the MTN’s Events and Sponsorship Manager, Mr. Okundola Bamgboye, who spoke with reporters yesterday said popular artistes such as Wizkid, Banky W and Davido, amongst others, have been twit guests, on the ICT and Telecommunications Company’s Twitter handle chatting and engaging the network service provider’s Twitter followers.

    Bamgboye said public has been delighted knowing more about these artistes as they get answers to questions, especially those relating to the concert, their personal lives and issues surrounding the entertainment industry – most notably, Banky W., whose involvement with MTN has begun a widespread rumour, linking him to joining the league of MTN ambassadors and musical super-stars, soon.

    “Meanwhile, Kingsley Okonkwo, aka KCEE, who just recorded over a million download on MTN Callertunez, in less than two weeks, after the launch of his debut album, ‘Take Over’, will take over discussions, this week Wednesday, on the MTN Twitter handle, to further establish the digital revolution and charge led by Nigeria’s largest ICT company and elaborate more on the next concert, coming up in Abuja, this weekend. He will be preceded by the MTN Project Fame season 3 winner, Chidinma while Don Jazzy take turn on Thursday” he said.

    Bamgboye noted that over the years, MTN has been in the fore-front of delivering innovative services and organizing events that match the consumers’ desires.

    He went on that:” This is the reason why it is taking the ‘Loud in Naija’ musical concert to different cities, across the country, to give its subscribers a memorable experience, as the yuletide approaches.

    “It is imperative to ensure that the consumers’ passions and love for entertainment be put into consideration, this is why MTN has come up with a most unique musical concert, featuring Nigeria’s array of musical superstars”.

    He also established the fact that the company has never relented in its efforts to cause a massive revolution in entertainment and digital engagement.