Tag: KWASU

  • Make KWASU software research-based institution – VC

    Make KWASU software research-based institution – VC

    The Vice Chancellor, Kwara State University, (KWASU) Malete, Abdulrasheed Na’Allah has advised its Software Development and Innovation Team to make the university a software research-based institution.

    Na’Allah gave the advice on Friday in Malete, Kwara, while inaugurating the university’s 22-member Software Development and Innovation Team.

    He said the team should among other things conduct research and develop software in advanced technological areas possible.

    “This should be in service to KWASU and the larger Kwara, Nigeria and the global community.

    “We want people to be coming in and out of KWASU to get solution to their problems in terms of the software you will produce.

    “So, you have the mandate to acquire grants in support of your activities and boost KWASU’s Internally Generated Revenue drive.

    “Your mandate also includes collaboration with I.T. providers, such as Google, Oracle, SAP and Microsoft and also collaborate nationally and internationally with educational institutions,” Na’Allah said.

    He said that the team should be able to impact on the immediate environment by creating original and patented softwares that would relate to people’s social way of life.

    “I am charging the team to act local and think global, then think global and act local in the sense that, they should put our social way of life into consideration.

    “This is because many things done in technology these days are copied in such a way that they are not reflected to the local reality, hence they are short-lived.

    “So, it is important that when one is innovating anything, you look at the social way of life of the audience.

    “Think out of the box to develop softwares that can help villagers, market women and other members of the community as a whole,” Na’Allah said.

    Prof. Bayo Lawal, the Coordinator to the VC on Research and Industry, also told  the team to encourage students, especially the exceptional ones.

    He advised the management to try and send some members of the team for training out of the country.

    In her acceptance speech, the Chairperson of the team, Hajia Hassanah Bello, said the they would work together as a team to achieve the best for KWASU, Nigeria and the world at large.

    “We promise that we will be an African ICT Hub where original softwares will be produced.

    “We will be as interactive as possible with people within and outside this community to encourage interaction,” she said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that among the 22 member-team, five are Alumni of the institution, while four of them are students.

     

  • N3.2 bn earmarks  for take-off of KWASU’s 2 campuses

    N3.2 bn earmarks for take-off of KWASU’s 2 campuses

    The Kwara State Government has earmarked N3.2billion for the take-off of two new  campuses of the Kwara State University (KWASU) to be sited in Osi and Ilesa-Baruba.

    The state Commissioner for Information and Communication, Alhaji Babatunde Ajeigbe, disclosed this on Thursday during a news conference on the outcome of the State Executive Council’s meeting held on Wednesday, Feb. 22.

    The briefing was also attended by the Special Adviser to the governor on Legal Matters, Mr Suleiman Atolagbe, the Senior Special Assistant (SSA), Dr Muideen Akorede and the Chief Press Secretary (CPS), Alhaji Abdulwahab Oba.

    Ajeigbe said the N3.2 billion was for the construction of roads, students’ hostels, lecture theatres, offices and water reticulation for the two campuses.

    According to the Commissioner, the projects will be funded from the Kwara Infrastructural Fund (IF-K) based on Public-Private Partnership (PPP) framework.

    He said that Gov. Abdulfatah Ahmed of Kwara would soon perform the ground-breaking of the projects.

    He said the council deliberated on the white paper report of the visitation panel to KWASU and approved the appointment of two deputy vice-chancellors for Academic and Administration.

    According to him, the approval was in line with the laws that set up the university that says deputy vice –chancellors should be appointed to assist the vice- chancellor in the running of the university.

    Ajeigbe added that the council also looked into the various aspects that were considered to be militating against the smooth running of the university.

    “The council resolves that all the university’s organs should work according to the ambit of the law that establishes the university,” Ajeigbe said.

    The commissioner, therefore, said that all courses being offered in the university but not in tandem with the law should be scrapped.

    The council has directed the university’s authority to scrap the Legal Administration and Portuguese Language department while it should establish a Faculty of Law.

    The commissioner also said that the state executive council had approved the establishment of a new School of Governance and Business to be located in Ilorin, the state capital.

    Ajeigbe also said that the state government would access the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s N1billion Agriculture loan to be disbursed to farmers in the state.

    He said that a large expanse of land had been acquired in Kwara Central Senatorial District for the pilot project.

    He said that the state government would screen the farmers that would benefit from the loan so as to be sure that they were genuine.

    Ajeigbe said that the project would be an off-taker scheme whereby a farmer would identify what he wanted to plant.

    The farmer would also be connected to an off-taker that would buy the produce from him after harvesting.

  • Corruption caused Nigeria’s woes – Varsity dons

    Corruption caused Nigeria’s woes – Varsity dons

    Nigeria’s current travails are attributable to corruption and African time mentality, Vice Chancellor of the Kwara state University (KWASU), Malete, Prof. Abdulrasheed Na’Allah and President, Nigeria Association of Mathematical Physics (NAMP), Prof. Garba Babaji have said.

    Prof Na’Allah lamented that it was shameful that Nigeria, despite its enormous human cum natural resources is incapable of paying its workers’ salaries.

    He spoke this in Malete at the 26th annual colloquium and congress of NAMP which was hosted by KWASU.

    The vice chancellor charged academics to collaborate with industries through their researched works in finding solutions to Nigeria’s problems.

    He said: “Academics work with government to move the society forward; question is; what are the results of those meetings that we have had with government? In Nigeria, no extra-ordinary things happen. As academics, we must understand that our responsibility is to make life better. It is a shame that a nation as rich as Nigeria cannot pay its workers’ salaries. We are the largest in Africa. Human resource alone is very huge.

    “The country cannot pay its workers’ salaries because we have almost totally been swallowed up by corruption. We have failed to tap the 24 hours information technology to move the nation forward.

    “I challenge all of us here to use our theories to collaborate with industries to move this nation forward. The responsibility of engaging in research and development rests squarely on the shoulders of academics.”

    Also speaking, Prof Babaji said: “The way forward is what individuals can do to make life better for all Nigerians. As mathematicians and physicists, we must make sacrifices for the nation. We must bear in mind that Nigeria can only be positively changed by Nigerians, therefore, we must individually and collectively utilize our resources in executing useful work. Mathematically, the most important factor that determines the output of any transformation is the operator. We Nigerians are the operators for the much needed positive transformation of our country.”

  • KWASU recalls suspended dons

    KWASU recalls suspended dons

    The Management of the Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete, has reinstated six lecturers, who were suspended indefinitely for harassing the institution’s Chief Safety Officer (CSO).

    A report by a panel on the issue, noted that the unnamed CSO was harassed while trying to address a group of academic staff, including the suspended lecturers, found holding a meeting in the Visual and Performing Arts (VPA) Open Theatre without official permission to use the facility.

    A statement signed by Dr. Isiaka Aliagan, Director, Office of the University Relations, noted: “Using the VPA Open Theatre without official permission and harassing and abusing an officer of the University while performing his lawful duty, were considered by the university management to be acts of gross misconduct, which are not only inimical to the integrity of the University, but also undermined the authority of the University.

    “Thus, the university management, having decided that by such act, the affected academic staff members have contravened the extant provisions of the Code of Conduct for staff, approved their suspension from duty with immediate effect until further notice.”

    The management referred the matter to the Senior Staff Disciplinary Committee.

    The affected lecturers, were served their letters of suspension, and directed to hand over all university property in their possession to their superiors and have been barred from entering the university campus, especially academic areas.

    However, the lecturers were reinstated on Tuesday after amicable resolution of the issues.

    The affected lecturers were  Prof Innocent Okoye (Department of Mass Communication), Dr. Dauda Adeshola (Mathematics), and Mr. Dairo Paul, (Bioscience and Bio-technology).

    Others are Dr. Gafaru Olorisade (Business Education), Prof Christopher Odetunde (Aeronautic and Astronautic Engineering), and Dr. Ayotunde Alao (Mass Communication).

     

  • Rumpus in KWASU over proposed ASUU

    Rumpus in KWASU over proposed ASUU

    Teachers at the five-year -ld Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete and the management are set for a showdown over the former’s plan to form KWASU’s chapter of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    Members of the academic staff hasve inaugurated KWASU’s ASUU caretaker committee, preparatory to the formation of the union.

    The chairman and secretary of the caretaker committee are: Dr Dauda Adeshola and Dr Shehu Abdul-Ganiyu Salau.

    But the management has described any form of unionism on campus without its consent as illegal.

    Adeshola, shortly after his inauguration, urged members to be resolute in their determination to bargain for better conditions of service. He assured that the proposed association would not contravene laid down rules and regulation.

    Interestingly, the caretaker committee had informed the management of the inauguration of KWASU-ASUU. A letter dated August 17th, 2015 and signed by Adeshola stated thus: “This is to officially inform the university management and the academic community that ASUU, KWASU chapter was officially inaugurated on Thursday the 13th of August, 2015 where a caretaker committee was set up for the take-off.”

    The letter entitled: “Inauguration of ASUU, KWASU chapter,” was addressed to the registrar.

    “We pledge the loyalty of the union to the university authorities and the government of Kwara State. Kwara State University established in 2009, is now about to witness union activities after the five-year waiting period stipulated by both the National Universities Commission (NUC) and KWASU conditions of Service and Regulations,” the letter added.

    A circular by the principal/protocol officer, KWASU, Hamidat Yusuf, described the meetings that cumulated to the emergence of the caretaker committee as “illegal, cultic and combative unionism.”

    The circular reads: “This is to inform the university community that the management is aware of groups of KWASU staff holding clandestine meetings in odd venues in Malete in the name of cultism or combative unionism.

    “The university wishes to warn all concerned that this is illegal under KWASU rules and no nefarious clandestine group, no matter what name it disguised itself, will be recognised by the university. The university only recently attained five years of peaceful and purposeful academic calendar.

    “An acceptable legal unionism for students, academic and non academic staff will be ushered in within an open framework with active participation of management and all concerned. No amount of effort by the handful 17 staff that met outside the campus and held cultist meeting to create chaos in the school will succeed.

    “The police, office of the university safety and other security agencies have been put on alert to monitor these nefarious individuals and each of the 17 staff or any other who might be misguided is hereby warned.

    “A timetable will be published at appropriate time for peaceful unionism. Some gangs are obviously sad about the peaceful nature of KWASU in the face of national difficulties and seek to cause disaffection with government.”

    However, the Provost College of Information and Communication Technology, Prof Innocent Okoye expressed his happiness on the development.

    “For the first time, I am feeling that I am in a university. For once an issue of common interest is being discussed and people are taking sides based on their interests. It is very good for KWASU. So let the controversies continue; conflict is needed for change to take place.”

    The provost who said he was at the meeting from beginning to the end, protested that the meeting was not clandestine, having been convened with prior knowledge of the Nigeria police and national headquarters of ASUU.

    Also reacting, Head of Department (HOD), Aeronautics and Astronautics, Prof Chris Odetunde is disappointed that any peace-loving administration will address peaceful gathering as an illegal union.

    “If the administration enjoys controlling the going and coming of faculty, staff and students then it should change KWASU to Kwara state secondary school; KWASU is a citadel of learning for matured thoughts and cross pollination of ideas. Such circular needs to be retracted as it dislocates the peace on campus. It is unconscionable,” Odetunde added.

  • Row in KWASU over unionisation

    Row in KWASU over unionisation

    Authorities of the Kwara State University (KWASU) and academic staff are on collision course over plan to form the institution’s branch of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    The academic staff recently inaugurated KWASU’s ASUU caretaker committee preparatory to the formation of full blown ASUU activities.

    The chairman of the caretaker committee is Dr. Dauda Adeshola while the secretary is Dr. Shehu AbdulGaniyu Salau.

    But management of the institution described any form of unionism in the school as illegal.

    Dr. Adeshola shortly after his inauguration urged members to be resolute in their determination to bargain for better conditions of service for members in the university.

    He assured that the association would not contravene laid down rules and regulation of the institution.

    The caretaker committee subsequently officially informed the management of the formal inauguration of KWASU ASUU.

    In letter dated August 17th, 2015 and signed by Dr. Adeshola said; “this is to officially inform the university management and the academic community that ASUU, KWASU chapter was officially inaugurated Thursday the 13th of August, 2015 where a caretaker committee was set up for the take-off.”

    The letter entitled: “Inauguration of ASUU, KWASU chapter,” was addressed to the school registrar.

    The letter added; “the inauguration which took place at E-place Plaza, Malete had five protem officers after a keenly contested election. They were elected to run the affairs of the union until a new exco is elected.

    “We pledge the loyalty of the union to the university authorities and the government of Kwara state. Kwara state University established in 2009 is now about to witness union activities after the five-year waiting period stipulated by both the National Universities Commission (NUC) and KWASU conditions of Service and Regulations.”

    In a circular by the Principal/Protocol Officer, KWASU, Hamidat Yusuf said that described the meetings that cumulated in the emergence of the caretaker committee as “illegal, cultic and combative unionism.”

    The circular reads: “This is to inform the university community that the management is aware of groups of KWASU staff holding clandestine meetings in odd venues in Malete in the name of cultism or combative unionism.

    “The university wishes to warn all concerned that this is illegal under KWASU rules and no nefarious clandestine group, no matter what name it disguised itself, will be recognized by the university. The university only recently attained five years of peaceful and purposeful academic calendar.

    “An acceptable legal unionism for students, academic and non academic staff will be ushered in within an open framework with active participation of management and all concerned. No amount of effort by the handful 17 staff that met outside the campus and held cultist meeting to create chaos in the school will succeed.

    “The police, office of the university safety and other security agencies have been put on alert to monitor these nefarious individuals and each of the 17 staff or any other that might be misguided is hereby warned.

    “A timetable will be published at appropriate time for peaceful unionism. Some gangs are obviously sad about the peaceful nature of KWASU in the face of national difficulties and seek to cause disaffection with government.”

  • Soyinka for KWASU convocation lecture

    Soyinka for KWASU convocation lecture

    •732 to graduate Saturday

    Nobel Laureate, Prof Wole Soyinka is scheduled to deliver the convocation lecture at the third convocation of the Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete on Saturday.

    At a briefing on Tuesday, Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof AbdulRasheed Na’Allah, told reporters that the renowned Professor of Comparative Literature would speak on a topic that is relevant to the present situation in the country, adding that “Professor Soyinka would speak from his heart”.

    He said 732 students would graduate this year – with six from the faculties of Information Communication and Technology (ICT) and Pure and Applied Sciences bagging first class honours degrees.

    One hundred and seventy-four others would get Second Class Upper, 549, Second Class Lower, and three would be awarded third class.

    The Vice Chancellor, who said the graduates of the university had been prepared with academic and entrepreneurial knowledge, added that some got funds from the university to start businesses, even while on campus, with the aim of making them job creators.

    He, therefore, appealed to parents of the graduates to support and encourage them in their determination to create wealth and be solutions to the country.

    The vice-chancellor also called on the corporate organisations, government, and others to partner with the university on research outputs.

    Asked his expectation from the new government, Na’allah urged President Muhammadu Buhari to revitalise public education in Nigeria.

    He said: “Most of us here are products of public education. We were ready to defend our schools as the best. We had the best teachers; best equipment and we had the passion to make the difference in the world. Today unfortunately, most Nigerians who have something good for their young people prefer the private schools. Today sadly too people have no more confidence in public schools.

    “I think this government must take revitalisation of public education as one area of major change for Nigeria. If public education is revitalised and parents begin to have confidence in public education a lot of changes will come to this nation.

    ‘’The Federal Government should declare state of emergency on public education and mobilise state and local governments to revitalise public education in Nigeria.”

  • KWASU establishes Centre for Nollywood Studies

    KWASU establishes Centre for Nollywood Studies

    The Kwara State University (KWASU) has established the Centre for Nollywood Studies that will be headed by American scholar cum Hausa film critic, Dr Carmen McCain.

    The establishment of the centre, according to KWASU Vice-Chancellor, Prof. AbdulRasheed Na’Allah, is in line with the institution’s commitment to pioneering an internationally recognised research centre for Nollywood and Cinema Studies in Nigeria.

    He made the disclosure at a three-day conference of playwrights, convened by erudite playwright and scholar, Femi Osofisan, in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital.

    “Aside from the Film Village that we have already established, we have established the Centre for Nollywood Studies because we believe that Nollywood is so important. We want to shape Nollywood to become the pride of the nation and provide an environment where film production will thrive,”he said.

    To accomplish the set goals, Prof. Na’Allah said, Dr McCain of KWASU School of Visual and Performing Arts, has been appointed the acting Director of the centre. The appointment, he said has been approved with immediate effect, adding that it is sequel to the success of the committee, which was earlier inaugurated by him, to see to the establishment of the centre at the institution.

    According to a letter signed by the Registrar, Mr Surajudeen Oyebode, Dr McCain, who also lectures at the Department of English, “is expected to work with notable scholars locally and internationally to set up the centre as a globally recognised research destination for Nollywood and cinema studies,” adding that the appointee also “has a mandate to create and administer the KWASU Film Archive; develop and manage the centre, in collaboration with the University Library, the KWASU Film Archive. She is also expected to host visiting research fellows, conferences and seminars; and conduct studies, educate and publish cinema materials, among others.”

    According to the Registrar, “The appointment is in recognition of Dr McCain’s exemplary accomplishments and wealth of experience in the film industry”.

  • Why we banned indecent dressing, by LASU, KWASU

    Why we banned indecent dressing, by LASU, KWASU

    The Lagos State University (LASU) and the Kwara State University (KWASU) have introduced new dress codes.  They have outlawed the use of lewd clothes and related materials. Some students applaud the move; others are not comfortable with it. But the institutions are defending their actions, warning that errant students will be sanctioned, report Kofoworola Belo-Osagie, Adekunle Jimoh, Ilorin, Adegunle Olugbamila, Oluwatoyin Adeleye and Everistus onwuzurike

    The Lagos State University (LASU) and the Kwara State University (KWASU) have outlawed indecent dressing on their campuses. Under the new dress code regime in KWASU, girls are not to wear sleeveless or blouses with deep cleavages, mini-skirts and transparent clothes; the boys cannot wear shorts, dungarees, earrings and afro hair style.  They can also not sag their trousers or plait their hair. Both sexes cannot wear tattered (or flowery) jeans, heavy jewelry, ankle chain or slippers; nor can they pierce their bodies (nose, mouth, tongue).

    Besides, the school barred the cohabitation of male and female students on or off-campus.  In the past, both sexes had separate hostels  on campus. Some of those living off-campus co-habited.

    A student (who does not want to be named) described the measure as an infringement on students’ freedom, right to associate and interact without hindrance.

    At the Lagos State University (LASU), banners listing the 19 prohibited dressings are displayed at strategic points on the campus.

    Some of the rules are similar to KWASU’s. in addition, students are barred from using  clothes with obscene inscriptions, fez caps or any other face covering, wearing ties loosely (for boys), rolling up sleeves, and wearing artificial hair beyond shoulder length, among others.

    While some students of both institutions like the new dress codes, others fault the rules for “infringing on our human rights”.  Those on the dissenting side are more in LASU than KWASU, where the students generally think the dress code is good.

    One dissenter at KWASU thinks  the rule barring co-habiting is harsher than the one against indecent dressing.

    The student, who did not wish to be named, said: “Universities worldwide are supposed to be citadels of learning (where students enjoy) universality of freedom, though that freedom is not licensed. It is also assumed that anyone admitted into the university is matured, both in character and mind. These latest restrictions on cohabitation are a serious affront to our rights.”

    On the dress code, another student, Henry Abdul, said it would promote good behaviour.

    “It will make us responsible. Hitherto, the way some female students dressed and went about on campus was far from decent. With the new dress code, I think some normalcy will be in place. The dress code should not be strange to any of the students that are morally and spiritually brought up.,” he said.

    For Zainab Masud, a 200-level student, the code is ideal for a school like KWASU, which is domiciled in a rural setting and a pre-dominantly Muslim community.

    “Coming from a Muslim family and being a Muslim, I am cool with the newly-introduced dress code. When you look at reasons for the introduction of the new dress code, one will understand the kind of environment one is operating and what is expected of one.

    “This is Kwara State and not Lagos or Rivers, where you see students dressing like they are in American movies.  Kwara is mostly an Islamic state. I think they are just trying to discourage provocative dressing which is already becoming rampant among some students,” she said.

    Femi Jimoh noted that only those who disobey the dress code have reasons to worry.

    “We are complying now and those that are yet to find it easy to comply with are being identified every time for punishment,” he said.

    At LASU, harassment of students that do not comply with the dress codes starts from the gate. The eagle-eyed security officials either frisk suspicious students or prevent anybody who falls foul of the dress code from entering the campus. Sometimes, detained students are grouped together by the main gate and questioned before eventually being released.

    Shola Sobanjo (not real name), a 200-Level English student, has been delayed by the security before and almost missed her class.

    She said: “It was in the morning on Monday.  My friend and I were about entering (the main gate) when security people said she could not enter because she was putting on a pair of slippers. We then pleaded that it was a flat leather slippers and not the usual bathroom slippers. One of the security men even touched it to confirm it was made of leather yet they could not yield. By the time they eventually allowed us, it was  halfway into the morning lecture.”

    Another student (names withheld) claimed that the security officials now use the measure to extort money from defaulters.

    “Harassment has now become a daily thing. I can tell you that security officials now use the opportunity to extort money from students before they let them in. Even things that do not amount to indecent dressing, they will claim it is, just to get a tip from defaulters before allowing them in,” he said.

    Many of the students do not like the new code, arguing that as adults, they should be able to do what they like.  They also said an institution in Lagos ought to be more liberal.

    Ibukun Fashuanmi said of the code: “(It is) an inconsiderable restriction of the expression of the students’ fundamental human rights.  Our freedom to express ourselves in fashionable yet self identifying style has been robbed from us.  We are students for God sake; and need to enjoy the freedom the university setting presents in its totality without an iota of fear.  Most of the students are above 18 hence know what the ideals of the society really are.”

    Elizabeth Danilola thinks such code should not exist in a public school.

    “I think it is absurd. Those kinds of laws will make ground in private schools not a public school.  This is not the time for them to be making obnoxious laws. It can never work.  How do they expect us to change our dress code now when we didn’t start like this?” she asked.

    LASU students also believe that the enforcement of the code may not last and have criticised the selective implementation of the code.

    A student who identified himself as Segun, and is studying Law, said some students dress indecently and are not punished.

    “As far as I am concerned, the management is just being hypocritical.  Every day, they (management) keep mouthing this dressing code; you see the dress code flying all over the place; yet you see students with indecent dressing on campus and wonder how they escaped from security officials. The truth is that some students come into the campus with vehicles but nobody cares to check what they are wearing,” he said.

    However, one student, Kayode, thinks the code is for a good cause.

    “Frankly speaking, I support the school’s decision on the new dress code. I feel their aim is just to cut excessive dressing among students. What the management wants to achieve is to ensure that students dress moderately and responsibly to school, thereby preparing them for the labour market. Some students just dress any how or over- dress as the case may be,” he said.

    On the dress code in KWASU, Vice Chancellor, Prof Abdulrasheed Na’Allah, said rules and regulations are not negotiable.

    He said: “There is a freedom in choosing where you go for education. Nobody is compelled to come to KWASU. Different factors are considered in choosing a particular university.  Let the world know that KWASU has made a decision on the kinds of strategies it wants to operate. It is a choice the university has made.”

    Na’Allah said students have been cooperative on the new rules, describing them as “some of the extraordinarily well behaved students you see anywhere.”

    Regarding the law that outlaws co-habiting of male and female students off-campus, the vice chancellor said it was introduced to check rape, which had become a problem for the university.

    He said: “Recently we recorded very high cases of rape, which disturbed the university. You are aware that we have male and female students off campus. Here on campus no hall has male and female students domiciled together.

    “That is why we decided to enforce the strategy of keeping both off and on-campus female and male students in different dormitories. We are now involved in setting guidelines and encouraging developers to meet our guidelines. We are grateful since we started that the rape cases have fallen.

    Prof Na’Allah said the university was inspired by the example of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), which is running a stable system.

    “Because of the crisis of cultism, it is really important for a university like our own to look at the examples of other universities around Nigeria. How are they addressing some of these issues? University of Ilorin is close to us. UNILORIN is doing some exceptional things that are helping to enforce some of these regulations. You discover that some academic disciplines even adopt some very good dress codes.

    “These are the kinds of reasons that encourage us to emphasis on students’ decent dressing. It is the way you present yourselves that people see you and there is nothing wrong in an academic environment, to encourage people to dress in an acceptable manner in the community.

    “When you get back to your home you can dress the way you like but not in the university. It is good you have an opportunity to interact with one another but let the university have the trust that we are dealing with somebody who is disciplined, who has good character and is able to adapt to certain regulations.”

    Na’Allah also said that given the location of the university, it must respect the culture of the host community.

    “Again, we are in a rural area. We have come to live with the community.  It will not be fair to say ‘to hell with these people’ because we are a university. No, they have some values, they have some techniques. The way the universities in Ilorin, Lagos, Calabar and others dress may not be the way we do here, because of the sensitivity of the rural people and because we are a university for community development. Community is important to us. So we took all these into consideration in doing what we do.”

    On his part, the LASU Vice Chancellor, Prof John Obafunwa, said the dress code was not new but just being enforced for the first time.  He said it was not to impinge on rights but to make the students learn to dress responsibly at all times.

    “Why would you want to have as a student someone that wears slippers to class?  Go and look at the mode of dressing in private universities, they look decent and wear shoes,” he said.

    Obafunwa added that the institution’s enforcement of proper dressing is to guard against sexual harassment.

    “Sexual harassment is not an excuse by our colleagues but students can cause it through indecent dressing,” he said.

    The Vice Chancellor also said the level of compliance was good, particularly among boys.

    At the University of Lagos (UNILAG), arguably the headquarters of campus fashion in Nigeria, there is no formal dress code.  Notwithstanding, there are places on campus where some kinds of dressing are not allowed.

    The Deputy Dean of Student Affairs 2, Dr Karo Ogbinaka, said students are not allowed to wear informal clothes that expose their body.

    “There is no specific dress code. The rules that are not allowed include: sagging for boys, barring of chest, etc. For girls, exposure of sensitive parts, short clothes, spaghetti tops, hot pants. These are purely informal wears that are not expected of people we are training for leadership,” he said.

    Ogbinaka also said any level of management can insist on proper dressing.

    “Some boys who have problems would come here to complain and just wear bathroom slippers thinking, ‘it is just that office across there.’  But we tell them that no; the office may even be under your hall, but you must be properly dressed before you can come to the student affairs office. So specific levels of management have the authority to enforce the rules from their discretion,” he said.

    Also, students are not allowed to wear sleeveless or shorts into the Senate Building and the library, while some faculties, like Law, have departmental dress codes.

    However, the students support the fact that there is no general dress code they are forced to abide by – though they said it is important for students to dress responsibly.

    Donald Asakitikpi, a 200-Level student of Mass communication said some lecturers insist on proper dressing, which has helped him as a person.

    “They enforce those rules in some departments, though. Like mass communication department, lecturers do not allow their students dress anyhow. They have sent me out of class many times for wearing pam slippers, or wearing shorts. They are also against boys leaving their hair too full or combing hair in public. The enforcement of the rules is very good because now, I dress better than I used to,” he said.

    Tobi Oyewole, 400 level, Petroleum And Gas Engineering student, who does not like the rule that bars shorts from Senate Building, however advised students to dress well.

    “My advice to my peers about dressing is that they should dress well – not to be wearing sweater under hot sun or sleeveless when rain is falling. I don’t believe sagging is right. The girls should also stop dressing like prostitutes. It is our duty to discipline ourselves,” he said.

    Oyewole is also of the view that rules on dress code should not apply in public schools.

    “It is okay for the rules to be enforced in religious private universities because that is the reason for which they were established but not in the public ones,” he said.

  • KWASU organises career exhibition

    The Counselling and Career Services Centre (CCSC) of the Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete, has organised a programme tagged Career Fair Exhibition for students and fresh graduates of the institution.

    The programme in its maiden edition provided an avenue for the graduating students to display their talents and exhibit what they have for the labour market.

    Speaking at the event, Mrs Olabisi Adedigba, the Coordinator of the centre, noted that the objective of the fair was to bring together KWASU students, different organisations and employers to meet the yearnings of the university to produce graduates who would not be job seekers but employers of labour.

    Adedigba explained that collaboration with the organisations was necessary because they were in the best position to lead the students’ right, adding that they would be able to point out what the market needed and what the students were expected to bring to the labour world to attract potential employers.

    “As graduating students of this great institution going into the world of work, it is important to intimate them with the information they need to be relevant graduates in the market. This fair will give them a unique insight into that which they need, to be relevant in the market especially in the 21st century,’’ she said.

    Dr Yomi Akindele-Oscar, an Associate Professor of Health and Counselling Psychology at Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, in his paper titled: Habits of Highly Effective Job Seekers in a Down Market,  advised the students on the appropriate precautions and habits expected of a job seeker.

    He warned that the career-life journey of an applicant is filled with challenges, adding that only graduates who are adaptive to change can survive and win the race of employment.

    In her address titled: Vital Strategies to Maximise your Career Success Dr Mary Ogechi Esere, a lecturer at the Department of Counselling Education, University of Ilorin, stressed that self-discovery was the key to a successful career.

    While identifying the importance of the possession of team spirit in any chosen career, she said: “No matter how hard you work or how many brilliant ideas you may have, if you can’t connect with the people who work around you, your professional life will suffer’’.

    She advised against pessimism, poor-self-confidence and low self-esteem, saying they were anti-career.

    For, Kwara State University, all activities were geared towards building the individual and a great nation while developing everyone to become elements of change.

    In his presentation, titled: Building an enduring entrepreneurship drive before and after graduation, Dr Muritala Awodun, Dean, School of Business and Governance, said career life was full of obstacles. He explained that failure was not falling to the ground but the inability to rise after one has fallen.

    In his remarks, Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Prof AbdulRasheed Na’Allah, said the event was to ascertain the activities of the university as a university for community development.