Tag: lecture

  • Amen for AAU 52nd Inaugural Lecture

    THE Provost of the College of Education, Ekiadolor, Benin, Prof Amen Uhunmwangho, will deliver the 52nd inaugural lecture of the Ambrose Alli University (AAU), Ekpoma today.

    The lecture with the theme: The politics of Language,will start at 2pm with the Vice-Chancellor of the university, Prof C. A. Agbebaku as chief host.

    Uhunmwangho, a professor of English, also said that over 17 students of the College of Education, Ekiadolor, have been expelled between 2009 and 2015 for various offences including cultism.

    Speaking through the public relations officer of the institution, Rev. D. E. Agbonwaneten said 18 students were also suspended indefinitely for cult related activities in 2013.

    Meanwhile, the college recently filled about 100 vacant positions.

     

  • Asiodu lecture series debuts

    Some concerned technocrats and business executives have instituted the Philip Asiodu Lecture Series (PALS) in honour of Chief Philip Asiodu, renowned economist, technocrat, retired permanent secretary, ex-minister.

    In a statement by Chairman of the Organising Committee, Peter Osamgbi, said Chief Asiodu approved the institution of the Lecture Series because of the need to x-ray Nigeria’s economic challenges with a view to proffering solutions.

    This year’s theme is: The Proper Role of Oil in the Context of Accelerating Growth and Development

    The event will hold on February 22, at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs, Victoria Island, Lagos.

    Vice President and Treasurer, World Bank, Arunma Oteh, will be the guest speaker. The  event will be chaired by foremost industrialist, Chief Chris Ogunbanjo.

    Former Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon will be the Special Guest of Honour.

  • Nuel Mark & Partners plans anniversary lecture

    Renowned firm of estate surveyors and valuers, Nuel Mark & Partners, is set to mark its 10th anniversary.

    As part of the events to mark the milestone, the company would hold its first ever annual lecture titled: ‘Land acquisition, affordable and sustainable housing development in the Niger Delta region,’ slated to hold in Port-Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    With well over 400 choice property strategically located all over Nigeria, this industry game changer specialises in all facets of the thriving property management and consultancy business, which include development, appraisal, preparation of feasibility and viability reports on proposed projects and sourcing of development finance, valuation of assets, among others.

    Speaking at an interactive media session, Emmanuel Mark, Lead Consultant and Head of Practice of the firm said: “Our tested reputation based on experience, maturity, professionalism and prompt service delivery remains our hallmark.”

    The company has also hinted of plans to officially unveil a Non-Governmental Organisation, The Nuel Mark Foundation on November 26, 2015 as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility.

    The Foundation, according to Mark, is another opportunity to give back to the society.

  • Crescent University’s 7th Convocation Lecture

    Monologue

    University is a city of perspiring dream which some people turn into inheritable reality but which others keep in perpetual suspense.

    The knowledge that propels the world into great hopes may sometimes be packaged in the University classrooms or laboratories.

    But the basis of such knowledge is surely outside the University. The most knowledgeable human beings in history never knew anything called University. Yet, they ventilated the environment that brought University into being.

    Crescent University, Abeokuta held its 7th convocation on Saturday, October 10, 2015. But its Convocation Lecture which yours sincerely was privileged to deliver came up a day earlier (Friday, October 9, 2015).

    The theme of the lecture was ‘Moral Education and Nation Building’. The intention was to publish that lecture in this column today. However, since the lecture was too lengthy to be published in a single edition of ‘The Message’ column, culling an excerpt from it may not be a bad idea. Please, read on:

     

    Preamble

    Any time I remember an historic inscription once placed conspicuously at the main entrance of the University of Cordoba in Spain, my heart throbs. The inscription goes as thus:

    “The world is sustained by four formidable pillars: The Wisdom of the Learned; the Justice of the Great; the prayers of the Righteous and the Valour of the Brave”.

    It must be noted that the key words in that inscription are four: Learning, Justice, Righteousness and Bravery. Those words are the real factors of ethics and morality embedded in the University curriculum from inception. The factors were coined to accentuate the high level of discipline and fear of Allah required to form the character of an average University graduate.

    Those factors simply summarise the essence of temporal and spiritual life of man in all ramifications through the vehicle of education. Without them, no life can be said to be worthy of living and no education can be rightly proclaimed.

     

    University of Cordoba

    For those who did not know, University of Cordoba was the very first formal and standardised University ever established in the world. It was established in the mid 10th century CE by Caliph Abdur-Rahman III of the second Umayyad dynasty who ruled in Spain from 912 to 961 CE. University of Cordoba preceded the three oldest universities in the world today: Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt; Qarawiyyin University in Fez, Morocco and Zaytuniyyah University in Tunis, Tunisia. Each of these universities is well over 1000 years old now.

    It was at the University of Cordoba that the Christian Europe first came in contact with the yoke of the knowledge that fetched it what is now called modern civilisation. Thus, at a time when the city of Cordoba under the Muslim rule, was styled ‘The Jewel of the World’ by the Europeans because of its beauty, serenity and grandeur, the University of Cordoba stood out as a second to none citadel of learning in the entire world.

     

    Attestation

    To attest to this fact, a French Historian of the 20th century and author of ‘The Civilisation of the Arabs’, Gustave Le Bon, had the following to say:

    “At an epoch when the rest of Europe was plunged into the darkest barbarism, Baghdad and Cordoba, the two great cities where Islam held sway, were centres of civilisation which illumined the whole world with the light of their brilliance”.

     

    Arabic Numerals

    If some people in the present generation are still in doubt over the above narration and quotes, then, we can shift our focus to a related but more familiar terrain that has no shadow and cannot be doubted.

    At least most of us can still recall that the numerals which we inherited from our colonial masters are called Arabic numerals. Those are the numerals with which we were taught mathematics in schools when we were young. They are the same numerals with which we now conduct our economic activities. It was through those numerals that Muslim intellectuals introduced the figure called zero (0) into the world thereby bringing decimal system into being. Today, everyone knows that without decimal system the achievement of any scientific advancement would have been impossible.

     

    The Roman Numerals

    Before the invention of zero by the Muslims, Europe had relied heavily on the clumsy system of Roman numerals which required enormous expenditure of time and labour. For instance, while the decimal system makes it easy to write such figure as 1848 in only four numerals and within a second, the Europeans used to write the same figure as follows: MDCCCXLVIII in Roman numerals.

     

    Essence of Zero

    The real essence of inventing zero (0) by the Muslim intellectuals was not just to advance the course of science and technology for academic purpose but also to boost human morality by facilitating transparency in economic transactions that could be devoid of manipulation and thereby prevent corruption.

    This further confirms that the end result of education in those days was not just to obtain certificate but to pave way for civility. But can there be any civility in the absence of good human conduct? This is where the question of ethics and morality comes in. It is through high level of discipline and sound ethics that exemplary leaders emerge.

     

    Qualities of Leadership

    University is so named because of the universality of certain human norms and mannerism that distinguish between man and animal. This does not however make it for anybody aspiring to leadership to pass through a university. The greatest leaders in history never passed through a university education even as the most educated human being that ever lived (Prophet Muhammad (SAW), was an illiterate. Yet from the fountain of his education many nonentities have become professors in various fields of learning while many more (literate or illiterate) people across nations and continents have become employees of Islam.

     

    Education and Literacy

    The difference between education and literacy is grossly misconceived in Nigeria. While the one is universally beneficial to all and sundry, the other is beneficial only to the so-called literate. Whereas education is about knowledge, cultural value, responsibility and legacy, literacy is about momentary material benefit that can never become a legacy or a heritage. The death of a literate person connotes the end of literacy in him while an educated person lives on even long after his demise. Prophet Muhammad is a typical example of the latter.

     

    Benefits of education

    Our ancestors who domesticated plants and turned them into edible foods did not attend any school and were therefore not literate. It was from their education that we came to inherit how to turn cassava into gari and eba and yam into yam flour (amala) and pounded yam (iyan) and maize into pap (Eko). It was from their knowledge also that we came to turn melon (egusi) as well as locust beans (Iru) into nutritious soup. It was also those ancestors who cultivated cotton and silk without learning textile technology in any classrooms, and turned them into fabrics with which they designed a variety of dresses for men and women of different generations.

    Thus, if we wear such dresses as Buba and Iro as well as Agbada, Danshiki, Oyala and the likes today it is due to the sound education of our illiterate ancestral fathers and mothers rather than the ingenuity of our literacy. As a matter of fact, the modern Professors have not added anything tangible to those foods and dresses despite their five star certificates in nutrition and textile technology. If anything, they have rather used their so-called literacy to bring various diseases and immorality into the world through malnutrition and nudism. Whereas education abhors corruption literacy encourages and upholds it.

     

    Pseudo-Education

    Today, what remains of most Nigerian universities is mere nomenclature attributable only to literacy rather than education. Even such literacy has so evidently dwindled to a stage of mockery that one sometimes wonders if university as an institution of learning in Nigeria still has anything tangible to contribute to education for the benefit of mankind. The quality of most Nigerian graduates today is so un-befitting to the status of the tertiary institution called university that the phrase ‘University Education’ has virtually a mockery. This is because the main objective of seeking admission into Nigerian universities these days is just to obtain certificate that can serve as meal ticket rather than education that can pave way for quality life.

    The heavily pregnant inscription quoted at the beginning of this speech, in respect of the University of Cordoba, is quite symbolic of the intellectual and humanitarian qualities of the initiators of university education. It enabled the Muslims of that time to pilot the world, with knowledge, into the realm of what is now termed ‘Modern Civilisation’. It constitutes the summary of good leadership theoretically and practically whether in the primordial or contemporary times.

    It connotes the necessary equanimity with which excellent leadership is managed and maintained in any sane society. That is what a well-focused university should be. That is what Crescent University is grooming its graduates to become. We pray Allah to enable the Crescent University also become as great in history as the notable universities that preceded it. Amin.

  • Corona School anniversary lecture today

    Corona School anniversary lecture today

    Corona Schools will hold its 60th anniversary lecture at Muson Centre Lagos today.

    The lecture forms a part of an array of activities that have been lined up between October and November to celebrate the school’s three score’s anniversary.

    Director, Corona School Trust Council, Mrs Olufunto Igun, said the lecture with the theme: ‘Teaching and learning in the next generation’ is part of Corona School’s contributions to the nation’s education sector.

    According to her, the lecture will be delivered by Johann Ari, of the Larusson Centre for Digital, Analytics and Adaptive Learning, United States of America.

    The lecture, Igun said, would also feature an interactive session among participants drawn from education, civil society parents, school administratiors and government representatives among others.

    It will be recalled that CSTC kicked off the anniversary last month with a press briefing, Alumni get together as well as an art exhibition.

     

  • Crescent University’s 7th Convocation Lecture

    Monologue

    University is a city of perspiring dreams which some people turn into inheritable reality but which others keep as dreams in perpetuity. The knowledge that propels the world into greater hopes may sometimes be packaged in the University but its basis is surely outside the University. The most knowledgeable human beings in history never knew anything called University yet they ventilated the environment that brought University into being.

    Crescent University, Abeokuta, held its 7th convocation on Saturday, October 10, 2015. But its Convocation Lecture which yours sincerely delivered came up a day earlier: Friday, October 9, 2015. It was a lecture too lengthy to be published in a single edition of this column and ‘The Message’ doesn’t serialise articles. But an excerpt from it is brought here today. Please, read on:

     

    Preamble

    Any time one remembers an historic inscription once placed conspicuously at the main entrance of the University of Cordoba in Spain, the heart throbs. The inscription read as follows:

    “The World is sustained by four formidable Pillars: The Wisdom of the Learned; the Justice of the Great; the prayers of the Righteous and the Valour of the Brave”.

    It will be noticed that the key words in that inscription are four: Learning, Justice, Righteousness and Bravery. Those words are the real factors of ethics and morality embedded in the University curriculum from inception to accentuate the high level of discipline and the fear of Allah required to reflect in the life of an average University graduate.

    Those factors simply summarise the essence of temporal and spiritual life of man in all ramifications through the vehicle of education. Without them no life can be said to be worthy of living and no education can be rightly proclaimed.

     

    University of Cordoba

    For those who did not know, University of Cordoba was the very first formal and standardised University ever established in the world. It was established in the earlier part of the 10th century CE by Caliph Abdur-Rahman III of the second Umayyad dynasty who ruled in Spain from 912 to 961 CE. University of Cordoba preceded the three oldest Universities in the world today: Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt; Qarawiyyin University in Fez, Morocco and Zaytuniyyah University in Tunis, Tunisia. Each of these Universities is well over 1000 years old now.

    It was at the University of Cordoba that the Christian Europe first came in contact with the yoke of the knowledge that fetched it what is now called modern civilisation. Thus, at a time when the city of Cordoba under the Muslim rule, was styled ‘The Jewel of the World’ by the Europeans because of its beauty, serenity and grandeur, the University of Cordoba stood out as a second to none citadel of learning in the entire world.

     

    Attestation

    To attest to this fact, a French Historian of the 20th century and author of ‘The Civilisation of the Arabs’, Gustave Le Bon, had the following to say:

    “At an epoch when the rest of Europe was plunged in the darkest barbarism, Baghdad and Cordoba, the two great cities where Islam held sway, were centres of civilisation which illumined the whole world with the light of their brilliance”.

     

    Introduction of zero

    If some people in this generation are still in doubt over the above narration to which some well known historians have attested as quoted, then, we can shift our focus to a related but more familiar terrain that has no shadow and cannot be doubted.

    At least most of us can still remember that the numerals which we inherited from our colonial masters are called Arabic numerals. Those are the numerals with which we were taught mathematics in schools when we were young. They are the same numerals with which we now conduct our economic activities. It was through those numerals that Muslim intellectuals introduced the figure called zero (0) into the world thereby bringing decimal system into being. At least, everyone knows that without decimal system the achievement of any scientific advancement would have been impossible.

     

    Europe’s adoption of Arabic numerals

    Before the invention of zero, Europe had relied heavily on the clumsy system of Roman numerals which required enormous expenditure of time and labour. For instance, while the decimal system makes it easy to write such figure as 1848 in only four numerals and within a second, the Europeans used to write the same number with 11 numerals as follows: MDCCCXLVIII in Roman numerals.

     

    Essence of Zero

    The real essence of inventing zero (0) by the Muslim intellectuals was not just to advance the course of science and technology for academic purpose but also to boost human morality by facilitating transparency in economic transactions that could be devoid of manipulation and thereby prevent corruption.

    This further confirms that the end result of education in those days was not just to obtain certificate but to pave way for civility. But can there be any civility in the absence of good human conduct? This is where the question of ethics and morality comes in. It is through high level of discipline and sound ethics that exemplary leaders emerge.

     

    Qualities of Exemplary Leadership

    University is so named because of the universality of certain human norms and mannerism that distinguish between man and animal. This does not however pave way for a tradition in which leaders must have passed through any University before emerging as leaders. The greatest leaders in history never passed through University. Even as the most educated human being that ever lived (Prophet Muhammad (SAW), was an illiterate. Yet from the fountain of his education many nonentities have become professors in various fields of learning while many more, literate or illiterate, people across nations and continents have been employed so permanently that they can never be jobless again.

     

    Education and Literacy

    The difference between education and literacy is grossly misconceived in Nigeria. While the one is universally beneficial to all and sundry, the other is beneficial only to the so-called literate. Whereas education is about knowledge, cultural value, responsibility and legacy literacy is about momentary material benefit that can never become either a legacy or a heritage. The death of a literate person connotes the end of literacy in him while an educated person lives on even long after his demise. Prophet Muhammad is a typical example of the latter.

     

    Benefits of Education

    Our ancestors who domesticated plants and turned them into edible foods did not attend any school and were therefore not literate. It was from their education that we came to inherit how to turn cassava into gari and eba and yam into yam flour (amala) and pounded yam (iyan) and maize into pap (Eko). It was from their knowledge also that we came to turn melon (egusi) as well as locust beans (Iru) into nutritious soup. It was also those ancestors who cultivated cotton and silk without learning textile technology in any classrooms and turned them into fabrics with which they designed a variety of dresses for men and women of different generations.

    Thus, if we wear such dresses as Buba and Iro as well as Agbada, Danshiki, Oyala and the likes today it is due to the sound education of our illiterate ancestral fathers and mothers rather than the ingenuity of our literacy. As a matter of fact, the modern professors have not added anything tangible to those foods and dresses despite their five star certificates in nutrition and textile technology. If anything, they have rather used their so-called literacy to bring various diseases and immorality into the world through nutrition and nudism. Whereas education abhors corruption literacy encourages and upholds it.

     

    Pseudo-Education

    Today, what remains of most Nigerian Universities is mere nomenclature attributable only to literacy rather than education. Even such literacy has so evidently dwindled to a stage of mockery that one sometimes wonders if University as an institution of learning in Nigeria still has anything tangible to contribute to education for the benefit of mankind. The quality of most Nigerian graduates today is so unfitting to the status of the tertiary institution called University that the phrase ‘University Education’ has virtually become meaningless. And this is because the main objective of seeking admission into Nigerian Universities these days is just to obtain certificate that can serve as meal ticket rather than education that can pave way for quality life.

    The heavily pregnant inscription quoted at the beginning of this speech  in respect of the University of Cordoba is quite symbolic of the intellectual  and humanitarian qualities that enabled the Muslims of that time to pilot the world, with knowledge, into the realm of what is now termed ‘Modern Civilisation’. It constitutes the summary of good leadership theoretically and practically whether in the primordial or contemporary times. It connotes the necessary equanimity with which excellent leadership is managed and maintained in any sane society. That is what a well-meaning University should be. That is what Crescent University is grooming its graduates to become. We pray Allah to enable Crescent University also become great in history. Amin

  • Dignitaries grace VC’s public lecture

    Dignitaries stormed Oodua auditorium of the Ekiti State University, (EKSU) Ado -Ekiti , for the first Professor Oladipo Aina public lecture to mark the International Peace Day. It was organised by a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Peace Building and Human Development Centre, and the Rotary Club of Ado Ekiti.

    President of the NGO and the Club, Ayo Olowoyeye, said the decision to have the lecture in honour of Aina, who is also the EKSU vice chancellor, was in recognition of his achievements in the past five years. The theme of this year’s International day of Peace was “Partnership for peace, dignity for all.”

    Delivering the lecture, the former Registrar of EKSU Dr. Omojola Awosusi, praised Aina for running an open administration. He enumerated the types of industrial actions, as well as causes of strikes in universities while also deliberating on the legality or otherwise of strikes.

  • Lecture rooms for science faculty

    EKSU Vice Chancellor, Prof. Patrick Aina has taken delivery of multi-million naira lecture rooms Faculty of Science.

    At the handing-over, the contractor, Mr Idowu Olanrenwaju of Hydee Construction Ltd, said that the building was done to specification.

    The new edifice was the second infrastructure handed within one week-following the completion of the e-exam centre five days earlier.

    The Dean, Faculty of Science, Prof. Kayode Olofintoye, thanked Aina for the facility, noting that its completion will enable workers to increase productivity.

     

     

    Aina thanked members of staff for their cooperation adding that the vision to make EKSU a world class institution is ongoing and very fast too.

    He urged the Faculty of Science to make judicious use of the edifice.

    He also assured that the ongoing construction of the five-storey new academic building to accommodate the Vice-Chancellor’s Office and other structures would be completed soon.

  • Ezekwesili to deliver Foursquare diamond jubilee lecture

    Ezekwesili to deliver Foursquare diamond jubilee lecture

    A public lecture to mark the Diamond Jubilee Anniversary of the Foursquare Gospel Church in Nigeria holds in Abuja on Thursday at the National Christian Centre.

    It will be delivered by former Minister for Education, Mrs Oby Ezekwesili, will speak on the topic ‘The Role of the Church in Nation Building.’ It will be chaired by House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara. General Overseer of the Foursquare Gospel Church in Nigeria, Rev Felix Meduoye, will lead the District Overseers, Zonal Superintendents, pastors and members of the church, to welcome dignitaries and invited guests from all walks of life.

    The lecture is second in the series of such events to mark the 60th anniversary of the Foursquare Gospel Church, which was established in Nigeria by the missionary, Rev Harold Curtis, and his wife, in 1955.

    The international arm of the church had been founded in 1923 in Los Angeles, United States of America, by traveling evangelist, Aimee Semple McPherson. The maiden lecture marking the Diamond Jubilee had held in Lagos in May, and it was delivered by Professor Niyi Agunbiade, Vice Chancellor of McPherson University, Ogun State. The Diamond Jubilee Anniversary will be concluded in November with a special National Convention, which will attract delegates from different parts of the world, including the International President of the organization, Dr Glenn Burris Jnr.

  • Priest to present 19th UNN inaugural lecture

    Priest to present 19th UNN inaugural lecture

    A Catholic priest has been scheduled to deliver the 19th inaugural lecture of University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN).

    The lecture series were introduced 39 years ago by the institution’s Governing Council to stimulate robust research and academic excellence.

    The lecture, which only involves academic staff who have attained the status of professor, provides them the platform to showcase their intellectual prowess in their fields before the university community.

    A statement from the senate ceremonials committee of the University of Nigeria, said a famous economist and catholic priest, Rev. Fr. Prof. Hyacinth Eme Ichoku, will deliver the historic 99th inaugural lecture series on Thursday, next week, September 17.

    The lecture entitled “Health and Economic Development in Reverse Causality”, will attempt to x-ray the relationship between health and economic outcomes, as conventional wisdom and scientific evidence produced in the 1980s suggested that improved income leads to improved health of the population.

    The release said, “As the standard of living of the people improves, people tend to live healthier and longer lives, thus, it is said that the wealthier the healthier, implying that richer individuals tend to be healthier and richer nations tend on average to live healthier and have longer life expectancy. However, there are new scientific evidence suggesting that improved health leads to improved productivity, therefore, that improved health is a major determinant and contributor to economic growth and development.

    The Vice Chancellor of the institution Prof. Chukwuma Ozumba will chair the occasion, scheduled for the Princess Alexandra Auditorium, on the Nsukka campus on Thursday, September 17th.

    The UNN 99th inaugural lecturer, Prof. Hyacinth Eme Ichoku who was ordained catholic priest in 1988, joined the university in 2001 as a lecturer and rose rapidly to the status of professor in 2012, after securing a doctorate degree in economics at the university of Cape Town South Africa in 2006.