Tag: mistakes

  • Private varsities learn from mistakes

    Private varsities learn from mistakes

    Private universities are better managed because they avoid the potholes public universities have fallen into, says Prof Johnson Eze, Vice-Chancellor, Novena University, Ogume, Delta State.

    In an interview, Eze said private universities learn from the mistakes of older public universities because their administrators have worked in public universities for years and know what to correct.

    He said: “Because most of the senior staff in all these private school have been exposed to the same situation in public schools or some have come from abroad where things are better and, therefore, they can say well we must have a change and go after the change.

    Commenting on the limited number of PhD holders in the university system, Eze said the minimum qualification set by the National Universities Commission (NUC) for lecturers and the length of time it takes to get the PhD in some institutions means not enough of them can be produced in good time.

    He said: “The minimum qualification for lectureship is lecturer two. Lecturer two is what you come to after assistant lecturer. If you have a master’s degree, you start as a graduate assistant, that is, you don’t lecture officially, you help senior lecturers. After assistant lecture, the next grade is lecturer two. And the NUC is insisting that Lecture two qualification is PhD. If PhD is the minimum qualification for teaching in the university, how many PhD holders do we have in the country, or how many PhD holders are our universities producing yearly. Does it correspond with the ratio of undergraduates in our institutions?”

    Speaking on what Novena is doing differently, the professor of Plant Eco-physiology said the 10-year-old institution is training students who will be self-reliant on graduation.

    “In the next five years the indication is very strong that Novena will be making a great deal of progress in producing manpower not only for university, teaching, and for job but for also entrepreneurship. We will not just be producing job seekers but be producing job creators,” he said.

    Already, he said products of the institution are excelling within and outside Nigeria.

    He said: “In 2011 alone, two students of Novena University won international awards. One of them was Miss Vivian Nwafor, a Biochemistry student, who has always topped her class, won an international award in South Africa. Miss Tessy Askia, a Computer Science graduate of Novena University was the best graduating Masters degree student of Business Information in a university in London and was also given an international award.

     

     

  • Cote d’Ivoire: We must avoid silly mistakes – Ideye

    Cote d’Ivoire: We must avoid silly mistakes – Ideye

    Before the Tuesday game, you people have been complaining about the pitch, how can you describe Royal Bafokeng Stadium?

    The pitch helped us in the game against Ethiopia on Tuesday because we kicked the ball on the ground and the pitch stop the bouncing of the ball. I think the pitch played an important role on Tuesday.

     

    Against the Cote d’Ivoire it is going to be a tough one for us. How do you guys see the match coming up on Sunday?

    It will be a big game no doubt about that. We know how important the game is and everybody here knows how important the game is for Nigerians. We will go all out and make sure we bring victory to our country.

     

    We have not been seen more goals from the strikers, what do you think responsible for it?

    I don’t know the reasons. We might not score more goals but the most important thing is that we are winning matches. For me I am okay with that.

     

    Like how many goals should we be expecting against Cote d’Ivoire on Sunday?

    We will go all out and win I can’t promise of any goal, the most important thing is that we win and we have to make sure that we win on Sunday.

    Nigerians back home expecting nothing sort of victory from the team.

     

    What assurance are you giving them and what are you expecting from Nigerians too?

    We will do our best like we’ve being doing in our previous games and it is God that will decide what will happen on Sunday.

     

    You are one of the Nigerian players that have played in major league. You must have used to these Ivoirian players. How tough do you think the game will be for the Super Eagles?

    It will be very difficult game for us. I think right now we’ve leant our lesson from all the games we’ve played. I think we don’t have to do the same mistake we’ve committed in the previous games. We just have to make sure we keep the ball on the ground and be very calm in the game.

     

    Some are saying the Ivoirians team are full of names and of cause; their name is enough to scare any team.

    Yes, if you see their team they have all the big names. This day’s names don’t play football I believe if we give our best something good can come out of it.

     

    Thank you for talking to SportingLife

    It is my pleasure.

  • Mali crisis: US admits mistakes in training local troops

    The US military commander in Africa says the Pentagon made mistakes in its training of Malian troops now trying to oust Islamists from the north.

    Gen Carter Ham of United States Africa Command (Africom) said its forces had failed to train Malian troops on “values, ethics and a military ethos”.

    He spoke  after reports of abuses by Mali government troops taking part in the French-led counter-offensive.

    Meanwhile, air strikes have been reported near the northern city of Gao.

    The militant stronghold came under fire as the military operation entered its third week.

    Islamists seized the north of Mali last year and have imposed a strict interpretation of Sharia, or Islamic law, on its inhabitants.

    France intervened militarily on 11 January to stop them advancing further south.

    However, human rights groups have since accused Malian troops of killing Arabs and ethnic Tuaregs as they advance north.

    The claims caused alarm in the West, particularly in the US, which has been training troops in Mali and neighbouring countries to tackle the militant threat for several years.

    Gen Ham said Malian troops were given plenty of tactical training, but not enough ethics training.

    “We were focusing our training almost exclusively on tactical or technical matters,” he told a forum at Washington’s Howard University on Thursday.

    “We didn’t spend probably the requisite time focusing on values, ethics and a military ethos.”

    The general said not enough was done to convince Malian recruits that “when you put on the uniform of your nation, you accept the responsibility to defend and protect that nation, to abide by the legitimate civilian authority that has been established, to conduct yourselves according to the rule of law”.

    “We didn’t do that to the degree that we needed to,” he added.

  • KESHI ROARS: Avoid mistakes against Zambia

    KESHI ROARS: Avoid mistakes against Zambia

    Super Eagles coach, Stephen Keshi has said that despite the not-too-impressive outcome of the first match against Burkina Faso on Monday, his wards are set to clinch the three points at stake today against defending champions Chipolopolo of Zambia in the ongoing African Cup of Nations in South Africa.

    Speaking in the pre-match press briefing yesterday at the Ingwenyama Conference and Sport Resort in Nelspruit, the Big Boss as he is fondly called said his players have learnt from their mistakes and that the match against Zambia is an opportunity to make amends.

    “We have had some training sessions after our disappointing first outing against Burkina Faso and I think the mistakes made should not occur again.

    “The defenders especially have been worked on and we expect that we can secure our place in the quater finals with this win,” he said.

    He however admitted that another draw will be detrimental to the set goals of the team, adding that winning the encounter is not negotiable.

    The Super Eagles today in the second match of their AFCON campaign square-up against Zambia needing a win to be in a vintage position for a place in the quater finals.

  • We’ll work on our mistakes —Manu

    We’ll work on our mistakes —Manu

    The head coach of the Golden Eaglets, Manu Garba (MFR) has reassured Nigerians that they would see a completely different U17 national team in the return leg match in Bamako in a fortnight.

    Coach Manu in a chat with SportingLife shortly after his wards laboured to a 2-0 win over the Aiglonets of Mali in the first leg of the final round of the African U17 Championship qualifier played at the U.J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar, noted that his boys played slightly above average on a day they missed gilt-edge chances.

    He however said that the coaching crew would deliberate on the team’s areas of weaknesses and then correct the players ahead of the return leg.

    “We created a lot of chances which we missed. We will have a round table discussion and deliberate on what went wrong and right in our last game.

    “I believe in the next match we will see a different Eaglets that are very clinical in attack.

    “After every training session we always address the problems we had from our previous matches, this will not be an exception. Before we go for Mali we will address the problems noticed,” Manu disclosed.