Tag: Moses Emorinken

  • We groom our graduates to be employable – DVC, Babcock University

    We groom our graduates to be employable – DVC, Babcock University

    Undoubtedly one of the frontline private universities in Nigeria, Babcock University, Ilisan, Ogun State, through its operations and forays into ICT revolution and students’ mentorship has remained unrelenting in its drive towards excellence. In this interview with Emorinken Moses, its Deputy Vice Chancellor and College of Health and Medical Sciences provost, Prof. Iheanyi Chukwu Okoro beams more light on the institutions activities, achievements and products.

    Babcock University is one of the few private universities with impressive stories to tell; can you give us a sneak peek into your activities so far?

    Well, as we speak, students have started their exams, one of the things we have going for us is stability. By the grace of God, we have not missed a single day since 1999. And one of the factors responsible for this is the online revolution going on in the institution. Some of our courses are now taken online. Before now, marking, collation, and grading of the scores of students after an examination was an arduous task. You typically would find a lecturer having to mark and grade close to 500 students. However, some of our in-house ingenious staff in the ICT unit developed a software, which is now being used for exams. It was tried last year, and within 30 minutes the exams were concluded and the results came out swiftly.

    This reduced the burden of collation of results for the lecturers. All they now have to do is input the data (scores) and the computer software automatically does the calculations and collation of results instantly.

    Secondly, as a school, we place a premium on the behaviour of our students. We believe that education is more than imbuing academic knowledge to students, but also in the inculcation of ethical and scrupulous behaviours. We train their hearts and make sure that they behave well.

    We have a way of monitoring their behaviour through a tool called the Behavioural Index. We monitor them in their hostels, chapel, class rooms etc. If a student has any infraction or misconduct, he or she is ‘demerited’. Every student has a 60 demerit point; so as a student keeps misbehaving, his or her score reduces. It is like withdrawing from ones account. When you are zero, you go on suspension, and this affects your ‘citizenship grading’. Even if you have a first class, with a zero point of behaviour, you are not graduating because this affects your citizenship rating.

    This form of assessment has also gone online. There is a central coordinating office called the BUMU office (Babcock University Merit Unit). The unit coordinates all the grades from the various points online, and they issue out the grades to the students at the end of a session.

    Can you tell us about the ‘total classroom revolution’ project?

    The Total Classroom Revolution is simply leveraging technology in the deployment of learning and the learning environment. Currently, every classroom in the school has a projector and smart boards. You can also find radio towers at strategic positions within the campus. We intend to have a cloud all over the compound, so that students can access their lectures anywhere they are within the campus. Lecturers can upload courses, and students can refer back to it by downloading it.

    All these congenial educational facilities are powered by electricity. Therefore, the school is investing heavily on a power project called Babcock Power Project, which will supply uninterrupted power round the clock. At first, we wanted to opt for a gas-powered turbine, but because of the huge cost of maintenance, we settled for a power generator that runs for 80,000 hours non-stop…on gas. By implication, it means it can run for 9 years at a stretch.

    Due to the current economic recession in the country, the project has however been stalled a bit; but, with the Naira slowly gaining stature, we hope to push the project further.

    Aside the generating power generator, there are some diesel-powered generators on ground as standby – they can run for 30 hours non-stop.

    All of these efforts are geared towards creating a congenial academic environment for the students and members of staff.

    You have spoken on the importance of behavioural competence of the students; however, focusing on the society as a whole, do you think the Nigerian youths have the right values to lead going into the future?

    To be frank with you, I don’t think we are giving our younger ones good examples. There is a saying where I am from that – ‘When a mother goat is eating the yam, the kid is also looking at the mouth of the mother goat.’ The snake can only give birth to long things like itself. This is the situation of the country now. Until we have a total revolution in the attitudes of minds and behaviours among the older generation (my generation), the concept of examples and mentorship for the younger ones will be a white elephant expenditure. The blame should not always point to the direction of the younger ones. You cannot give what you don’t have. It is my belief that when you have a delinquent child, there are at least two delinquent adults that are propelling such a child. Take for instance examination malpractice; some parents arrange for special centres for their wards; the individual running this centre is a delinquent adult, the parent seeking his or her service is a delinquent adult. Their unethical attitudes can only produce a delinquent child. These acts continue even when the child reaches an institution of higher learning; the child now believes that this is the ideal way to carry on in life. He doesn’t do anything straight anymore because he believes he has to cheat to get things done. However, if the child requests for a special centre and is rebuked instantly by the parent, this leaves an indelible impression on the child.

    My appeal goes to my generation to consider posterity before engaging in acts of malfeasance, corruption, and other related delinquent behaviours.

    This current administration has a mantra – the change begins with me! But it should go beyond rhetorics and advertisement.

    In Babcock, our motto is ‘building leadership through Christian education’. We intend to produce servant-leaders. We continually resound into the consciousness of our students that leadership is about service – it is not what you get from the position, but what you give into that position.

    Here, we have the Babcock University Students Association (BUSA), which is not a student government but an association. We train them on the values that make a complete leader, and the need to be a worthy example. Another important thing about the behaviour of students in Babcock is their responsibility to the environment. If you go round, you will not see a single piece of paper on the ground. When you come to such an environment, you will definitely look stupid to begin to drop wastes on the ground. Our students are well dressed. It is leadership by example – from the management, members of staff, and down to the students.

    Last week, the students had a seminar tagged ‘experience’, which saw the likes of Femi Falana (SAN), Charles Okafor etc. They were on ground to encourage and inspire the graduating students on succeeding. They shared personal experiences about how they became successful in their fields and careers. Also, they enlightened the students about some of the pitfalls they should avoid on their journey to the top.

    There is this assumption that a lot of Nigerian graduates are unemployable. What is your take on this? What is Babcock doing to produce ‘employable’ graduates?

    What makes us stand out is the process of producing our graduates. Regardless of the unemployment in the country, one fact remains that people are consistently being employed. For instance, KPMG, a foremost auditing firm has seen the quality of our students in accounting, and have given us 300 slots for internship every year. From those 300, they will select those that will eventually be employed. Other organisations like ICAN, ACCA, CIMA etc., are partnering with us in Accounting. In computer, the computer professional registration body in Nigeria has named Babcock a centre for excellence in training because they have seen our products. It is the same for other programmes. Also, we have been the overall best in the Nigerian Law School for two years now. That speaks volumes about the quality of our products.

    Students evaluate the lecturers – contents, methods etc., while the lecturers in turn evaluate the students. If a student fails to meet up with 75% of attendance, he or she has failed automatically – it is called “Failure due to absence” (FA).

    When students are graduating they go through a finishing school to prepare them for the labour market. Issues on how to sit at an interview, how to write a CV etc., are considered. The highlight of the programme is usually a job fair where organisations come and interview students live, and possibly recruit them on the spot.

    Finally, we have a centre for entrepreneurial studies that teaches the students all kinds of arts and craft – theory and practical.

    My worry about ‘unemployability’ also bothers on the incessant strikes that used to be preponderant in federal and state-owned schools, which is reducing gradually. This usually affects the quality of content that the lectures give as a result of rushing to meet up with the semester.

    What is the state of Babcock’s Cardiac Centre?

    We have partnered with Tristate Cardiovascular Associates from Delaware in the U.S. It is a team of experts that brings together solution to heart diseases through the collective competence of top intervention cardiologists, cardiothoracic surgeons and radiologists.

    We have developed a state-of-the-art cardiac centre, which is currently the only permanently run cardiac centre in the country today. Other centres may occasional invite surgeons from abroad to come and perform one or two heart surgeries and then go back to their country. However, our surgeons are permanently resident in the institution. The centre, which started in October 2015 have performed almost a hundred heart surgeries, and still counting.

    We are partnering with NNPC, LAFARGE, Primary Health Administrations in the country, and non-governmental organisations (NGO). They refer cases to us.

    Many universities have come to us for academic partnership; amongst them are Caleb University, Adeleke University etc.

    Our medical students go to India for their housemanship for two months each. This is because of the quality of field experience they can get from India because of its seasoned medical department.

    Our computer students also go to Poland for computer training and exposure. In fact, some students also earn an additional degree during their educational stay in Poland.

    We also partner with Birmingham University. Our International and Diplomacy students go there for two years and get their law degrees and come back. These are a few of the kinds of academic partnerships that we are involved in.

    Tell us about the awards Babcock has won in recent times.

    We have received awards from the World Branding Forum in the education segment. We got the award in 2015 and 2016 concurrently. We also received a solid 18-carat gold award plaque, based on the fact that no organisation had ever won the award back-to-back since inception.

    For two to three years now, we have won the best university in Africa award, given by the Association of African Students. We were nominated by the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS). The interesting thing is that Babcock is not part of NANS, however, their interactions with our students and the qualitative feedbacks they get informed their decision to recommend our institution for the award.

    Also, in the Nigerian Private Universities Debate (NIPUD), our students have consistently emerged tops in the last four years. We encourage our students to be the best they can be.

    Do you think that government is doing enough to encourage private tertiary institutions? Also, what can government do to encourage private tertiary institutions?

    I do not think the government is doing much to encourage private institutions because they see it as business. They only monitor and accredit them through their agencies to ensure that the schools meets up with the minimum standard, however, that is where it stops. The federal government finances government-owned universities using TETFund. Initially, private institutions have always been weary of receiving such funds because as the saying goes – he that pays the piper dictates the tune. But with the biting economic situations in the country, private institutions have started to bite their words arguing that even if the institutions are privately owned, it produces graduates for the nation at large; therefore, it should at least be encouraged with palliative and government largess like the TETFund. It is a cry of desperation because many universities are finding it difficult to cope. We implore government to give us grant in aid. By grant in aid, we mean government provides some level of financial support, monitor its usage, but do not interfere with running the school.

    Twitter: @memorinken

    Instagram: @memorinken

    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • Against All Odds: Odujinrin becomes 1st African to travel round the world

    Against All Odds: Odujinrin becomes 1st African to travel round the world

    It is a common saying that the world would make way for a man whose words and actions shows that he knows where he is going. The very inspiring story of Captain Ademilola Oyewale Odujinrin; a Nigerian pilot who began his expedition to fly round this terraqueous globe we call earth in nine months is a quintessential example of a dreamer bringing his dreams to fruition “against all odds”.

    He is the first pilot of African descent to fly solo round the world in a relatively small plane. His achievement is a great beacon light of hope to this generation; one that has totally changed the narrative for good about the African people, especially – Nigeria.

    Captain Odujinrin ‘Lola’ as he is fondly called held a press briefing on Thursday, 13th of April, 2017 at the press conference with newsmen held at the Murtala Muhammad Airport in Lagos. ‘Lola’ dedicated his achievement to the Nigerian people; especially to the younger generation of dreamers. He urged the youths to embrace hard work and persistence, and to believe that they only can make or create their luck.

    According to him, his overwhelming passion for Aviation started when he was yay high – between 7 to 10 years of age. His greatest inspiration was his late Uncle who was a pilot who sometimes take him inside the cockpit of the aircraft: That was the beginning of his unflinching zest for Aviation. “I can remember one night I was flying a kite and I noticed aeroplanes flying across the sky. Then I asked my dad where the planes were going. He replied me saying ‘they are going to Lagos – Murtala Mohammed Airport’,” he said. That was also a seminal moment for his aviation foray.

    Talking about some of the challenges that he and his team had to grapple with, Lola explained saying, “The challenges were numerous, however, the major one was the finance. However, one that was closely associated to securing finance was self-believe. If we believe enough in ourselves and our dreams, financial challenges can always be surmounted.

    The second most challenging part of the journey was the weather. In most parts of the world it was rainy season. Although in Nigeria the season for rain is usually in June, but it was different for other places. We (I and my plane) were stuck in south-eastern Asia for two months,” he said.

    His remarkable journey which began in June 2016 in Washington DC, U.S.A, was launched by the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, who blessed the voyage and described Nigeria as a fortunate country with great people capable of changing Africa for better as there is one Nigerian out of every four black people on earth.

    The World Tour saw Lola fly over 25 countries, had 35 stops, and for 300 odd hours in his small plane which hardly provided him the opportunity to stretch his body during his time in the air for a duration of 9 months. He began his journey from Washington DC, U.S.A, to Iceland, then Europe, and into Africa via United Arab Emirates (UAE), India, and Asian sub-continent. He flew over some islands before undertaking the longest legs of the journey across the Pacific Ocean between Hawaii and California, and back to Washington DC where he ended the journey.

    Lola in some spates of emotions and words recounted his experiences while seeking sponsorship and endorsement, especially from Nigerian organizations. According to him, it is very regrettable that no Nigeria Company was willing to offer support and endorsement for the project. It took visionary and benevolent companies like Transcend, Air Djibouti, and Tolaram Group which are foreign companies to see the importance of the project, and the sundry benefits it has; not just to the companies, but to changing the narrative of the African people for good.

    With respect to creating an enabling and congenial environment for dreamers like Lola to thrive and not just survive, he said “I appreciate and understand that I was privileged to travel, however, I know we also have some Nigerians who travel and wasted the opportunity; so the argument is on both sides. What we are advocating is for the government in whose hands the destinies of these many and ubiquitous dreamers are, should create an enabling environment for them to achieve their dreams.

    “The Ooni of Ife spent sometime in the United States talking about creating an enabling environment for talent, skills, and brainchildren to find expression, application, and fulfillment.

    “Our policy wonks in the senate and the federal government need to begin to create more policies and put more concrete structure on ground that will enable you and I fulfill our Nigerian dream.

    “Also talking about the enabling environment, I was pleasantly surprised when I saw the level of infrastructures – roads, street lights etc., in Lagos. Lagos has change; now that is a positive step in the right direction.

    Lola restated that the reason for him embarking on such a long, arduous, and sometimes dangerous journey was to be a joyous daybreak to end the long nights of psychological debacles and manacles placed upon the Nigerian youths by their environment. Everyone is a star, and should be given the right environment to blossom, boom, and not gloom.

    ‘Lola’ as he is fondly called by his friends and associates, hails from Ijebu Remo, he was given birth to in England, before his parent relocated to Lagos, and like every other Lagos child he grew up and spent his childhood in Lagos.

    Twitter: @memorinken

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    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • #BBNaija: How Efe WON by FAILING the reality TV Show

    #BBNaija: How Efe WON by FAILING the reality TV Show

    …Lessons learnt BASED ON LOGISTICS!

    I know somebody out there will be reading this piece and saying to himself or maybe laughing hysterically that the writer of this piece must be off his rocker. “How could this clownish ‘writer wanna-be’ be associating a winning brand like the logistics crooner, Efe Ejegba, with failure? This writer definitely has no clue!”

    Like Mr. Eazi will say, hey! Please HOLD UP for a second and follow my line of thought as I take you through the FAILING POINTS of our dearly beloved Efe.

    First of all, please don’t go down low. Big Brother Nigeria show is a ‘reality’ TV show where house mates are supposed to live their lives in an enclosed and controlled environment, with little or no interactions with outsiders. First, how can a TV show be real? I mean TV is generally associated with make-believe. Therefore if you are able to pretend in a very convincing manner, you can literally bring warm tears into the eyes of your audience; that is the rule of the game!

    Reasons why Efe failed the TV show:

    1.  He was very ORIGINAL:

    Take it or leave it, everyone in the show already had a script in their heads, buried within the deepest and darkest part of their subconscious. Most of the housemates started to play and display their scripts hoping to convince you and I that they are REAL. However, the only housemate who really failed in that area was Efe. He failed because he must have decided to extricate any script embossed in his mind; all he did was to come with is original and ‘diamond in the rough’ self to play the game. A wise man once said ‘TO THINE OWN SELF BE TRUE’. Efe failed the test of make-believe but won and literally stole our hearts away by being original…Believing in his make! Lesson learnt: You may fail to feign reality all in the name of a show, but you will succeed when reality shows up.

     

    2. He connected to his ROOT:

    There is something very special, almost ethereal about a man that is able to relate and connect with his root – his people, experiences, and culture. While other housemates related fairly on their connectedness to their root, Efe displayed a humongous relish and deep collection with his root – experiences with his people (Niger-Delta), his sometimes tumultuous and rickety experiences growing up, and a deep connection with his culture. Lesson learnt: In Sound Sultan’s voice: ‘no matter where you go make you no forget area o’.

     

    3. He was the LOGISTICS man:

    SEE GOOBE, Efe already volunteered to be the logistics person. He wanted to be the one to carry out all the running around; what some might call the errand or dirty job. He was not scared that someone else would take the spotlight. Please indulge me for  moment, If you are a religious person of Christian faith you might have come across the part of the bible where Jesus Christ said – he that will be first in the kingdom must first be the servant of men…I just paraphrased it. Lesson learnt: Always be willing to serve, because it is in serving that the whole world will create a path to your abode. Never be afraid of the other person outshining you…the sky is big enough for all to soar.

     

    4. He had his MOTHER’S LOVE:

    From some of the stories that Efe narrated and recounted while in the house, you will notice streaks of tales of his mother scattered around it. In this part of the world, we believe that the prayer and good will of a parent especially that of a mother, is almost as potent as the proclamation from God. I‘m sure his mother’s heart must have leaped in merriment those times she hears her son talk about her (although sometimes he gives too much information); there is no way her merry heart would not pray for him. Lessons learnt: Please and please, for those whose mothers are still alive…please treat her with love and kindness because she deserves it. Please do not allow prophets of doom and naysayers bedevil your mother to call her a witch; even if it happens that she is a witch, hers will be to protect you. Please show great love to ect you. Please show great love to your momma. For the rest of us whose mothers have gone to rest with the lord, let’s be comforted with the singular fact that she is resting and praying for us.

     

    5. He was not SUPER HUMAN:

    We are all creatures flawed with personal idiosyncrasies and foibles. Regardless of how real Efe was, he identified with his humanity and its sundry limitations. He did not try to form Robocop or Superman. He never tried to be more catholic than the pope. Instead, he made his mistakes, owned up to them, accepted responsibilities for them, and moved on. Did he misbehave a few times in the house? Yes he did! Did he get drunk at some point? Yes!! As a saying goes – ‘the best of humans is still human after all’. Lesson learnt: let us not be too judgmental of ourselves and people around because somehow we are faced and fazed with similar weaknesses – what is sometimes most personal, is also most general. Be you a teacher, housewife, lawyer, president, clergy etc., we all have blood running through our thick veins; therefore, let us tolerate people and forgive their weaknesses because the beauty of life does not lie in perfection, but in a potpourri of imperfect perfections.

    He is EDUCATED:

    Beyond being real, original, respectful etc., Efe is educated. Education is not limited to stale and sometimes banal knowledge gotten from the four walls of a higher institution, but rests heavily on the ability of a man to learn from experiences, relearn critical lessons, and unlearn unethical, unscrupulous, and amoral attitudes of mind and behaviour. From the conversations of the young man – Efe, it was clear that he was not just sound cognitive-wise, but also experientially: He was street savvy. Education (university degree) is usually not enough because the world is full of educated derelicts. Lesson learnt: Don’t just go to school to earn a degree, get an education!

    Contact Moses Emorinken

    Twitter: @memorinken

    Instagram: @memorinken

    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • Nigerian campuses: Recession in session

    Nigerian campuses: Recession in session

    There is a popular notion that Nigerians rank highly among some of the happiest people on the face of this teraqueous globe we call earth; this prevalent adulation is not one of those garbs that we wear and glo with pride or relish, but a survival and adaptive swathe that keeps us going in the hope that in the end everything will be alright. It may as well be a typical case of “suffering and smiling” according to the legend – Fela Anilulapo-Kuti (of blessed memory).

    The foray into recession in the country has morphed from being a technically correct narrative to a practical overwhelming reality for most Nigerians. In fact, according to some public and economic analysts, this is the height of economic slide and gloom that the country has ever witnessed from its inception.

    However, this piece intends to traverse the length, breadth, and width of a few campuses across the country to garner opinion polls with respect to the state of recession on campuses relative to the grotesque economic reality perpetuating the larger society.

    Taking a panoramic view at the entrance gates of most tertiary institutions all over the country, one cannot help but notice the large number of people (especially students) who enter the campus community for the purpose of study, work, business, and a number of other personal reasons. Howbeit, beaming our focus on academics; we find that it is one thing to have the capacity, enthusiasm, and willingness to learn, it is a different thing entirely to have an enabling physical, psychological, social, and economic environment where learning can take place uninhibitedly.

    The cost of living on campuses in federal and state owned schools before now has always been very reasonable and affordable especially for indigent students who engage in petty jobs – before, during, or after lecture hours in order to eke out a living for themselves.

    Prices of food items (perishable and non-perishable), study materials, printing and photocopying, transportation, prêt-à-porter, and a number of other things that are necessary for study and living on campuses are usually lower in price compared to those obtainable in towns and cities where these schools are located.

    For Damilare, a student of the department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), the cost of “survival” (as he likes to put it) on campus has doubled owing to the increased cost of what he describes as the most important inspiration for the brain – FOOD! The quantity of food he would normally spend a paltry sum on and still get filled now cost a whopping amount to buy the same quantity. For instance, a plate of rice of one hundred Naira which normally fills his plate now struggles to occupy a half section of the plate. He now has to spend two hundred Naira for the satisfaction of one hundred Naira before now. Spaghetti increased from N120 to N200, a bag of pure water (produced by the school) now goes for N150 from N80. Supply of electricity which was almost constant before is now very epileptic and transient due to rationing in its supply.

    According to him, “the cost of bottled water has increased by about 30% (that is, from N50 to N70), and because of the hot temperature and the necessity to move – to and from lectures, students sweat a lot. By implication, they have to get handkerchiefs to wipe their sweat; this also has increased from N50 to N70. Students cannot even AFFORD TO SWEAT in this recession. Nawa O!”

    For David, a student of the department of Industrial Relations and Personnel Management of the same institution, this recession era has been most unkind to him because he now has to “double his hustle”. He is the first child of four siblings – born to an artisan father (carpenter) and mother that earn just enough to subsist the feeding of the family. Out of sheer will, doggedness, and determination, he got admission to study in the university. However, he had to work as a bouncer at night to be able to provide for his academic needs, and also send some stipends to his family back home. Now, he works two jobs just to be able to keep up with the increased cost of living and study on campus. He now works on shift as a waiter in a popular fast food restaurant on the Island during the day, and maintains his bouncer job at night. This according to him has taken a toll on his health and academic performance, so much so that he now contemplates dropping out of school.

    Students of the mighty University of Benin (UNIBEN) are not left out of the recession party as is evident in some of the lucid narratives by a few of its students. For Omo, a student of the department of Accounting, her campus economics is heavily dependent on the economy at home. As a lady, she has need of a lot of things: from items for personal hygiene, study material, to feeding and transportation etc. She practically have to ration her eating time table; she hardly can afford a three-square meal. What she does now is 0-0-1 or 1-0-1; the former code meaning that she eats only at night, while the later code means she eats only in the morning and at night. In her words, “I don’t want to be involved in aristo, sugar daddy or whatchacallit, but with the way things are going, I am gradually changing my mind about it…I must survive nah!”.

    For Olabisi, of the Ekiti State University (EKSU), a student of the Faculty of Law, the narrative seems to be in tandem to that of Omo from UNIBEN. According to Olabisi, the resultant effect of the recession on her parents (who are civil servants) has had a direct effect on her. Her parents, who have not been paid their salaries for months, now have to struggle to send her monthly allowance. She now gets half the allowance because of the financial situation back home. The sad part is that the half allowance does not reach her on time: When it eventually comes, she spends all of it settling accumulated debts from friends. Also, as a law student, prices of most law books have increased. From the angle of feeding, the smallest size of bread that sold for N50 now sells for N80; a bottle of palm oil that sold for N500 now sells for N900; photocopy that costs N5 now cost N15; imagine you have to make a photocopy of over 500 pages – then, you can understand the fiscal strain this would have on the pocket. Due to the perpetually unavailability of electricity on campus, photocopy business owners have to use generators; this is a major cause of the meteoric rise of the cost to photocopy materials.

    Funmi is a happy-go-lucky student of the University of Ibadan. According to her, “I have learnt to live life as it comes – one day at a time”. The prices of food items have skyrocketed so much so that eating in a cafeteria have become a luxury – the exclusive preserve of the rich. Even if one decides to cook and not constantly visit the overtly expensive cafeterias, the cost of kerosene is a major disincentive towards cooking in the hostel to cut cost.

    Transportation cost has increased immensely. Taking a cab is now for those with deep pockets and rotund account balance. Cabs that would normally cost N70 now cost N150 (over 100%); students now have to rely on their “nomadic abilities” to be able to adjust and adapt to the changing economic weather. According to her, the recession does not seem to affect students’ performance because they have learnt, although incommodiously, to adapt to the harsh academic environment due to the economic harmattan in the country.

    “When you call home, they tell you there is ‘nothing nothing’ in the house, that they also are just managing to get by each day.” “The situation is pathetic, despicable, shameful, and lugubrious,” she said.

    Merely looking at Collins, one can swiftly come to the conclusion that all is not well. He seems to assume a posture of someone making a call; he looks worried, depressed, and frustrated. On campus in Kogi State University, the cost of support items for food such as kerosene, gas etc., has gone off the roof. Student can no longer cook every day; they now struggle to cook once or twice in three (3) day. Students now cook with firewood to save cost. The cost of materials and photocopy is now a major headache because their prices have doubled. Students find it hard to photocopy a bulky material; you now find scenarios where three or four students combine financial resources to print or photocopy a material. In turn they ration the period in which each person has left to pass the book to the other person for reading.

    In fact, social activities, programmes, and events on campuses by faculties, departments, clubs, religious gatherings etc., have been gravely affected. Programmes which would normally hold twice or thrice a semester now struggle to hold once in a session. For example, the stage plays of Theatre Art department which would normally experience a deluge of students, even with gate fees, now struggle to get a handful of audience; the turnouts in the past had always been impressive. However, this period, students complain bitterly about unaffordability of the gatepass for the stage shows – 200 naira.

    Habeeb, a student in the faculty of social sciences of Great Ife! – Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) could not hold his peace as he expressed his frustration about the unbearable reality of increased prices with respect to feeding, movement, and study materials. For undergraduates and alumni alike of the university, “risky” is a quintessential element of the OAU experience; if you haven’t eaten “risky” – a bread stuffed with fried egg and manually toasted, you are not yet a bonafide student of the school. According to him, “risky” is now very risky to eat constantly, not because it is overtly unhealthy, but because of the cost implication on your pocket money or “allawee”. The cost of everything has skyrocketed. Students have now learnt how to augment the stipend they get from home by either working on part-time basis, providing services such as makeup, tailoring, barbing, computer and phone repairs etc. Truly, if necessity is the mother of invention, “recession” is the father of creativity and ingenuity.

    Speaking with Arc. David Adio-Moses, a lecturer at the University of Lagos, he firmly enunciated that it is an overwhelming reality that the recession has hit all parts of the economy; from the prices of food stuffs, wears, transportation etc.; virtually every area of our lives has been affected by the recession.

    However, according to him, “regardless of the effect of the recession on the students and staffs alike, they (students and staff) are learning to be more prudent with their resources. Living an overtly extravagant lifestyle is no longer an option.

    “People are learning to adjust to the economic situation. If you do not spend anyhow, you will have enough to last you till the end of the month; you also learn to curtail your expenses and focus on the important things,” he said.

    With respect to the performance of students in the recession, he said the performancesof students, rather than drop has improved. “In as much as students sometimes find it difficult to feed because it is a sober period, this times, you see people who would normally not think of God or a higher being before now, begin to get closer to God.” He said.

    “You also find people you are used to living extravagant lifestyles in the past begin to leash themselves; so instead of going to parties, they sit in their hostels or classrooms and probably read more. At the end of the day, taking a cue from the last convocation, we find astounding results. For instance, History department recorded its first ever first class since the inception of the department in the school; also, we see two ladies graduating with a CGPA of 5.0 just like the first ever 5.0 CGPA last year. We see all these happening even in the time of recession. In as much as things are difficult, people are learning to be more focused.” He added.

    His advice to the government in order to elevate the country from the abysmal planes of economic quagmire to the mountain top of economic prosperity is to leverage the competence and brilliance of its denizens. “There seems to be a disconnect between the government and the brilliant minds in the country. Government needs to open up channels of communication, interaction, and partnership,” he said.

    According to him, “those with the solutions to the ubiquitous economic doldrums do not have an unhindered access to the government in order to proffer qualitative prognostications and antidotes.

    “The government needs to create an interactive forum where these brilliant minds (without ethnic, religious, and political colourations) can interact freely with the government with the sole purpose to proffering enduring solutions to the economic problems bedevilling the country.

    Arc  Moses also added that he has been researching and working assiduously on green architecture; with the level of progress made and the serendipitous prospects it holds, we can provide renewable energies cheaply from five sources namely – solar power, wind energy, biomass (waste), the rise and fall of the ocean current, and the piezo electricity (electricity generated by walking).

    “No one is tapping into all that. We have the solutions and the people, but there seems to be a sharp divide between the government and these people; if this lacuna can be bridged, the people can help the government and the government can in turn help the people,” he said.

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    Email: brandphase@yahoo.com

  • The Nation thanks God for ‘special year’

    The Nation thanks God for ‘special year’

    Members of the staff of Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation and Sporting Life, were ecstatic yesterday as the management held a special end-of-year interdenominational thanksgiving service.

    The quadrangle at the company’s premises was saturated with “anointing” from respectable clerics, who joined the the employees to give thanks to God for “a special year.”

    The thanksgiving followed the resounding achievements of the company last year.

    The Nation and Sporting Life shone at the Diamond Awards for Media Excellence (DAME), Sports Business/Media Award, Nigerian Media Merit Awards (NMMA) and PEARL Awards among others.

    The Nation is the Newspaper of the Year at the NMMA. It won five others, including Editor of the Year, Editorial writing of the Year and three individual awards.

    The service began with the a praise and worship session led by Olawale Olugbayibi, a store keeper and Moses Emorinken, the Personal Assistant to the Managing Director.

    The duo anchored the over two-hour spiritual-filled service, which featured special prayers, various hymns and a sermon.

    Editorial Page Editor Sanya Oni led the opening prayer. General Manager, Training and Development Pastor Soji Omotunde delivered the welcome address.

    Pastor Omotunde described the year as “special” for the company.

    He said: “It is great to witness this moment. Within seven years of its creation, our newspaper claimed Newspaper of the Year prize. Some newspapers are now envious of us because of our achievements.”

    He urged workers to put in more efforts to sustain the position.

    “God has placed us in the number one position. We should not go back; we are working towards sustaining that position,” he said.

    Urging the staff to be godly, Omotunde prayed that the company and its workers will “overflow” to 2014 by God’s grace.

    Deputy Chairman Editorial Board Tunji Adegboyega, who said a special prayer, thanked God for the company’s achievements.

    Pastor Steve Bulugbe, who ministered, said God had been wonderful in the last seven years.

    Quoting several lines from the Bible, the cleric said there was need for gratitude for whatever God had done.

    According to him, if an organisation deems it fit to thank God, He would bless it the more.

    Prophesying that the level of everyone present will change, his prayer received a thunderous “Amen”.

    Thanksgiving, Pastor Bulugbe said, is commanded by God.

    “Thanksgiving is the will of God to man; it is better to do God’s will . Every obstacle in front of The Nation shall be divided,” Pastor Bulugbe said and the gathering yelled ‘Amen’.