Tag: NUC

  • Community thanks NUC on varsity

    Offa community in Offa Local Government Area of Kwara State has praised the National Universities Commission (NUC) for approving Summit University.

    Summit is one of the nine private universities approved by the federal government.

    The community under the aegis of Offa Descendants Union (ODU), also congratulated Offa indigenes. The group implored them to remain committed to keeping to self help and communal efforts.

    A statement  by ODU Secretary-General, Mrs Wosilat Macarthy, said Summit University would not only enhance the socio-economic and education life of the state and the nation, but further create job opportunities for the people.

    Macarthy appreciated the resilience of the proprietor, Ansar-Ud-Deen Society of Nigeria (AUD), for locating the university in the community. She said people of Offa would remain grateful to God as they are optimistic He will do more for them.

    She also lauded AUD national vice president, Alhaji Tiamiyu Olatinwo, whose untiring efforts resulted in “realising this long dream”.

    She also gave the Offa monarch, Aremo of Offa, Mufutau Gbadamosi and Prof Jamiu Oyawoye a pat on  the back for their doggedness in getting the institution approved.

     

  • ‘Why NUC cancelled Pass degree’

    Freshers admitted by the Usmanu Danfodiyyo University, Sokoto (UDUS) have been urged to be of good conduct and face their studies. The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Abdullahi Abdu

    Zuru, gave the advice during the institution’s 36th matriculation.

    Zuru, who congratulated students, said 4,133 scaled the admission hurdles. He urged the freshers not to indulge in vices that could make them lose the opportunity.

    He said: “The university degree of this great institution would only be given to students who have been confirmed worthy in character and learning.”

    Speaking on the National Universities Commission (NUC) decision to cancel Pass degrees, the VC urged students to read to graduate with good grades. He told them to shun bigotry, intolerance and vices that could cause disturbance on the campus.

    The Dean of Students’ Affairs, Dr Adamu Aliero, urged the students to eschew violence and acts that could terminate their admission. He said they must deal with one another with respect and understanding.

    Some of the freshers spoke to CAMPUSLIFE after the event. Kabiru Umar Galadima, admitted into Economics Department, described the matriculation as a “dream come true”. He said: “I want to make sure that I graduate with a First Class, I know it won’t be easy but by Allah’s guidance, I will work hard to achieve it.”

  • NUC: why we approved Turkish varsity Law programme

    The National Universities Commission  (NUC) has said it approved Law degree programme for the Nigerian Turkish Nile University after the university had met all the requirements specified by the commission.

    The Director of Press and Public Relations of NUC, Mallam Ibrahim Yakassai,  who disclosed this yesterday in a chat with newsmen, said the NUC monitoring team was satisfied with the facilities put in place for the programme as well as the accompanying academic staff on ground.

    Speaking on the development, the Vice Chancellor of the University, Prof Huseyin Sert, said the approval of the programme would enable the university to churn out manpower that could bridge the gap in the nation’s legal system.

    Professor Sert said: “Just as the main intention of the university is to contribute its quota to the Nigerian society by providing more manpower needed in all sectors, it is expected that Law should also be included.

     “We are mainly going to use this multimedia system of delivering our lectures to the teeming population of our students. That is the main innovation and one of the best practices obtainable all over the world”.

    “Right from the beginning, we are going to start from that perspective. That is why in advance, we are preparing our course materials so that when they come into the multimedia projected lectures, students will get it right”.

     To bridge the gap between university tuition and labour market demands, the Vice Chancellor said plans were on ground to ensure that students are taught the practical aspects of the profession, right from the beginning.

    According to him, the university’s law faculty would begin with about five chambers to get the students exposed to practical aspect of legal practice.

    “We want to make it the best Law Faculty in Nigeria. That is the plan we have. We are hopeful that this will contribute immensely to law practice in Nigeria.

    “Law is a critical part of every university. We understand that we have a public sister university, University of Abuja, but a lot of parents come to us demanding for Law programme. We already have the requisite proposals on ground to support that structure”, the Vice Chancellor stated.

  • NUC team visits

    Back at EKSU, the NUC accreditation panel assessed the facilities of the medical college.

    It was the second team in two weeks to access the college.  The Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria had visited earlier to check the infrastructural facilities as well as human resources required for the accreditation.

    The NUC Team was received by the Vice-Chancellor, Prof Patrick Aina and his principal officers at the Council Chamber.

    Prof Aina informed the team that the people of Ekiti State were anxious to have their own College of Medicine.

    The Provost, Prof Araoye, said the college was prepared for the accreditation exercise.

    The leader of the NUC team, Prof. James Odia, promised to carry out the assignment in the best interest of all, without bias.

     

  • NUC okays law programme for Turkish varsity

    NUC okays law programme for Turkish varsity

    The National University Commission (NUC) has approved a law programme for the Nigerian Turkish Nile University (NTNU).

    The Vice Chancellor of the university, Professor Huseyin Sert, made the revelation during an interview with journalists in Abuja at the weekend.

    According to Sert, the objective of setting up the law faculty, especially here in the Nigerian Turkish Nile University, was to help in bridging the manpower gap in the legal academic system.

    The Vice Chancellor said: “Just as the main intention of the university is to contribute its quota to the Nigerian society by providing more manpower needed in all sectors, it is expected that law should also be included.

    “We are mainly going to use this multimedia system of delivering our lectures to the teeming population of our students. That is the main innovation and one of the best practices obtainable all over the world.

    “Right from the beginning, we are going to start from that perspective. That is why in advance, we are preparing our course materials so that when they come into the multimedia projected lectures, students will get it right”.

    To bridge the gap between university tuition and labour market demands, Professor Sert said plans were on ground to ensure that students are taught the practical aspects of the profession, right from the beginning.

  • Strike paralyses Ekiti varsity hospital

    Clinical services at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital (EKSUTH) were paralysed yesterday, following the decision of the Joint Health Sector Unions (JOHESU) to join the nationwide strike by health workers.

    The workers decided not to join the JOHESU nationwide strike, which began last November, following an appeal by Governor Ayo Fayose.

    They also decided to wait for the accreditation visit of the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria and the National Universities Commission (NUC) to accredit the university’s college of medicine.

    A source said the national body threatened to sanction the local chapter for failing to join the strike.

    A visit to the wards yesterday showed that pharmacists, nurses, radiologists and other health professionals stayed away from work to join the strike.

    Many patients were turned back because there were no workers to attend to them.

    In a related development, members of the Federal Teaching Hospital (FTH), Ido-Ekiti, staged a peaceful protest over what they called “the non-readiness of the Federal Government to implement a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) reached with the union”.

    The protesters condemned the non-payment of the adjusted salary arrears which they claimed has been paid to medical doctors.

     

  • NUC team inspects ABUAD engineering college

    The National Universities Commission (NUC) accreditation team on Monday began a one-week visit to the College of Engineering, Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD).

    The team, led by Prof. Ike Mowete, was received by ABUAD Founder/Chancellor, Aare Afe Babalola and other officials.

    In his welcome address, ABUAD Vice Chancellor, Prof. Michael Ajisafe, said the university has achieved many feats within its short time of existence.  For instance, he said the Council of Legal Education increased admission quota in the College of Law from 80 to 180.

    He also described ABUAD as “one of the best in the country” and the Founder as a “global citizen.”

    Ajisafe expressed optimism that all courses being offered at ABUAD College of Engineering will be accredited.

    In his speech, Aare Babalola said he conceived the university to be a model and compete with the best in the world.

    He explained that the rot he met at the University of Lagos (UNILAG) where he served as Pro-Chancellor/Chairman of the Council for seven years motivated him to establish ABUAD to provide the best of tertiary institution.

    Babalola, who described ABUAD as “baby of UNILAG”, also said the university was not established for profit but to serve humanity and invest in future generations.

    He said: “Ours is not a profit making university, whatever excess we have will be ploughed back into the university to make it grow and grow. If the university is indebted in anyway, we are going to pay it but we will not take the profit anywhere.  We are taking after Harvard, Yale and others which were established to service the people.

    “In 2000, I was called upon to be a Minister for the fourth time but I turned it down but the President told me that if I don’t want to be Minister, there was a lot of rot at UNILAG. Rot like admission racketeering, hostels were in disrepair and the Engineering Faculty was very bad. I called one of my clients, Julius Berger and within four years, it became number one in Nigeria.

    “NUC gave me the award as the best Pro-Chancellor twice and when I left, I thought I could still do something. I had a vision to establish a university which I thought would be what a university should be.”

    Babalola disclosed that the College of Engineering stands on two-and-half hectares of land and is equipped with 21st Century facilities.

    Responding, Mowete, who is a Professor of Chemical Engineering at UNILAG, said Babalola’s tenure made a lot of difference in the institution.

    Mowete stressed that the accreditation team would reports what it sees to the higher authorities for necessary action.

    He identified areas that would come under the scrutiny of the accreditation team to include facilities, staffing, programmes, among others.

     

  • Varsities lack quality lecturers, says NUC

    THE report of the Needs Assessment on Nigerian universities has shown that less than 50 per cent of their lecturers have doctorate degrees.

    The National Universities Commission (NUC), which said this yesterday, added that inadequate teaching staff in the right mix and quality has negative effect on accreditation performance of universities.

    Deputy Director, NUC, Ashafa Ladan, spoke for the commission in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, at a public lecture organised to mark the first Founder’s Day celebration of Al-Hikmah University, Ilorin.

    The lecture was entitled: “The challenges of private universities’ proprietorship in Nigeria.”

    Ladan warned that some private universities proprietors would “either have their operating licences suspended or undergo forensic auditing due to their failure to put in place proper structure for governance and administration as contained in their academic brief and the university law.”

    The NUC director added that profit motive made some proprietors to violate procedures and requirements in an effort to begin lucrative and marketable courses before maturity period.

    Said he: “The guidelines and requirements of NUC and other professional bodies place greater constraint on some proprietors as they would have preferred to employ poor quality teaching staff to maximise their profit.

    “Most of the senior teaching staff in private universities are either employed on sabbatical, visiting or adjunct basis due essentially to difficulty in attracting quality staff at this level.

    “The quality of teaching staff (senior lecturers and above) posed greater challenge with regards to mentoring, research and research leadership, effective linkages, journal publication and the general evaluation system of standing of the university.

    “There is poor understanding of the concept of governance and management structure of the university by some proprietors, which poses a serious challenge. There is poor understanding of how university works/operates by some proprietors. Some proprietors are deliberately stubborn, viewing private universities as purely a business affair, which is not the case.

    “Some private universities take off with bank loans and whatever is generated as revenue is shared between repayments of the loans and running the universities in an uncomfortable ratio. This challenge is compounded by the fact that private universities do not determine their carrying capacity. This often creates poor financial standing/position for the proprietors. And unsteady funding has negative impact on quality teaching, leading to production of poor quality graduates and accreditation performance.”

    In his remark, Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed urged the nation’s private universities to promote academic excellence so that students can make valuable contributions to the country’s development.

    Ahmed, who was represented by Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Abdulwahab Opakunle, added: “Nigeria’s advancement will be considerably enhanced when we imbibe excellence as a national ethic.”

    The governor urged “private universities in Nigeria to continue to provide quality university education despite the challenges confronting them.

    “As we are all aware, funding is a major challenge confronting universities all over the world – whether publicly owned or privately run.

    “However, you are urged to identify innovative ways of overcoming these challenges so that private universities will become as reputable as their publicly owned precursors. I am confident that private universities in Nigeria have the capacity and capabilities to become centres of academic excellence and groundbreaking research.”

  • 100 First-Class graduates to study abroad

    Education Minister Malam Ibrahim Shekarau said yesterday that the Federal Government would sponsor 100 First-Class graduates for studies abroad.

    Shekarau spoke at an interactive session in honour of some selected outstanding members of “Adaidaita Sahu Societal Reorientation Programme”, an initiative of his administration as governor of Kano State.

    The minister said the graduates would be sponsored under the Special Presidential Scholarship Programme initiated by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    According to him, Jonathan had instructed the Nigerian Universities Commission (NUC) to select the best graduates and secure admissions for them to study up to doctorate level at universities abroad.

    Shekarau said the first batch had been screened and would soon leave the country to study at the best 25 universities in the world.

    The minister added that as part of the government’s effort to provide Nigerians with qualitative education, some university lecturers had been sponsored for various training locally and abroad.

  • NUC  okays eight Osun varsity courses

    NUC okays eight Osun varsity courses

    The Vice-Chancellor of the Osun State University, Prof. Bashir Okesina, has said eight postgraduate programmes have been approved by the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    Speaking at a briefing on the main campus, he said the postgraduate programmes would begin in the 2014/2015 session.

    The courses are Master of Arts (M.A.) History and International Studies; Master in International Studies (MIS); Master in Intelligence and Strategic Studies (MISS); Master of Science in Geography; Professional Master in Disaster Risk Management (MRM); Professional Master in Environmental Management (MEM); Ph.D Microbiology and M.Sc. Biochemistry.

    Okesina also said 32 undergraduate academic programmes had been accredited.

    Okesina ordered students on the Ikire Campus to pay N30,000 reparation fee before resumption.  He announced the resumption of the students, following their protest.

    The VC appealed to the students to be of good conduct.

    The don said: “The NUC has approved eight post graduate programmes for commencement in the 2014/2015 session and through Learned Conference Policy has sponsored over 250 academic and non-academic staff to attend local and international conferences, trainings and seminars.

    “Eight five academic staff have benefitted from the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) on Academic Staff Training and Development (AST&D) to study within and outside Nigeria.

    “Academic and non-academic staff have also attended international and local conferences to broaden their horizon as the management is committed to continuous training and exposure.”