Tag: Students

  • Peace training for students’ leaders

    LEAD initiative in collaboration with Human Capital Partners have organised a three-day leadership tournament called Student’s Leadership Development Tournament (SLEDT) for Students’ Union (SU) leaders of higher institutions in Nigeria, with a mission to expose them to international best practices.

    The programme also featured training in Agri-business.

    At the event, which was hosted by the University of Ibadan, the SU leaders showcased their stewardship using the criteria called VCAPPS, which stands for Vision, Continuity, Accountability, Productivity, Peace and Sustainability and Agri-business.

    Titilayo Femi Kings, an internationally certified student’s affairs professional and project director of SLEDT said Students’ Unionism should be encouraged because it helps groom future leaders.

    “Existence of Students’ Union government enhances the process of school administration and it usually facilitates effective communication between authorities and the students. Indeed, Students’ Unionism provides opportunities for leadership training for the youths,” he said.

    Kings, who is also the Face of Agriculture, Africa,  said the event came out of a vow he made in 1998 during a violent protest by students following the death of M.K.O. Abiola, in which some students died or got injured without achieving meaningful progress.

    He said many students are misled to participate in protests that end up being violent.

    “Many of those protests could have been resolved without resorting to violence and a lot of lives would have been saved.  Today Students’ leaders are characterized by thuggery, cultism and antisocial behavior which are against the tenets of the founding fathers of Students’ Unionism. This is why we are coming up with a programme that focuses on the Partners In Progress (PIP) strategy, which is the hallmark of the 21st century student leader,” he said.

    The tournament has been attended by representatives from schools such as Federal University, Dutse, Federal University of Technology, Owerri (FUTO); Federal University of Technology, Minna (FUTMINNA); University of Calabar (UNICAL); University of Agriculture, Makurdi (UAM); Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST); Ibrahim Babangida University (IBBU), Lapai; Ambrose Alli University (AAU) Ekpoma; University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID); University of Ilorin (UNILORIN); Uthman Dan Fodio University and Imo State University, Owerri (IMSU).

    Kings noted that the schools that attended last year, now called SLEDT certified schools, have remain peaceful for the past one year.

    Based on what they learnt, the various SU leaders committed N500,000 from their union account to start farming yam, vegetables, fish and poultry.

    They asked for government’s help and support in making their vision a reality.

    At the conclusion of the competition, Imo State University, Owerri emerged tops, while FUTO and IBBU were the first and second runners up.

  • Scholarship for indigent students

    Scholarship for indigent students

    The Ilaje Regional Development Council (IRDC) in the coastal area of Ondo State has given scholarship to more than 400 indigent students in secondary and tertiary schools. The gesture was aimed at providing quality education for its people within the Regional Development Council (RDC) in the oil-producing area.

    At Igbokoda, headquarters of Ilaje Local Government Area venue of the event, cheques were given to the indigent students of the mandate area of the RDC.

    Over 400 students in the secondary and higher institutions benefited from the gesture. While those in the higher institutions received N50, 000 each, secondary school students received N20, 000.

    Speaking at the occasion, Chairman of RDC, Prince Henry Ehinmola said the council initiated the scheme as an annual event different from that of the NNPC/CHEVRONN which scope of beneficiaries extended beyond the RDC mandate area.

    He said the scholarship scheme was strategically put in place to complement the efforts of the state government in order to improve the quality of education of the students in the oil-producing area.

    This is to also assist parents in educating their children.

    The chairman of Ilaje Local Government Area, who was represented by one of his supervisors, Jossy

    Ehimore said the programme was a laudable one as “every programme on education is a programme to improve the well-being of humanity”.

    He appreciated the management of RDC for the initiative and implored the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the gesture.

    All present at the ceremony praised the generosity of the RDC.

    The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) was represented at the occasion by officials of the Ministry of Niger Delta, the Ugbo Traditional Council of Chiefs.

    Besides, all community heads and representatives of the GMoU areas were also in attendance.

    One of the beneficiaries, Emmanuel Omogbemi expressed his happiness and promised to utilise the money given to him sensibly.

    Omogbemi said after his education, he will definitely come back home to join in the development of the oil-rich Ilaje land.

  • Students finger Mimiko in NANS crisis

    Students finger Mimiko in NANS crisis

    Is Governor Olusegun Mimiko behind the crisis rocking the Ondo State chapter of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) Joint Campus Committee (JCC)? Yes, say some students, who accuse him of dividing the committee among members, because of the state’s forthcoming governorship election. The government dismisses the allegation as baseless, reports TAIWO ADEBULU.

    WHO is the leader of the Ondo State chapter of the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) Joint Campus Committee (JCC)? Two students Samson Falegan and Anthony Atolusi are laying claim to the seat following the committe’s convention at the Federal College of Agriculture in Akure, the state capital, last month. Their squabble has led to the committee’s factionalisation.

    Some students have accused Governor Olusegun Mimiko of fometing the crisis, saying he wanted to plant his stooges in the JCC ahead of the state’s governorship election.

    JCC members alleged that trouble starter after the governor’s failure to impose his candidate as JCC chairman.

    The chairmanship candidates at the convention were Anthony, Samson, Azeez Adebowale, Damilare Olusanya and Olasunkanmi Olajuyin. Nine tertiary institutions participated in the election. Delegates comprised Students’ Union Government (SUG) presidents of the nine institutions.

    Before the election, Falegan was alleged to be Mimiko’s candidate because of his membership of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Anthony won with five votes; Azeez and Samson polled two votes each.

    The convention chairman, Oluwakayode Ogunade, declared Anthony the winner in a ceremony witnessed by representatives of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), the Department of State Service (DSS) and the police. NANS national and zonal coordinators also monitored the election.

    Few hours after the convention, Samson issued a statement, rejecting the outcome of the election, declaring himself winner. He was immediately recognised by the government as JCC chairman. Samson’s inauguration as factional JCC chairman was attended by some of Mimiko’s top aides, who read his “goodwill message” on the occasion.

    Reacting to the development, some SUG presidents, who voted during the convention, accused the governor of creating division in the students’ body. They alleged that Mimiko is making effort to plant his stooges in the JCC to hijack the students’ group ahead of the state’s governorship polls.

    They claimed the governor used his Senior Special Assistant (SSA) on Youths Matter, Tony Omogbemi and NANS National Vice President Timileyin Ayenuro, who is said to be a card-carrying member of the PDP, to destabilise the Ondo JCC and drag the body into politics.

    A SUG president, who pleaded not to be named, said: “A convention that was conducted peacefully ended in a crisis because of Mimiko’s wish to hijack the body for selfish political gains. Before the world, Anthony was elected as JCC chairman in a free and fair process, but Ondo State government, through its SSA on Youth Matters and NANS Vice President, created another faction for reasons we cannot fathom.

    “We have voted for our choice and we don’t expect Mimiko to destabilise our body because of his selfish political interest. There is no need for playing game that will throw the state into a crisis. We still don’t know why a sane government would identify with somebody that had two votes against another, who had five votes? Are they saying two is greater than five?”

    Another delegate, who also pleaded anonymity, said Omogbemi called the SUG presidents for a meeting, where he promised them “handsome reward” if they voted Samson. “We were called before the convention by the SSA to vote for Samson Falegan. He promised us handsome rewards if we did so, but we rejected the offer and told him the association is for students and not politicians,” the delegate said.

    A former Special Assistant on Students’ Matters to Ondo Government, Mr Olumuyiwa Asagunla, blamed students for the problem. According to Asagunla, the JCC  lost its credibility when it started to look up to the governor for handouts.

    He said: “Why would NANS write to Ondo State government that it wanted to hold its convention? What is the business of the government with who becomes the chairman of JCC? Since the students wrote to the government, Mimiko will naturally have interest in who becomes the chairman. NANS ought to be a pressure group and not a government stooge.”

    Asagunla said Anthony should be recognised as the authentic chairman of the Ondo JCC. He cautioned the government against causing crisis in the students’ body, saying: “NANS must be insulated from politics.”

    Speaking with CAMPUSLIFE, Anthony said he did not know the reason for the division, maintaining that he did not belong to any political party.

    He said: “I won the election with five of the nine votes from the delegates. But, they alleged that I am an All Progressives Congress (APC) member, but I told the concerned parties in the government that I have never joined any political party. They later told me that they wanted Samson, because he is a loyal PDP member.”

    Anthony accused Ayenuro of being Mimiko’s mole in NANS, alleging that NANS Vice President had always wanted to sell the association to the PDP.

    Samson said he won the election, urging the public to disregard the faction led by Anthony. He denied being a stooge of the governor and dismissed the allegation that he belongs to the PDP.

    He said: “I am for the students’ interests and will not be intimated by accusation from losers. The enemies of progress said that I am not the legitimate chairman of NANS JCC in Ondo State and that, I did not win the election. The misinformation is malicious and a figment of the losers’ imagination. I wish to state categorically that I won the election.”

    Ayenuro said he was not ready to comment on the allegations against him when our reporter spoke with him.

    He simply said: “Consultations are ongoing to resolve the crisis.”

    Contacted on telephone, Omogbemi described the accusation as baseless. He said the government did not recognise anyone as the JCC chairman.

    He said: “We have not identified with any faction for now. Nobody has come to my office or met with Governor Mimiko to say he is JCC chairman. It was only the former chairman who came to my office before their convention.”

    Omogbemi denied that the government had a preferred candidate, saying: “It is not true. I think you should call the SUG presidents to know who they voted for and do your calculation.”

    The outgoing chairman, Odunayo Kalusa, called on the NANS President, Tijani Usman, to call Ayenuro to order. He said: “Ayenuro should stop betraying the interest of the students for his personal purse. He should stop acting like a kid. The JCC convention has been conducted and nobody can reverse it. Anthony Atolusi remains the recognised JCC chairman in Ondo axis and Samson Falegan should stop parading himself as chairman.”

  • Group offers scholarship to indigent students

    The Ilaje Regional Development Council (IRDC) in the coastal area of Ondo State has given scholarship to more than 400 indigent students in secondary and tertiary schools. The gesture was aimed at providing quality education for its people within the Regional Development Council (RDC) in the oil-producing area.

    At Igbokoda, headquarters of Ilaje Local Government Area venue of the event, cheques were given to the indigent students of the mandate area of the RDC.

    Over 400 students in the secondary and higher institutions benefited from the gesture. While those in the higher institutions received N50, 000 each, secondary school students received N20, 000.

    Speaking at the occasion, Chairman of RDC, Prince Henry Ehinmola said the council initiated the scheme as an annual event different from that of the NNPC/CHEVRONN which scope of beneficiaries extended beyond the RDC mandate area.

    He said the scholarship scheme was strategically put in place to complement the efforts of the state government in order to improve the quality of education of the students in the oil-producing area.

    This is to also assist parents in educating their children.

    The chairman of Ilaje Local Government Area, who was represented by one of his supervisors, Jossy

    Ehimore said the programme was a laudable one as “every programme on education is a programme to improve the well-being of humanity”.

    He appreciated the management of RDC for the initiative and implored the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the gesture.

    All present at the ceremony praised the generosity of the RDC.

    The Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) was represented at the occasion by officials of the Ministry of Niger Delta, the Ugbo Traditional Council of Chiefs.

    Besides, all community heads and representatives of the GMoU areas were also in attendance.

    One of the beneficiaries, Emmanuel Omogbemi expressed his happiness and promised to utilise the money given to him sensibly.

    Omogbemi said after his education, he will definitely come back home to join in the development of the oil-rich Ilaje land.

  • SUV knocks down LASU students

    Two 200-Level students of Lagos State University (LASU), Joshua Oluranti and Paul Olajire, have cheated death after they were knocked down by a Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV) at the school gate on Sunday. The victims were rushed to a private hospital close to the school.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that the incident happened at 10pm when Joshua and Paul were going to the campus to read for the examination they had on Monday.

    An eyewitness, who gave his name as Olaolu, said the students were a few metres from the school gate when the SUV, with number plate LSR 513 DE, came from behind and hit them.

    “They were rushed to a nearby private hospital by the driver of the SUV in the company of students who rushed to the scene of the accident,” Olaolu said.

    Joshua, who sustained a dislocated hand and bruises on the face, surprised his classmates when he showed up for the examination on Monday. His entrance into the examination hall in company of Students’ Union President, Tayo Sekoni, was greeted with cheers by his classmates.

    Tayo used the opportunity to announce free ride for students on campus throughout the examination period. He hailed students for not resorting to the violence after the accident, saying it was a show of maturity.

    The union president urged students to be calm, advising them to study hard during the examination period.

    A security officer at the hospital, who prevented our reporter from speaking to the victims, said Joshua had been discharged on Monday, adding that Paul remained under observation at the press time.

    It was also gathered that the driver of the SUV footed the victims’ hospital bills.

  • Provost to students: Violence will attract dismissal

    About 350 new students of the Federal College of Agriculture, Akure (FECA) have taken an oath of allegiance to the institution.

    At  the event, the Provost, Dr Samson Odedina, worried that many youths have lost the virtues of hard work, honesty, punctuality and sense of morality.

    He said it was an irony that this is happening to young people in a country that has been described as the most religious in the world.

    Odedina lamented that most of the agencies of socialisation have failed in their duty of moulding the character of the young ones.

    He said: “It is in realisation of this that FECA has chosen to rededicate itself not only to provide training in Agriculture, but also moulding the character of her students in order to become assets to their families, communities and the country.”

    The provost admonished them to avoid all forms of violence on campus, saying any violent act would attract outright dismissal from the college.

    Odedina re-emphasised the need for the freshers to take their studies seriously.

    The Registrar, Dr Pius Adebisi, administered the oath.

     

  • Whither students unionism?

    Whither students unionism?

    Students’ unionism makes campuses tick. Through its activities, it draws attention to students’ needs and takes up the authorities when the need arises. Many institutions believe that students’ unionism is being taken too far these days. So, they are contemplating proscribing the unions. Their sin: protests that degenerate into violence. But students’ leaders say the authorities are the problem. OLUWATOYIN ADELEYE reports

    They were shut for the same reason, though their locations are different. The University of Lagos (UNILAG) and the University of PortHarcourt (UNIPORT) were shut following students’ protests. In the UNIPORT crisis, Peter Ofuru, President of the Faculty of Management Sciences Students Association died.

    In the face of these protests, the authorities are becoming worried that students’ unions wield too much power and influence. Many of them argued that it is an aberration for a students’ union to consider itself a government, which is at par with management.

    The Students’ Union Activities (Control and Regulation) Act of 1989 allows students the freedom to participate in union activities.  However, the law states that school managers can step in to control such activities when need be.

    Section 1 (1) and (2) of the Act says: “As from the commencement of this Act, student participation in all union activities shall be voluntary, and confined to individual campuses of universities or institutions of higher learning or any other similar institutions. Nothing in this Act or any other law shall prevent any Governing Council, Vice-Chancellor or any authority or person in charge of or in control of any university, higher institution or similar institution from making regulations for the purposes of controlling student union activities within aforesaid institutions.”

    Anyway, students’ union leaders are clamouring for more power, claiming their voices are not being heard enough.

    At the 133rd regular meeting of the Council of Heads of Polytechnics in Nigeria and Colleges of Technology (COHEADS) held last week at the Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), a major topic  was how much power management should concede to student leaders.

    Director of Physical Planning and Development of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), Mr Ekpeyong Ekpeyong, who represented the board’s Executive Secretary, Dr Masa’udu Kazaure expressed fears that the students may eventually take over the institutions and relieve management of its responsibilities, if left unchecked.

    He said: “Even in heaven, there is order. Not because somebody says I want this, then the person is entitled to it. There are entitlements at various levels and people should be allowed to go by their entitlements so that they can all help one another. There are issues on campuses that require the students’ input and they are always or most of the time carried along. Where we know they are not carried along, many times, we send panels of enquiry to check them. So if it is on general issues, what they (the students) are seeking is not acceptable. But wherever their concerns are to be, we will give them the chance.”

    Counselling the institutional heads, Ekpeyong said: “If we are managers, we have to do it well. We should not allow our students to dictate to us in whatsoever way. If we allow them, they will become managers and they will turn management to beggars, while they run the institutions. It is not done in any part of the world. There are instruments we use to handle such situations in our campuses. If we allow them small power, they will take more and the result is not always favourable. Closing schools due to protests is not the best way to train. Any break during training means you have to start all over again and there is no time for that. We have our calendars fixed.”

    Condemning some recent students’ protests, Special Assistant to the President on Youths and Students’ Affairs, Nasir Sa’idu Adhama blamed the students for towing the path of confrontation, ignoring consultation and consolidation.

    He said: “I wish to draw our student leaders and students’ attention to the three Cs’ of Consultation, Consolidation, and Confrontation which they are familiar with. Reports so far gathered confirm poor consultation between students’ leaders and institution’s management before adopting confrontation as a solution to the plight of students on our campuses.”

    The Dean, Students Affairs, UNILAG, Prof Babatunde Babawale, accused the students of wanting to establish a government within a government.

    “I think like all young men and women, students who are still under tutelage need to have very limited powers on account of their age and experience in life and ought to be guided by rules and regulations and experienced staff in the universities. It is an aberration to have students describe their union as a government. They cannot have a government within a government. In other words, the idea of having a students’ union called government is tantamount to having a republic within a republic or allowing the running of a parallel government,” he said.

    Students, Babawale said, should have representatives for leadership training and student representation, but they must not misuse the opportunity to achieve malicious aims.

    “University administrations must put in place measures that will not rob the students of the need to exercise their fundamental human rights or their rights to experience training for leadership, but these must be severely constrained in the exercise of their powers as a union. This tendency by students’ union officials to think that they are above the law is responsible for the numerous protests that we have across the nation. The way to curb this is to let them know that first and foremost, they are in the university to learn and obtain their certificates. And that the essence of having a students’ union is to carry them along with the administration of the university so that they can have a say in the running of affairs that affect them; and to provide them with opportunities to be trained for leadership positions in future. But the moment students form a negative mentality that unionism is for intimidation, extortion, lawlessness or that it puts them above every other student, then that becomes an aberration,” he said.

    To ensue peace, Babawale advised management to talk with students regularly, and encourage the good ones to take up leadership positions.

    “My advice to management is that they must improve their monitoring of individuals that have access to union offices, because it appears that in a number of cases, very serious-minded students tend not to be given access into positions where they could exercise leadership role because of the politics of unionism. So we must create rooms that will encourage highflying students to be the ones that will have access to union offices. Management must also step up their regular meetings with students so they can be on top of situations. In this case, I am saying we must step up our own ability to clearly detect areas that can be exploited by those I choose to call ‘union entrepreneurs’ who are merely exploiting problems in the university to achieve selfish objectives. We must also be on top of situations that have to do with the welfare of our students always. Things don’t have to be left till too late before they are attended to.

    “But more importantly, there is also the need to curtail that tendency of student leaders to think they are above everyone else. Every union president tends to want to see himself as the alternate vice chancellor. Measures must be put in place to call them to order to avoid this frequent recourse to protest, the paralysis of university and disruption of the academic calendar,” he added.

    Administrators believe that if the students know about certain activities, the aims of establishing students’ unions would be peaceably fulfilled.

    Lagos State University (LASU) Vice Chancellor (VC), Prof Lanre Fagbohun said such an understanding is crucial to the success of any school administration.

    He said: “Students are critical stakeholders in the university. Thus, it will be an aberration, and it will not augur well for good administration if they are not included in the governance process. Students should not dictate to the management, but, must be allowed to contribute to discussions that will affect their interest before decisions are taken. Their views must be given due and sincere consideration, and thereafter, decisions can be taken. There are administrative committees in which students can serve. Don’t forget, the university is for learning (inclusive of leadership training) and culture.”

    Students are fighting for more power. They argue that the lack of an effective students’ union is the cause of their friction with management.

    For Tayo Sekoni, Students Union President, LASU, the students’ union should enjoy the same privileges as the school authority.  However, he added that a listening management would nip any crisis in the bud.

    He said: “In LASU, the students’ union has the same power with the university management because we (students) are the number one stakeholders on campus. So we have enough powers. The power is mainly used to see to the welfare of the students; to negotiate, dialogue, and fight for their rights. There are three steps in students’ unionism, the last of which is protest. Consultation and negotiation should come before making a sound of aluta (protest). I have a listening management so we have resolved issues through peaceful dialogue. But we have a relationship with ULSU (Unilag Students Union) and from our discussions, I believe they were right to go on that protest. How can we have a federal university where students don’t have  light and water? That is too bad. The negligence is on the part of the university management. So I am in support of their protest.”

    Taiwo Hassan, National Coordinator of the Education Rights Campaign (ERC), which fights for students’ rights, lamented that management hide under students’ protests to shut schools.

    He said: “Students’ union activities do not often disrupt school activities. In fact, in most cases, campuses are closed following students’ protests not because the protests were violent, but because the school authorities often want to punish students by sending them home for a few weeks or months so that they would be scared of demanding their rights next time. So for me, the blame for closure of campus and disruption of academic calendar should be laid at the doorsteps of school authorities. Just look at what happened at the UNILAG. The authorities felt that since students were complaining about epileptic power supply and high cost of living on campus, they should send them to their different homes to see if there is light there also.”

    Hassan debunked the claim that students’ unions wield too much power, saying they are not given enough recognition.

    He said: ”I believe students do not have enough power in academic environment. Without students, there would be no VC, rector or provost. There would be no Visitor, neither would there be a pro-chancellor. But despite the important place students occupy in a school environment, they are not involved in deciding how their schools are run, what projects are prioritised and how funds are managed in the institution. Students’ representatives are not allowed in the Senate, governing councils, boards and committees, yet it is their fate that is being decided in all of these crucial decision-making organs that constitute the management of an institution.

    “How can you have such an undemocratic school environment and expect peace and harmony? Without their involvement, students feel disconnected, especially because the policies rolled out from the undemocratically-constituted Senate and governing councils are often anti-poor policies that threaten their interest. My organisation, the ERC, has been agitating for years now for the full democratisation of the school environment so that elected representatives of students and staff can be in the Senate, Governing Councils and all decision-making organs so as to guarantee that funds released by government are judiciously spent and also to ensure that students interests are considered.”

    The National Association of Polytechnic Students (NAPS) also argues that students be more involved in the running of their schools.

    In a paper its leaders presented at the Co-HEADS meeting, the group lamented what it called persecution by school management.

    It reads: “The authorities of our institutions still deprive us of democratic Students’ Union Government, which makes meaningful consultation and effective participation in government policy-making difficult for us. Indiscriminate rustication, suspension and expulsion of student leaders still prevail, while intermittent closure of our institutions continues as a characteristic feature.”

    The paper, signed by the association’s Public Relations Officer (PRO), Olugbode Damola, Vice President (South West), Olaogun Yusuf, and the Chairman of NAPS Technical Education Campaign Committee, Lukman Salahudeen, argued that students participation in unionism gives them practical experience to hold public office in future.

     

  • Why we abandoned foreign studies half-way, by Rivers students   

    Rivers State students, who were on scholarships abroad, but returned home on the order of the government to continue their studies in the country have decried the development.

    They wondered why it was during their time the government discontinued foreign sponsorships when their mates concluded their studies abroad.

    Former Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s administration began programmes encouraging Rivers youths to study outside abroad.

    Some of them have completed their studies and returned home; others stayed abroad for their Masters and Doctorate or work.

    But those offered admission to study abroad a year or two before Amaechi left office have been enmeshed in the state’s boiling politics.

    Governor Nyesom Wike said his administration had no money to pay for students on scholarships abroad.

    Instead, the governor said the students should return to Nigeria to continue their studies in local universities.

    Our investigation showed that many students have returned, following the government’s directive.

    In an interview in Port Harcourt, the state capital, Governor Wike said despite his decision to discontinue the fees of students abroad, his government cleared fees of those in final year.

    The governor said his government could not allow the students to suffer but would offer them opportunity to study in Nigeria.

    Our reporter spoke with some returnee students, who said the government’s discontinued payment of their fees forced them to abandon their studies and return home.

    According to them, they returned because their visas would not be renewed without payment of their school fees.

    The distraught students noted that the government’s failure to settle their allowances caused them hardship.

    One of the students, Fortune Anokuru, of Computer System Engineering at Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom, said he was preparing for second year when news came that Rivers students on scholarships abroad should return home.

    He said students, who have not returned home, were doing menial jobs to survive.

    Fortune said: “We came back because we were unable to pay our fees, and the country made it compulsory that it would not renew student’s visa unless we paid our fees. The government has decided to discontinue paying our fees abroad.

  • UNIABUJA expels 54 students for misconduct

    UNIABUJA expels 54 students for misconduct

    The University of Abuja yesterday said it has expelled 54 students of the institution for involvement in examination misconduct.

     In a statement yesterday in Abuja by the Deputy Registrar (Information) of the institution, Mr. Waziri Garba, said that the decision to expel the students was approved by the Senate of the University.
     
    It added that the decision followed the recommendations by the central examination misconduct committee the senate set up earlier to investigate the allegations of examination malpractices against the students.
     
    The statement showed that 21 of the expelled students were from the Faculty of Social Science, 16 from Science, 11 from Education while 3 students each were expelled from the Faculties of Law and Management Sciences.
     
    The University, according to the statement, also approved the rustication of 19 students from the institution spanning various academic periods.
     
    The statement said that 14 of the students were rusticated for one academic session while five were rusticated for one semester and to carry over their courses.
     
    The statement reads: “Of those rusticated, seven were from the Faculty of Arts, four from Social Science, three each from the Faculties of Science and Education and two from the Faculty of Management Sciences.”
  • AUN hosts career fair for students

    No fewer than 28 blue chip firms attended the career fair organised by the American University of Nigeria (AUN) at the Shehu Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja.

    For two days, students and alumni of the institution were trained on how to be employers. Many companies were also on ground to hire graduates from the institution.

    The fair, ninth by the university, was aimed at familiarising its graduates with various firms. It featured multinational companies cutting across telecoms, oil and gas, power, transport, health, and other sectors.

    Some firms also administered aptitude and problem-solving tests to the students, alumni, and other prospects. The representative of the companies also guided participants about their career and requirements in the labour market during the fair.

    “At AUN, we give them education that gives them knowledge, skills and even the attitude that they need to find jobs or create employment,” the President of the institution, Dr. Margee Ensign said.

    She added that the fair was organised to provide students and alumni exposure to career and internship opportunities.

    Ensign also said the fair was organised to prepare students of the university for interviews, how to write CVs, and prepare them for the world of work. She advised universities to go beyond issuing degree certificates to helping them chart career paths, make choices, and prepare them for the task ahead.

    She added: “I have had some great discussions with people out here and I asked them: ‘What do you think of our students?’ One employer said: ‘’I did not think a 21-year-old could be so smart.’’

    But what was more important was a software engineering student been interviewed and the bank said: ‘your education is so well rounded, you can write, you can speak. He said I can hire you for marketing, I can hire you in our computer department.’ I think that defines AUN education, It is not narrow.

    The association’s Dean of School of Business and Entrepreneurship, Dr. Ferdinand Che, said the fair offers employers the opportunity to engage the students early.

    Said Che: “This is unique to AUN experience. It is a fundamental right because we are talking about preparing people for the work place and we are very serious about this. What is beginning to happen, it seems to me, that employers recognise this from what we are hear them say.”