Tag: Students

  • ESUT under siege, 3 students shot

    Three students of the Enugu State University of Science and Technology (ESUT), Agbani are on danger list of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH).

    They  were Friday night shot and wounded by suspected armed bandits who invaded their hostel.

    The affected students are currently undergoing intensive surgery at the hospital where they were rushed in the early hours of Saturday.

    One of the students was shot in the stomach and it was suspected that some pellets of the bullet were lodged in his abdomen for which doctors are battling to remove.

    The two other victims were also undergoing surgery at the hospital while efforts were being made to contact their parents.

    The Unique Hostel where the incident occurred and other hostels within the Agbani Permanent site of the university, according to sources, have been placed under security watch as it was suspected that the gunmen could be members of a secret cult.

    To forestall a reprisal attack, the source said, the management had taken measures to beef up security at the hostels with plain-clothe policemen deployed to strategic locations.

    Police spokesman, Mr. Ebere Amaraizu,  who confirmed the armed attack said that preliminary investigations revealed that the gunmen could be “student robbers”,  assuring that the police would do everything possible to get to the root of the matter.

    He could not say if any arrest had been made but he said that the command was already on top of the situation and would give further details after the ongoing investigations.

    “From what we gathered when the gunmen attacked some students at the ESUT Unique Lodge, which is mainly Boys Hostel, there was a stiff resistance by the students who succeeded in arresting one of the gunmen.  The arrested gunman alerted his armed colleagues who returned to the hostel and began shooting indiscriminately during which three of the students were shot and wounded,” the police spokesman said.

  • Participate in politics, students told

    Participate in politics, students told

    The Secretary-General of Pharmaceutical Association of Nigeria Students (PANS) has organised a seminar for students of the Department of Pharmacy.

    The event, which took place at the Lecture Theatre IV, was attended by representatives of Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria (PSN) and Pharmaceutical Council of Nigeria (PCN).

    The Secretary of PSN, Dr Felix Nduka, encouraged the students to imbibe good attitude in their endeavours, stating that pharmacists were not to be depressed by happenings around them.

    He said: “This is the maiden edition of the pharmacy talk show between pharmacists and pharmacy students. Today’s event is going to be highly informative as you will all be given opportunity to ask questions on any matters that may seem ambiguous in pharmacy.”

    The Chairman of the Edo State chapter of PSN, Solomon Ikpefan, decried the poor attitude of pharmacy students to politics. He stressed that the ‘book only’ lifestyle was not enough to survive in today’s society, stating that pharmacy students live a triangular life that was detrimental to modern career life.

    “Although I was the best graduating student in my class, I would tell you that no profession can go far without politics. Pharmacy students ought to network and not live a secluded life, involve in politics either at the faculty level or in the student Union government. This will help build the network you require to survive in the profession; the curriculum of the pharmacy school is under review, this is done in order to reduce the work load of the pharmacy students.”

    High point of the event was the quiz competition of which Akpan Eti-Inyene, 200-Level; Jennifer Otakhor, 500-Level and Christopher Ilegoghe, 600 -Level emerged first, second and third positions respectively.

    Speaking to CAMPUSLIFE, Toluwani Osabiya, 300-Level Pharmacy, said: “I didn’t like politics before this talk show, but now I am willing to sponsor a candidate in any political office he wishes to vie for.”

    Meanwhile, the Academic Committee organised a seminar titled: “Building a consummate pharmacist”. Present at the event were Jacob Egharevba, Chief Pharmacist, University of Benin Teaching Hospital; Dr Emmanuel Oloton, Pharmaceutical Association of Nigerian Students (PANS); President, University of Benin chapter Samuel Ugwumba, speaker of PANS congress Ikechukwu Abah, Dr Mathew Arewoh and Chairman Chartered Institute of Personnel Management (CIPM), Mr Festus Awo-Osagie.

    In his remark, Egharevba told the students to lead a responsible life, saying it would help to give the profession a good name.

    Highlights of the event included the raffle draw where winners were given pressing iron, chargeable lanterns and calculators.

  • Students’ N1m endowment fund for Akwa Ibom

    The leadership of the Akwa Ibom State Graduate Students’ Association (AKWAGRASA) at the University of Calabar (UNICAL) has launched a one million naira endowment fund to support educational programmes in the state. The endowment fund launching, which coincided with the swearing-in of the new leaders of the association, was held at the CES Auditorium of the university.

    Speaking after his inauguration, the president, Rankin Ndipmong, said the educational endowment fund was established with a view of supporting the free and compulsory education programme under the current leadership of Governor Godswill Akpabio.

    Rankin who appealed for support and donations from public-spirited individuals and organizations, noted that through the endowment fund, educational materials and facilities such as textbooks, notebooks, desks and other writing materials were made available to public primary and secondary schools across the state.

    Rankin expressed the belief that the educational materials, when provided, would go a long way in contributing to functional and qualitative education across schools in the state.

    The Deputy Dean of Postgraduate School, UNICAL, Prof Margaret Okon, applauded the brainchild of the administration, describing the gesture as effort in consolidating the achievements of free education scheme of the state.

    Other members of the new executives were Uko Itohowo, Vice-president; Ekong Asuquo, Secretary General; Ibanga Okon, Financial Secretary; Udoh Oliver, Treasurer; Nta Ubong, Director of Socials and Ebito Amanam as Provost  Marshal.

    John Akpan, a member of the association said: “the initiative of the new leadership will play a significant role in promoting education in the state. Education is paramount, hence, all and sundry must attach importance to it.”

  • Students renovate lecture auditorium

    Students renovate lecture auditorium

    In what could be regarded as uncommon demonstration of patriotism, students of the Centre for Continuous Education (CCE), the University of Jos, have given back to their institution even before graduation. They dubbed it pre-Alumni activities.

    The final year students of the centre decided to breathe life into one of the old structures in the institution by renovating the centre’s auditorium located at the Old Campus of the university along Muritala Muhammed Way, Jos.

    The students chose to renovate the multi-purpose auditorium which has not been renovated since its construction years back.

    Incidentally, the structure is located at the university’s temporary site when it took off in 1975 and has continued to be used for multi-purpose functions even after the university was moved to its permanent site along Bauchi Road.

    Currently, the centre serves as the university’s Consultancy Services block where diploma programmes are held.

    The centre which has since then produced several of thousands of diploma students in the fields of Accounting, Banking and Finance, Mass Communication, Marketing, Purchasing and Supply, Community Development and Public Administration, among others, has remained dilapidated despite that huge sums of money accrue from the diploma programmes.

    Incidentally, the auditorium which is used as lecture hall for these students is also used for matriculation ceremonies, seminars and other ceremonies organised by the university.

    Worried by the state of the facility, the final year students of the 2013/2014 session, decided to pool resources to give the auditorium a facelift. They taxed themselves and contributed what they described as seed money of over N1 million. The Director, Advancement Office of the university, Yakubu Gomos said the effort of the students was part of the leave-a-legacy programmes introduced by the university in 2007.

    Gomos, who coordinated the renovation project said: “The Advancement Office had initiated what we call ‘Leave-a-Legacy’ programme since 2007. It is a programme where students are encouraged to develop the idea of doing something for the school that prepared them for life.

    “With this programme, final year students do contribute funds and use the total funds collected to carry out one project of their choice within the institution. The ‘leave-a-legacy’ programme was originally meant for students running degree programmes, but we decided to extend it to non-NUC students who undertake diploma programmes at the old campus of the university so as to also give them sense of belonging to the university family. So, these students voluntarily contributed their little fund and before you know it, over N1 million was contributed for the project.”

    Continuing, he said: “The idea behind the ‘Leave-a-Legacy’ programme is to bring the final year students together to make positive impact on their school. It is pre-alumni activities to prepare the final year students to develop the idea of helping the school after their graduation as they join the alumni of the school.

    “It is another means of building the alumni from within. This means that before the students graduate, they are acquainted with the challenges which the school is experiencing and they will begin to think of how to help whenever they are fully established in their life after school.

    “The funds are collected by the students themselves. They also choose the project they want to embark upon to be supervised by the Advancement Office which coordinates the activities of Alumni of the school. At this stage, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Hayward Babale Mafuyai coordinates the execution of the project.

    “This yearly project has gone a long way in assisting the institution to solve some of its infrastructural challenges since 2007 when it was established.”

    Contributing, the Director of Centre for Continuous Education (CCE), Prof. Mark Lere said: “I am impressed with what these students have done. They have left a legacy behind because they have graduated. Before now, the students used to do such things in their respective departments, but this time around, they decided to do something that the entire school will benefit from.

    “Before the students embarked on the renovation of the auditorium, the hall was completely dilapidated; the roof was leaking because the entire ceiling had worn out, making students to run out of the class as soon as the rain begins, the windows were broken, just as the doors had given way.

    “The hall was virtually without seat. The students were not finding it comfortable any more. So, they were mobilised by the Advancement Office to carry out the renovation.  After the renovation, the hall appears new and attractive to them. So, if these students continued this way each year, the face of the centre will change for good.”

    President of the students’ union of the centre, Patrick Yilshap, who graduated from the Mass Communication Department, said: “All the final year students were involved, they contributed funds so that we could leave a legacy behind. We chose to renovate the auditorium because that was the only hall in the school that can take as much as 500 students at a time. The Vice-Chancellor gave his approval and the auditorium is now a new place to behold.”

     

  • Otuoke varsity where workers are more than students

    Otuoke varsity where workers are more than students

    Otuoke Federal University located at the hometown of President Goodluck Jonathan in Ogbia, Bayelsa State, may be one of the fastest-growing newly-established federal universities in Nigeria. It is also perhaps having its fairest share of crisis among its contemporaries.

    The other day, students of the university trooped to the streets to protest hike in school fees questioning the leadership style of the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Mobolaji Aluko. The students barricaded the gate of the institution and paralysed academic activities on campus as they demanded among other things for a downward review of the fees.

    Not long ago, it was the turn of Otuoke, the host  community. Youths from the community marched the streets and shut down the campus. They invaded examination halls and chased away students writing their papers. Though normalcy was later restored to the campus, all is still not well between the university and its host community.

    The leader of the protest and Otuoke Youth President, Comrade John Godfrey, told the Niger Delta Report that the community was instrumental to the building of the institution, yet, it is not getting its dues.

    “We donated a vast area of land free of charge for the take-off of the institution. The community conducted a launching where everybody from 18 years and above was compelled to donate money for the construction of the take-off temporary sites of both the administrative block, academic blocks and the hostels,” he recalled.

    He noted that the community made the sacrifices hoping that the university after taking off would reciprocate the gesture.

    He said: “But the reverse is the case. Today, the Otuoke community has suddenly become beggars. They have to go on their knees to the VC and registrar to demand employment and admission.”

    He said the community would continue their agitation until its demands are met. According to him the university should consider Otuoke as part of the Federal Government by applying the principles of local content and federal character.

    He said the community desired the university to give it the percentage of employment and admission due it without hesitation. “Otuoke has less than five per cent of employees in the levels zero to six categories which falls below the principle of local content.

    “Otuoke has less than 0.5 per cent of senior staff. This is also against the principle of federal character,” he added.

    He accused the VC and registrar of sharing all the key positions among themselves without considering the community, the local government and the state. Godfrey further claimed that since inception, the university has only been able to admit eight students from the community.

    “Until now, the university has refused to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the host community. There is no person from the host community who is a member of the Governing Board.

    “Despite the huge sum of money sent to the school, there is nothing on ground to show that the school is growing infrastructure wise,” he said.

    Godfrey alleged that workers in the university were always underpaid, claiming that instead of N46,000 approved by the Senate for the least worker, the school pays only N24,000 monthly.

    He also said the school was yet to pay the 28 days working allowances to the workers.

    He added: “Students are also crying as a result of the outrageous school fees they pay. For instance, other schools ay N35,000 while Federal University, Otuoke pays N85,000 and N95,000 for Arts and Science students respectively.”

    But, the VC said the university had never failed to engage the host community on employment and admission matters within the ambit of the law.

    He said: “Community pressure will come up and we have handled them well. But we don’t want to be compelled and the academic activities of the students disrupted.

    “It is not the protest by the youths that forced us to listen but the need to sustain our community relations policy and not to allow community and student clashes.”

    Aluko explained that the institution has more members of staff on its payroll than the student population. There are 1,300 employees and a student population of 1,040, he said.

    Of the number, he said the employed indigenes of various communities in the state are 760 people with Ogbia and Otuoke community having 350 and 150 persons respectively.

    He further said the school had entered into an agreement with the community through the Paramount Ruler, Obanema of Otuoke.

    He said: “We have agreed to engage the indigenes based on the increasing requirements of employment in the next few months. The names submitted for employment were done without required qualifications and we have asked them to attach to the names their qualification and we will conduct interview to affirm competence.

    “We have informed them that we must be careful about fulfilling the Federal Character provision. It is possible we will increase our employment quota by 25 per cent due to our increasing needs but we must follow due process.

    “And we have also insisted that the admission slots given to the community and others must be in compliance with the provision of the Joint Admission Matriculation Board (JAMB).”

     

  • Students cry out over bad road

    Students cry out over bad road

    Students of the Federal Polytechnic, Ado Ekiti (ADO POLY) are worried over the road leading to the campus. They want the government to repair the road to reduce commuters’ hardship. TEMITOPE YAKUBU (ND II Quantity Surveying) writes.

    If only students and workers of the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti (ADO POLY) knew their stay off-campus would be an unending nightmare, they would have preferred to live on campus.

    Reason: the road leading to the school is bad. Commuters experience hardship plying the road, which links the polytechnic from Matthew Roundabout. They are calling on the government to rehabilitate the road.

    The Poly Bus Stop stretch of the road, where commercial vehicles  pick and drop passengers is badly eroded. A section of the road is being washed away by erosion, which many blamed on lack of drainage. This axis is commuters’ nightmare because vehicles easily break down there.

    Most students who live off-campus come late for morning lectures because of the road. Commercial activity in the area has been affected by the situation, leading to the increase in price of commodities and services.

    The road is dotted with dangerous ditches and potholes, which are impossible for any vehicle to avoid. A move to dodge a pothole often leads drivers on a collision course with another vehicle. There have been accidents on the road, which involved students.

    The alternative means open to students is to ride motorcycles called Okada. But the recklessness of the riders is another problem commuters complain about.

    On the poor state of the road, Aanuoluwapo Omodara, a ND II Quantity Surveying student, said if the government can not repair the dilapidated sections of the road, it should expand the drainage channel to control the incidence of flood being experienced.

    He said that it would be futile to fill the potholes with sticky sand or gravel without having a proper drainage in place, saying the materials could be washed away during rainfall.

    Ridwan Atiku, ND II Marketing student, appealed to the Federal and state government to rehabilitate the road because of the untold hardship it has brought to road users, especially at night when vehicles with dim light can break down on it.

    Mr Adedotun Adeoye, a commercial driver, said the condition of the road made his bus to age fast. He saud: “The road has left our buses in bad shape. Government has forgotten us. We are begging them to come to our aid because they collect tax from us. The money we are paying to the local government is not yielding results as condition of the road deteriorates by the day.

    Adeoye said the bad road has not only crippled their business, but has also posed danger on their health.

    The Deputy Registrar, Protocol, Information and Passage Unit, Mr Adeyemi Adejolu, urged the government to repair the bad road to alleviate the suffering of the road users. He said that the poor state of the road had forced many car owners to incur extra maintenance costs on their cars.

     

  • Wesley varsity sponsors students

    The Management of the Wesley University of Science and Technology Ondo (WUSTO), in Ondo State has promised scholarships to 200 students, who choose the institution to study Agricultural Science.

    Speaking at a conference in Osemawe’s palace in Ondo, WUSTO Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Tola Badejo said students, who are presently studying in the institution with a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) 3.00 above, would enjoy partial scholarship.

    Badejo added that the introduction of the scholarship and laying of emphasis on agricultural students, was aimed at encouraging people to study the discipline with the aim of boosting food production in the country.

    He said the scholarship would be funded by the Methodist Church of Nigeria and the state government, noting that 50 slots of the 200 students would be reserved for the indigenes.

    Badejo lauded the contributions of Ondo community to the development of the institution, stating that the donation of 200 hectares of land for its permanent site and several buildings is of immense benefit to the institution.

  • Students unite for community

    It was fun when a group of students under the aegis of Seed of wisdom gathered last weekend in Oko, Surulere Local Government Area of Oyo State to chart the way forward for the community.

    The Students, who had been separated for many years, due to academic engagements, all grew up in the same community. The group has been described as veritable tool to promote education in the community.

    The Acting Coordinator of the group and a graduate of Public Administration from The Polytechnic Ibadan, Olaoye Shuaib, said: ‘‘The Forum is set up to educate, interact and relate with one another just as we do before leaving this land. Though we are starting this forum with childhood friends and relatives who are interested in the growth of this community, but we will soon extend membership to external persons who are ready to contribute to the service of humanity.”

    Shuaib urged members to cooperate with one another to realize the objectives of the group.

    Speaking on discipline and moral behaviour, Adeleke Kohuanm, a student of Applied Physics, University of Abuja, said a disciplined man would always command respect in the society.

    Taofeek Lawal, 200-Level Political Science, University of Ilorin, said he was delighted to be part of the team, adding that the forum would promote peace and unity to drive community development.

    In his remark, Gbadmus Akeem, Kwara State Polytechnic, noted that team-spirit was essential to the development of every organization, imploring fellow members to be their brother’s keeper.

  • 40 indigent students get Fawehinmi’s scholarship

    40 indigent students get Fawehinmi’s scholarship

    No fewer than 40 indigent  undergraduates  have been awarded Gani Fawehinmi Scholarship Awards.

    In a lecture titled: “The Law, the Lawyer and the Public Spirit: Gani Fawehinmi in Historical Perspective”, delivered at the award ceremony held last week, Professor Ademola Popoola of the Faculty of Law, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, decried the continuous falling standard of education in the country.

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    Popoola who spoke on  issues affecting the education sector in  Nigeria, at the event, which held at the late Fawehinmi’s Nigerian Law Publication House, Otunba Jobi Fele Way, CBD, Alausa, Ikeja, said anyone who has the interest of Nigeria at heart cannot but share the late Fawehinmi’s passion for education.

    The late Fawehinmi, according to him, beleived education to be the bedrock of sustainable national development and the pivot of progress.

    He said the problems of Nigeria’s educational system are legion, adding that access to it, funding, governance, quality and relevance are more telling.

    “It is indeed, a sad commentary that in 2014, education, in the appropriate metaphor of Professor S.O Awokoya, is still “The Crisis Child of Our Time”.

    “The percentages of failure recorded in the past four years ranged from 75.06 per cent in 2010, 44.66 per cent in 2011, 61.19 per cent in 2012 and 35.74 per cent in 2013, up to a whopping 70 per cent in 2014,” he said.

    According to the Law Professor, what the falling standard  portends for the country includes threat to the hopes and aspirations of the youths, who are the future and bedrock for any effective and sustainable development.

    “Regrettably, in most developing and underdeveloped countries of the world, including Nigeria where corruption, abject poverty, unemployment and disease have assumed a frightening dimension, the youth have become endangered species with bleak and uncertain future,” he said.

    The don commended the late  Fawehinmi for his initiative in addressing  some aspects of the crisis of education at the individual level. He blamed the crisis on long years of neglect, mal-administration and policy somersaults.

    “The late Chief Gani Fawehinmi had passion for education as he had for Law. In his life time, he meant many things to many people. Even in death, the memory of him and his good deeds is indelibly etched in the hearts of his teeming compatriots, particularly the down-trodden and the oppressed, whose lives he had touched in a lasting and remarkable way,” he said.

    Prof Popoola said the Senior Advocate of the Masses (SAM) conferred on Chief Gani Fawehinmi long before he became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) was  not by accident.

    The late Fawehinmi, according to him, was the only recipient of such title, adding that any other claim to the title of SAM is fake and should be ignored.

    Dr. Dipo Fashina, who chaired the Gani Fawehinmi Scholarship Awards Board,  said the number of recipients was reviewed upward from 20 in 2012 to 40 this year because  the award was not given last year due to incessant strike of the tertiary institutions across the country.

    The number of recipients, he noted, may be increased in the future as the need arises.

    Dr. Fashina, a former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, (ASUU) said the late Fawehinmi was concerned about Nigerian children who were very brilliant, but indigent.

    “There was another thing the late Chief Fawehinmi was concerned about, the disparities in the distribution of education in Nigeria. That there must be a reflection of the fact that there are bright students all over Nigeria,” Fashina said

    Over 1,000 students have so far been empowered through scholarship since the awards begun in 1973 by the Gani Fawehinmi Scholarship Awards  Board.

     

  • Students abandon class to honour class rep

    Students in the English Department of the University of Agriculture (UNIAGRIC) in Makurd, Benue State last Tuesday, abandoned academic activities to honour their class representative,  Joseph Pevigo, at his birthday.

    The birthday party, according to his colleagues, was in recognition of his sterling leadership qualities.

    The students staged a drama in honour of Pevigo, and followed it up with dance presentations.

    In his remark, Pevigo described the occasion as memorable, saying he would forever cherish the love shown by is course mates.