Tag: TETFUND

  • PLASU new VC assumes office, promises speedy progress

    PLASU new VC assumes office, promises speedy progress

    The newly appointed Vice Chancellor of Plateau State University ( PLASU ), Bokkos, Prof. Yohanna Izang, on Wednesday assumed office with a pledge to transform the institution to compete with the best in the world.

    Yohanna, while addressing the management and staff of the school, commended his predecessor, Prof. Doknan Sheni, for his efforts, and promised to build on that solid foundation.

    Izang, who described his appointment as “sheer grace of God”, said he would soon unveil his five years transformation blue print for the university toward placing the institution among the world best.

    “My plan is to brand PLASU as a competitive university with its graduates as models for other universities.

    “This means that we must together pursue the accreditation of our 15 additional programmes with all seriousness and diligence.

    “Human and infrastructural development is paramount to attaining academic excellence. We shall make that our priority,” he said.

    The new helmsman who, until his appointment, was the Head, Department of Building, University of Jos, also pledged to build on the visions of the founding fathers of PLASU, and solicited the support of management and staff toward meeting that goal.

    Earlier, Sheni had told his successor that he met only 93 staff but was leaving 426 made up of 326 senior, and 100 junior staff.

    Sheni attributed his modest achievements to the cordial working relationship he had with staff and students as well as members of the university community.

    He said that the Federal Government, through the education ministry and TETfund, played a great role in the infrastructural development of the university, and expressed the hope that Izang would improve on that relationship.

    NAN

  • PLASU set for NUC accreditation of 15 additional programmes – VC

    PLASU set for NUC accreditation of 15 additional programmes – VC

    Prof. Doknan Sheni, the Vice Chancellor, Plateau State University ( PLASU ), Bokkos, on Monday, said the university was set for accreditation of its additional 15 programmes by National Universities Commission ( NUC ).

    The vice chancellor made the disclosure at a news conference at the university’s Senate Chambers.

    He said “all is now set for yet another round of accreditation of 15 additional programmes by NUC come May this year.

    “A total of 17 programmes were accredited by the commission two years ago; we are now prepared for NUC with additional 15 programmes.”

    Sheni, whose tenure would expire by February ending, expressed gratitude to God for achievements during his two tenures, which he said stabilised the university system.

    He identified some of the achievements to include accreditation of 17 programmes 12 years after the establishment of the institution and successful holding of its first convocation last year.

    He added that “we have been able to complete the Library Complex, build road networks, did landscaping, fencing, established several laboratories including that of languages, Internet/web site, power from NESCO and built more students hostels.

    “People, especially parents and students, have developed interest in PLASU such that we are now admitting about 1, 500 students at a time.”

    The vice chancellor noted that the success story of the university would not be complete without appreciating TETfund and the Plateau Government, which he said did not fail the management.

    He, however, listed some of the institution’s challenges to include the lack of water, staff accommodation, street lights, pension scheme for staff and inadequate funding.

    He solicited support from well meaning citizens of the state and corporate organisations to transform the university to world class in no distant time.

    NAN

  • Convocation Lecture: Corp Marshall clamours TETFUND for Private Varsities

    Convocation Lecture: Corp Marshall clamours TETFUND for Private Varsities

    …Boboye, others tasks government of socialisation

     

    Corp Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Corp (FRSC), Dr Boboye Oyeyemi has called on the federal government to allow private universities in the country enjoy TETFUND allocation for the onward emancipation of education in Nigeria.

    Delivering the 8th Convocation Lecture of Joseph Ayo Babalola University, Osun State in honour of her convocation ceremonies on “Optimal Functionality of Agents of Socialisation: Decisive Ingredient for a Better Tomorrow”,  Oyeyemi revealed that government as an agent has considerable influence in the conscious harmonisation and propagation of long cherished values.

    He stated that government as an agent of socialisation must ensure that her policies on education does not fail and encouraged huge investment in the same as it is the only avenue for the enhancement of the country’s current productivity.

    Pro-Chancellor of the University, Professor Anthony Imevbore described the importance of education as an important facet of socialisation. In his words, “… The school is an artificial institution set up for the purpose of socialisation and cultural transmission.

    Imevbore further stated that “Joseph Ayo Babalola University is keen to initiate, steer and participate in discussions and reshape the history of this country and continent where we can to alter the social imbalance of the society.”

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University, Professor Sola Fajana urged federal government to focus her attention on education as it is a core agent socialisation for the all-round build-up of a university graduate in Nigeria.

  • Bauchi poly secures accreditation for 53 courses

    Bauchi poly secures accreditation for 53 courses

    Dr Suleiman Lame, Rector of Abubakar Tatari Ali Polytechnic, Bauchi, said on Tuesday that the institution had secured the accreditation of 53 out the 55 courses being run by the institution.

    Lame made the disclosure in Bauchi while briefing newsmen on some of the achievements recorded by the institution in the last three years of his administration.

    He emphasised that the accredited courses represent 95 per cent of all the courses being run by the 27-year-old institution as against the five accredited courses he inherited from his predecessor before May 2015.

    “Unfortunately, even the five courses that we have then, the accreditation of four expired in February 2011 leaving only one, which is computer science.

    The rector said 23 of the accredited courses were for Higher National Diplomas, eight courses degree while the remaining were for others courses.

    Lame said that the state government and TETFUND as well as the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of the institution had improved the school’s infrastructure including laboratories, workshops, hostels and construction of new school of general studies, engineering, vocational and technical studies.

    He said that TETFUND had also sponsored more than 70 lecturers to undergo various courses abroad.

    He said that the school was currently having 50 lecturers with doctor of philosophy certificates while another 15 would soon complete theirs.

    Lame said that the school with over 700 academic and non- academic staff and students population of over 13,500, is also running degree courses in technical and vocational education following its accreditation by the National University Commission (NUC).

    He said that the institution would soon commence courses on Leisure and Tourism as it had constructed a modern restaurant and guest house which are pre-requisite for obtaining accreditation for the courses.

    He said that the brain-drain syndrome which had earlier bedeviled the institution, had been eliminated following improvement in staff welfare package, facilities, retraining programmes and conditions of service.

    The rector said that the school had recruited 150 casual staff from the host community and as well provided five boreholes and other social amenities for the host community.

    He decried the menace of gully erosion that has devastated most parts of the institution, adding that it was beyond the scope of the school and even the state government to tackle as billions of naira would be needed to address the problem.

  • JAMB to remit less revenue to FG this year

    JAMB to remit less revenue to FG this year

    The Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board ( JAMB ), Professor Ishaq Oloyede, on Monday, said that the examination body will remit less than N7.8billion it remitted to Federal Government coffers in 2017 this year.

    Oloyede stated this during 2018 budget defence session with the Senate Committee on Tertiary Education and TETFUND.

    He noted although JAMB projected N14.691billion as its Internally Generated Revenue ( IGR), for 2018 fiscal year, N7.744billion out of it would be used for overhead cost items while N2.683billion is earmarked for capital project .

    The JAMB boss said that the examination body was given zero allocations for overheads and capital expenditure components in 2017 budget.

    He said that in 2018 budget proposal, JAMB was also given zero allocation for overhead and capital expenditure, a situation that made it to plan funding for the two components from its projected IGR.

    He said, “If we remove N7.744bn estimated for overhead cost and N2.683bn earmarked for capital project from the projected N14.691bn IGR, the balance surplus would be N4.262bn to be remitted into the federation account as against N7.8bn remitted last year.

    ” This has to be so because of critical expenditure to be carried out on overhead cost in terms of maintenance and upgrading of our facilities and information technologies and in particular , the highly needed capital project of procurement of new headquarters that would be on the national fiber optics for easy connection.”

    Oloyede noted that for the JAMB to install needed connections in its temporary site in Bwari town, it would cost it N300billion which necessitated it’s plan of either moving to the central area in Abuja metropolis or along the Airport road within the axis of University of Abuja .

    Read Also: Bauchi to get JAMB test centre

    Chairman of the committee, Senator Jibrin Barau (Kano North) and some other members commended the JAMB registrar for a job well done in terms of revenue remittance.

    A member of the committee, Senator John Enoh (Cross River Central ) took the JAMB boss up over his plan to remit less revenue to the Federal Government .

    Enoh noted that what the registrar did last year was in line with the policy that such bodies should remit 25% of total revenues generated into the federation account .

    ” To me, the JAMB registrar is being over commended or praised on what is expected of him legally and besides, he needs to explain to us properly why such revenue remittance would drop this year because the capital project is planning for is not absolutely within his powers, ” he said.

    The committee chairman over ruled him saying that the JAMB registrar deserved commendation to encourage him to do more for the examination body .

    Barau said, “Sentiments apart, what is good is good , this man has performed wonders where many had failed and nobody expects anybody here to say different thing. “

  • NASU berates inadequate funding of libraries

    NASU berates inadequate funding of libraries

    The Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions ( NASU ), has expressed dismay over inadequate funding of the National and State libraries across the country.

    Mr Micheal Adegoke, the Deputy National President of the union, said this at the end of the regular meeting of the WAEC/Libraries and Others Trade Groups in Lagos.

    Adegoke said that libraries, which served as gatekeepers, storehouses of knowledge and a critical element in the educational sector had been neglected.

    He said that there was no way the country could achieve the education for all if the present level of funding of the national and state-owned libraries was not drastically improved upon.

    He described as a national embarrassment, the present rented apartment of the National Library of Nigeria in Abuja and other parts of the country.

    Read also: NASU’s overreach

    The deputy president, therefore, called on the Federal Government to expedite action on the completion of the abandoned National Library of Nigeria Headquarters building, as a matter of utmost priority.

    Adegoke also urged the federal and state governments to improve funding of their libraries so that the aims and objectives of establishing them could be attained.

    He urged the intervention of Tertiary Education Trust Fund ( TETFUND ) in the funding of libraries as it did for public institutions’ libraries.

    NASU and other varsities’ staff unions such as the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities ( SSANU ) and National Association of Academic Technologists ( NAAT ) are currently on strike nationwide.

    The unions are demanding that the Federal Government should release N30 billion to them as a condition to calling off their industrial action.

    “Government should release more funds to take care of the arrears of the earned allowance of the three non-teaching staff of universities and commence the immediate implementation of the allowances to forestall further accumulation of the arrears,’’ Mr Alfred Jimoh.

    Jimoh is the National Vice President of SSANU and made the call at a news briefing on December 15 in Akure, Ondo State.

    NAN

  • TETfund: Open letter to President Buhari

    SIR: I write on behalf of over 100 stranded Nigerian scholars in the United Kingdom under the 2014 TETfund academic staff training and development scheme to pursue various PhD programmes. The fund is administered by our employers, the beneficiary educational institutions -polytechnics, colleges of education and universities across all the regions of Nigeria.

    Most of us are now three months away from completing our PhD training; but we cannot finish our studies following the compulsory withdrawal from our respective courses due to unpaid fees.  At the moment I am not a registered student and may be deported from the UK in a matter of weeks according to the terms of my Tier 4 student visa.  In addition to this, we have now become heavily dependent on loan facilities from families and supporters in order to meet up with basic living conditions. Should this predicament continue without prompt release of supplementary funds by TETfund, the tragedy is not only the shameful waste of three productive years of our lives, but the colossal waste of already advanced funds in the past years on this scholarship.

    I hereby humbly request your kind intervention to ensure that the Executive Secretary of TETfund, Dr A.B. Baffa gives our predicament the prompt attention it deserves. We have sought the attention of the Executive Secretary through direct written communications and through our various home institutional channels in Nigeria as well as Twitter, #TETfundscholarsUK and BBC Africa’s report to no avail.  We have also written to various public office holders including the minister of education, National Universities commission (NUC), Senate president, the Nigerian High Commissioner in the UK and the chairman of the board of TETfund.  To date, nothing significant has been done to assure us of the feasibility of completing our training and to obtain our degrees after all these years of hard academic work.

    We are appealing for special intervention and a review of our scholarship awards. The review is needful due to exhaustion in funds awarded which is also accompanied by the following reasons: First is the exponential increase in the exchange rate of the Naira against British pound sterling since December 2014.  Most of us were awarded the scholarship at an exchange rate between ¦ 265 per British Pound. Presently, the rate varies between ¦ 470 and ¦ 500.  Although, some scholars received the full payment of their fund in Naira account; it is in the public domain that all commercial banks in Nigeria closed their platforms for foreign exchange transactions through form A following a directive from CBN. Consequently, these TETfund scholars had to resort to Bureau de change at extortionate rates, leading to the unexpected exhaustion of the advanced sum.

    Then also is refusal of our home institution, the beneficiary educational institutions, to hold the approved fund in a domiciliary account as stipulated in the 2014 TETfund guidelines. These institutions had solely been responsible for the direct payment of fees and the overall administration of the funds allocated.  Also, against our cries to either follow TETfund guidelines or release the money to us for onward conversion to Pound Sterling, the fund was kept in Naira and released to us in meagre tranches. In my view, these amounts to the mismanagement of the Nigerian taxpayer’s money, leading to the drastic depreciation of funds held in trust for us.

    Could there possibly be laws and/ or administrative constraints hindering the Executive Secretary from monitoring and implementing sanctions to erring beneficial educational institutions?  Would Nigeria watch her taxpayer’s money go to waste and her citizens come back to Nigeria with their heads bowed to the dust of a failed institution? Is the management of TETfund really dysfunctional?

    Our dear President, we are ardent believers and supporters of your swift actions to give a resounding response to the above questions ravaging our thoughts. We implore you to direct the Executive Secretary of TETfund, Dr A.B. Baffa to approve and release supplementary funds for our fees and maintenance. This would assure us of our degrees and put to good fulfilment of already spent funds. Also, Baffa must pronounce and implement appropriate sanctions on all the accounting officers of the beneficiary educational institutions that have mismanaged the funds for our studies as highlighted above. We believe, TETfund should have the responsibility to monitor the progress and welfare of all scholars under her sponsorship and to implement strategies to sanction all the beneficiary educational institutions that have failed to administer the fund in accordance with her guidelines.

     

    • Biose J. Ifechukwude,

    Glasgow, United Kingdom.

  • Igbinedion Varsity offers scholarships to 360 students 

    Igbinedion Varsity offers scholarships to 360 students 

    Nigeria’s premier private university, the Igbinedion University, Okada has offered to give scholarship to 360 students from across the country.

     

    It said the scholarship would be granted to 10 brilliant and best students from each of the 36 states in the country.

     

    Vice Chancellor of the university, Professor Eghosa Osaghae, stated this at the award of first degrees and prizes to the 15th set of graduates of the institution.

     

    Prof. Osaghae noted that the gesture was to bridge the gap between the rich and the poor by making quality education available to every Nigerians.

     

    Osaghae stated that both the federal and state government have continued to fail private universities in critical areas by not extending bursary and scholarship award to students attending private universities.

     

    He also lampooned the private sector for depriving many Nigerians quality education by refusing to give support to students and management of private universities.

     

    The VC said 11 out of the 85 graduates from the federal government amnesty programme scored Second Class Upper honours.

     

    Prof. Osaghae announced automatic employment for the best graduating students from the federal government amnesty programme including best graduates from its Smart Partnership Programme with some state governors.

     

    His words, “Many people who desire private quality university education don’t have the means to do so. When government gives scholarship and bursary, they only give to students of public universities which are tuition free.

     

    “Private sector is the worst enemy of itself. The private sector also gives support to public universities and thereby deprive many people quality education. This is the time to support people so that we can bridge the gap between the rich and the poor.

     

     Chancellor and founder of the university, Chief Gabriel Igbinedion who was represented by his son, Lucky, said the running of a private university was not to make profit but contribute to national development.

     

    Chief Igbinedion urged the Federal Government to change its policy on private university funding by allowing access to TETFUND.

  • NUC: Only 30 per cent UTME candidates will be admitted this year

    NUC: Only 30 per cent UTME candidates will be admitted this year

    As a result of the limited spaces in tertiary institutions, only 30 per cent out of the 1.7 million candidates who wrote the unified tertiary matriculation examination (UTME) will be admitted this year, Executive Secretary, National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof. Abubakar Rasheed, has said.

    Prof. Rasheed said this at a one day public hearing on the regulatory conflict between JAMB and universities in offering admission in Nigeria.

    The hearing was organized by Senate committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund on Tuesday.

    The NUC boss said the limited spaces in tertiary institutions have made admission crisis inevitable in Nigeria.

    According to him, the only way to avert admission crisis in the country is to either expand access or create more universities to accommodate students.

    “The crisis of admission in this country inevitable. Unless we expand spaces we shall continue to have admission crisis in this country.

    “Every exam has its own problem. We believe JAMB exam is credible and all of us operating in the system respect the results of JAMB exam,” he said.

    JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede said there was no conflict between JAMB and universities.

    Prof. Oloyede said most of the candidates who sit for its examination annually do not have the required qualification to gain admission.

    He said: “It is not true that we have 1.7 million candidates that are ready to go into the Nigerian university system. Of the 1.7 million that took the exam I can say conveniently that not more than 30 per cent of them are not prepared for admission, they are just trying. They do not have the five O level required to go into the university.

    “Secondly, let me also let us realize that 10 per cent of the 1.7 million that we see or 1.9 as the case may be they are not what can be categorized as belong to the net enrolment ratio for entering tertiary education. They belong to the gross enrolment ratio.

    “80 per cent of candidates sitting at the point of sitting do not have the O level at all. They are awaiting results. So when we are building our theories and analysis, we need to be very cautious.

    “If you score 400 over 400 if you do not have the five O level you cannot come into the university. The basic qualification is the five O level.”

     

     

  • LAUTECH, the crisis and the unanswered questions

    LAUTECH, the crisis and the unanswered questions

    A parent whose child is 25 years old is supposed to be at peace after all, it is the blooming period of that child. The time to expand and reproduce.

    However, in the case where the child has been deprived of certain life teachings and brain nutrients, the parent would go bankrupt trying to right the wrongs such child would cause them. But if the parents of the child fails in their responsibility towards the child at one time or the other, the consequences will undesirable.

    Such is the case of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology ( LAUTECH ), a 25-year old institution that has been malnourished by her parents; Oyo and Osun states. Thus in recent time, the university is only growing in age but not in expectation! This not because the university is lacking in qualified, able and willing academic and non academic staff, nor because the student are not serious on their academic responsibilities but rather because the parents of the institution, Oyo and Osun states have ignored the institution.

    It was learnt that at present, the governments of the two states is owing the university subvention for about twenty two months. This is billions of naira. It is true that an old giant rat will feed on the breast milk of its grown kid.

    However, if the mindset of the giant rat is only to feed on its kid’s but refuse to nurture the kid to maturity, I doubt it if it (the giant rat) will not be blamed. LAUTECH has reached the age when thumb-sucking is no longer a pardonable offense but unfortunately, the institution is bereft of adequate “parental care”. Who then is to blame? You and I know the answer.

    A university of technology managed by two states whose mantra “upholding the Awolowo’s legacy” never seem to run out, is suffering hiccups and starvation, enough to have caused breakdown in the activities of the institution.

    The case, later turned crisis which presented itself as a tug of war between the managing states and the striking unions has now turned to into a wicked abandonment of the masses as not only the aforementioned parties are affected.

    The students have not only suffered, parents and active participants of democracy have had their hopes dashed over and over again. The students did all they could – organized protests that caught the media attention, even had a dialogue with the Senate President of the country , who, as expected, made promises that the matter would be resolved soon.

    Yet, the owner states claim nothing would be done unless an audit report was submitted. Some even opined that accounts audit cannot happen unless the industrial action is called off. They (Owner states) even set up white paper and technical committees both of which had their reports submitted on how to save the institution without having to go through hiccups as it is now.

    One had even hoped after that after the reports, the dear 25-year old would be cured forever. However, the matter only ended with the report’s submission.

    The state governments won’t give in and the unions, refuse to the Yoruba proverbial donkey who would work incessantly without pay.

    In a bid to kill the conflagration and save the grasses from the elephants at logger heads, a faction of the school’s alumni association started to ‘look for money’ to pay the lecturers.  They had a target – to raise N1bn in 90 days. They started ‘begging’ around to save the dying university by all means. how sad!

    Recently, the governing council of LAUTECH announced that the school shall be reopened and that activities shall commence on the 25th of September, 2017, the announcer stated that the state governments had sorted out funds for six months of the salary owed. In swift response, the unionists claim that they weren’t aware of the resumption and that their strike subsists unless their prayers are answered.

    Questions would then begin to fill a curious mind: was the proposed six months salary bailout supposed to buy us time before another strike action? What happens to the report arrived at by the visitation panel led by Wole Olanipekun (CFR), are there plans to implement these suggestions at all?

    The case of neglect by the owner states cannot be overemphasized. Save the TetFUND, NEEDS assessment, the donated and inherited buildings, one cannot point to one project accomplished by these governors.

    Is the bailout another way to sweep the plans for sustainability of LAUTECH under the carpet? Or abandon the institution completely? After all, the Oyo government has just fathered a new child, TechU and Uniosun has grown a great deal.

    What power does the National Universities Commission have in times like this? Only to ‘regulate’ the activities of universities?

    Have the NUC no power at all?

    Dr Saraki’s meeting with the students’ representatives is still very fresh in our memories, his assurances are too. Are there no plans to fulfill them?

    The KPMG audit report and the technical committee’s report are there no plans to lay the actual stance of the university before the public?

    If these issues are not well addressed, one may begin to wonder if the resumption announced by the governing council is worth the hype after all; and if we would not go back to where the issue all began.