Tag: University of Lagos (UNILAG)

  • UNILAG matriculates 9,204 for 2017/2018 academic session

    UNILAG matriculates 9,204 for 2017/2018 academic session

    A total of 9,204 students, who had been screened, were formally admitted into various academic disciplines of the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ) for the 2017/2018 academic session on Friday.

    Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, Vice-Chancellor of the institution administered the oath of allegiance to the new students.

    The ceremony was held amidst tight security as armed personnel were seen at strategic places around the venue.

    The tight security might not be unconnected with a threat by the non-teaching staff of labour unions of the institution that are currently on indefinite strike.

    In his brief address, Ogundipe congratulated the students for their success in enrolling into the university.

    He urged them to stay off drugs, robbery and any other vices capable of compromising their stay in the institution and ruining their future career.

    “I want to admonish you all to stay focused; take your academics seriously in order to graduate peacefully as and when due.

    “You must all carry yourselves well; eschew all forms of violence by staying away from bad gangs.

    “Always be of good behaviour so as to prove a worthy ambassador of this great university and a pride to your parents and the society in general,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • UNILAG postpones 2017 convocation

    UNILAG postpones 2017 convocation

    The University of Lagos ( UNILAG ), on Tuesday said it had postponed its convocation ceremony for the 2016/2017 academic session.

    The Vice-Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe who disclosed this in an interview with our reporter in Lagos said that a suitable date for the ceremony would be announced in due course.

    The university, in a statement earlier issued , had stated that a news conference to announce activities lined up  for the event had been slated for Feb. 14.

    “Yes, after some deliberations with management, the university has decided to postpone the convocation ceremony.

    “This is as a result of the challenges posed by the on-going strike embarked upon by members of the non –academic labour unions of universities.

    “The ceremony was earlier scheduled to hold from Monday, Feb. 19 to Thursday Feb. 22 .

    “The activities of these unions have the potential of snowballing and marring the carefully laid out arrangements already put in place for the ceremony,’’ he said.

    Ogundipe stated that though arrangements for a successful ceremony were already at an advanced stage, the institution would not give room for anything that might cause any form of inconvenience or embarrassments to invited guests.

    “The university remains committed to providing a conducive atmosphere that would foster quality teaching and research as well as produce graduates that can compete with their counterparts globally.

    “Hence, members of the community are enjoined to continue their lawful activities,’’ the vice-chancellor said.

    Members of the unions, the Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities ( SSANU ), the Non Academic Staff Union ( NASU ) and the National Association of Academic Technologists ( NAATS ), had embarked on strike on Dec. 4, 2017.

    The unions, under the aegis of the Joint Actions Committee (JAC), were protesting among other issues, the non-implementation of agreement they entered into with the Federal government in 2009.

    They were also protesting the sharing formula of the N23 billion released by the Federal government as part of earned allowance of workers of federal universities across the country.

    The National President of the JAC, Mr Samson Ugwoke, had while declaring the strike in December said it would be ‘comprehensive, total and indefinite’.

    NAN

  • Police, parents, NASU members in free for all as pupils are locked out

    Police, parents, NASU members in free for all as pupils are locked out

    The long-running strike of the Non-Academic Staff Union of Universities ( NASU ) got messier on Thursday morning as police officials, parents, members of the union and school teachers brawled over closure of school gates.

    Campus Life reports that on early hours of Thursday morning, the gates of International School and Staff School respectively at the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ) were under key and locks leaving pupils, parents and care givers stranded.

    Police vans from Sabo Police Division, Yabo were mounted at different locations on campus and specifically at the schools frontage.

    Pupils in their hundreds were seen lurking around the school fences while some of the pupils at ISL took to shooting match.

    At Staff School, the atmosphere was completely different as armed policemen, parents wrangled with members of NASU, who insisted that the gates must under locks and keys.

    Apparently aggrieved parents expressed grief at the action while they profusely bicker with the school teachers at the gate.

    While some of the parents regretted that the strike has taken tolls on the academics of their wards, others said the NASU members couldn’t have locked out pupils if their children were enrolled in the school.

    A parent at staff school, who was seen ranting said, “This is completely wrong and embarrassing. It is not in anyway rational to lock these young children out of school because of anything whatsoever. At the end of the day, the children who don’t know anything about the strike will be the ones to suffer most.”

    She added that the term has very few more weeks to end while there are lots to cover for the pupils.

    A male parent at ISL regretted that the timing of the strike was wrong because secondary school are meant to be prepared for West African Senior Certificate Examinations.

    He said NASU engaged in their demonstration but, it shouldn’t be at the detriment of school children.

    It will be recalled that UNILAG chapter staged a protest on campus few week ago to further press for their demands.

    Meanwhile, NASU on Wednesday staged another protest shortly after they distrupted the power and water supply across the university campus.

  • JP Clark unveils ‘Remains Of A Tide’

    JP Clark unveils ‘Remains Of A Tide’

    Renowned Nigerian poet and playwright Prof John Pepper Clark is out with a new book of poetry. 

    His newest collection of poetry, entitled Remains of a Tide, will be unveiled today by 11am the JP Clark Centre in the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ). 

    The book presentation, which is published by Mosuro Publishers, would be chaired by the Vice Chancellor University of Lagos, Prof. O.T Ogundipe. 

    The event is being organised by Mosuro Publisher.

    His other collections include A Reed in the Tide (Longmans, 1965), Casualties: Poems 1966-68 (USA: Africana Publishing Corporation, 1970), A Decade of Tongues (Longmans, Drumbeat series, 1981), State of the Union (1981) and Mandela and Other Poems (1988).

  • Ambode to deliver UNILAG convocation lecture

    Ambode to deliver UNILAG convocation lecture

    The Lagos State Governor,  Mr Akinwumi Ambode, is to deliver the University of Lagos  ( UNILAG )convocation lecture for the 2016/2017 academic session.
    Dr Taiwo Ipaye , the Registrar, University of Lagos, said in a statement on Friday in Lagos that the lecture, slated for February 19, has the theme `Inclusion: The Path to a New Nation`.
    The lecture is part of programmes lined up for the convocation ceremony proper.
    According to Ipaye, a pre-convocation  news conference to kick start the ceremony has already been  slated for February 14.
    She said that an opening exhibition and the inauguration of the 12th Vice Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe would precede the lecture.
    Ipaye  said the convocation ceremony proper had been scheduled for February 20  to February 22.
    According to her, Day 1 of the ceremony will feature the congregation for the award of first degrees, diplomas, certificates and the announcement of prize winners for graduating students of the Faculties of Education and Social Sciences for the morning session.

    Also Read: Beware: Only UNILAG has full accreditation for Law

    She said graduating students for the Faculties of Arts, Environmental Sciences and Sciences would be attended to during the afternoon session on the same day.
    The Registrar said on February 21, there would be award of first degrees, diplomas, certificates and the announcement of prize winners for graduating students of the Faculties of Engineering, Law and Management Sciences for the morning session.
    She said that graduating students from the Faculties of Basic Medical Sciences, Clinical Sciences, Dental Sciences, Pharmacy and the Distance Learning Institute would be conferred later on the same day (afternoon session).
    Ipaye said that on February 22, the final day of the ceremony, there would be the congregation for the award of Higher degrees of the School of Post graduate Studies.
    She said there would also be the ‘Best Researcher Award’ and the conferment of the title of ‘Distinguished  and Emeritus Professors’  on the same day.
  • UNILAG TV to begin operation in February

    UNILAG TV to begin operation in February

    The University of Lagos ( UNILAG ) television station will begin operations in February to facilitate research-oriented education and ease communication within and outside the university community.

    The Vice-Chancellor of the university, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, gave the assurance in an interview on Monday in Lagos.

    The Federal Government recently approved licence for the television thereby making it the first campus television station in Nigeria.

    According to Ogundipe, the university is set to change the face of television broadcasting through its Mass Communication Department.

    “We are ready to go on air, as we have all it takes to float a world-class television station.

    “Right now, we have the cameras and other gadgets with a world-class studio.

    “The approval to operate a television station will improve our branding; we are bringing professionals to help in kick-starting the station,’’ Ogundipe said.

    He commended the efforts of the immediate past Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Rahamon Bello and Prof. Ralf Akinfeleye of the Mass Communication Department, who pursued the dream.

    Ogundipe said that the university paid N10 million to acquire the television licence.

    Prof. Ralf Akinfeleye, also the Chairman, Centre of Excellence in Multi-Media/Radio Unilag and Television, told our reporter that the television station would be the first of its kind in West Africa.

    He thanked President Muhammadu Buhari for granting the licence to the university.

    He also praised former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who also granted the institution its radio licence in 2002.

    Akinfeleye, a former Head of Department of the Mass Communication, said that the station would go beyond the Direct Satellite Television (DSTV).

    He added that it would enhance the training of modern-day broadcasters.

    “We are indeed happy to see the realisation of this dream.

    “We bided for a World Bank’s five million dollars grant for equipment along with 19 other universities, and we won it.

    “I am glad to state that we have taken delivery of various equipment such as cameras, teleprompters and other broadcast materials worth that amount.

    “This makes our studio more sophisticated than most television stations in the country,’’ Akinfeleye said.

    The don said that the station would also add value to the training of the students.

    Dr Olubunmi Ajibade, a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mass Communication, said that the station, which would be hosted on the DSTV platform, would also be used to generate income for the institution.

    Ajibade said that Nigeria and Africa as a whole, would witness professionalism at its best in terms of broadcasting, with the operation of the station.

    “We train people for the industry; so we are in the best position to attract the best hands.

    “Fortunately, the World Bank project has already supplied us with world-class equipment for both the radio and television operations,’’ he said.

    NAN

  • Journalists urged to embrace immersive storytelling with multimedia devices

    Journalists urged to embrace immersive storytelling with multimedia devices

    In the wake of immersive journalism, otherwise called 360 journalism, there have been calls on Journalists on the need to begin to employ multimedia tools and data in their storytelling to tell important stories in new ways.

    Facilitators comprising multimedia journalists, IT and tech experts made this plea at a training session tagged “Hacks/Hacker Lagos,” organised by Code for Nigeria, a member of the continental Code for Africa federation.

    Code for Nigeria on using storytelling
    Code for Nigeria on using storytelling

    The training which attracted print and broadcast journalists as well as Mass Communication undergraduates from the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ) and Lagos State University ( LASU ) held on Saturday at Civic Hub, Yaba, Lagos.

    Yemisi Adegoke, a multimedia journalist and documentary film urged journalists to intensify efforts at building their capacity in research and investigation in order to tell unique stories.

    Noting that investigative journalism helped to unravel the problems confronting our society, she said it was imperative for journalists to use modern technologies to their advantage in proffering sustainable solutions.

    Flourish Chukwurah, a freelance multimedia journalist noted that immersive storytelling is the future of journalism saying it was high time journalists keyed into the idea.

    “We must begin to demonstrate this new form of journalism as well as significant technical, storytelling, ethical and cultural challenges that immersive storytelling – from 360 degree video to VR - present to journalists and media organizations.”

    “Journalists must be equipped with engaging narrative techniques, video editing skill, and ethics among others.”

    She urged media organizations to in teaching learning and teaching of multimedia journalism.

    “At this point, the media should facilitate online and in-person workshops, events and trainings to encourage more journalists, journalism educators and newsrooms to use tools available from various technology platforms to explore emerging forms of visual storytelling and to engage users,” she said.

    Speaking on How to Use Data in Story, Blaise Aboh, a Code for Nigeria Innovation fellow, said journalists need to double efforts at probing government functionaries and corporate institutions on the data they provide to the public.

    Noting that journalists are provided with abundant repository of data online, Aboh urged journalists to always verify and validate data before publishing their stories to ensure open data and open government system.

    He said, “There is need to change the power dynamics that govern our society, giving ordinary citizens more and deeper information in real time, along with digital tools for engaging citizens and with those in positions of power.”

    He added that journalists should go beyond the data generated by the government and explore more repositories of data in the course of discharging their constitutional duty.

    The country lead for Code for Nigeria, Nkechi Okwuone, noted that the goal of the training was to build capacity and expand the community of media and technology professionals.

    She said the organization would continue to help journalists explore opportunities and combat the challenges 21st century through the evolving form of journalism.

    She added that Code for Africa seeks to empower active citizenry and strengthen civic watchdogs to help government shape and improve its services to citizens.

    “Our goal is to bring experience supporting communities of journalists committed to learning and exploring how technology can strengthen reporting and storytelling,” she said.

  • PHOTOS: New VC, Prof. Ogundipe meets UNILAG Muslim community

    PHOTOS: New VC, Prof. Ogundipe meets UNILAG Muslim community

    The new Vice Chancellor of the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ), Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe meets with Muslim community, Prof.  M A Badmus standing for prayer session at the reception held at the central mosque  Islamic  Center Hall during a courtesy visit of the VC to the Muslim community on Friday.

    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), UNILAG Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, Bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus
    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), UNILAG Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, Bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus
    Unilag new VC
    UNILAG VC, Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe (second left), Muslim Community Chairman, Prof. Lai Olurode, bursar, Mr. Nurudeen Lawal and the Chief Imam, Central Mosque, Prof. M A Badmus

     

  • Drug abuse: Unilag gets test kit for students

    Drug abuse: Unilag gets test kit for students

    In a bid to check drug abuse on campus, the University of Lagos has provided a drug test kit in its medical centre to examine students suspected to be on hard drugs.

    Prof. Rahaman Bello, outgoing Vice-Chancellor of the institution, confirmed this at a forum with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

    Bello said that the initiative was necessary because drug abuse was on the increase in the nation’s tertiary institutions.

    “Drug abuse is a major problem for every institution, particularly, those in the cities. We have gone ahead in the University of Lagos to address it .

    “With the test kit, anyone who is suspected, his or her urine or blood depending on what we want to do, is collected for test.

    “The thing about drug is that when you take it, it will be in your blood for a longtime , so you cannot say , I did not use it once the test kit detects it.

    “Before, we start using the test kit , everyone we picked denied using drug since we could not find any evidence, ” he said.

    According to him, with the test kit, the university has been able to pin down victims, but granted them amnesty.

    He said that although the university’s regulation provided that any student found dealing with drug should be expelled, the management had to warn and rehabilitate them.

    “With the rehabilitation, the victims are given two or three semesters to ‘get clean’. By this, we mean they will visit the medical centre on monthly basis to get tested.

    “If after two or three visits, you are found clean, we will admit you back to the system, if not you are sent out.

    “This we do not to unnecessarily punish them, but to assist them to find a way to regain themselves,” he said.

    Bello said that about 100 students of the university was detected to be using hard drugs in 2016.

    “One hundred out of over 50,000 students,(35,000 – full-time and 15,000 to 17,000 -part-time) may seem insignificant, but to us, one person on drug is a problem to the university community .

    “If the individual is not stopped, he or she will influence so many others,” he said.

    On cultism, Bello said that it was a cankerworms in the education sector as examination malpractice and drug abuse.

    He said that cultism affected even secondary schools and sometimes primary schools.

    According to him, some institution in cities such as University of Lagos would need to intensity efforts to check cultism because they were located in infested communities.

    Bello said that the university’s management kept a watch on cult activities through intelligence network.

    “We get to know once anything comes up, and we nip it in the bud. We may not have completely wiped off cultism but it has been drastically reduced, ” he said.

    ==========

    Edited by Ijeoma Popoola

    Posted in General |

  • UNILAG to admit only 8,000 – outgoing VC

    UNILAG to admit only 8,000 – outgoing VC

    No fewer than 24,000 applicants to the University of Lagos ( UNILAG ) who scored 200 marks and above will still be unable to secure admission in the institution in the 2017/2018 academic session.

    The outgoing Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Rahamon Bello, gave the indication at a forum with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

    He said that although 32,000 applicants to the university scored 200 marks and above in this year’s Unified Tertiary matriculation examination ( UTME ), Unilag would not admit beyond 8,000.

    Bello said that the university insisted that an applicant must also score at least 40 per cent in Unilag’s post-UTME before consideration for admission.

    “We know what goes on in our public examinations. That is why we insist on candidates undertaking our post UTME and scoring at least 40 per cent,’’ he said.

    According to Bello, who steps down as Unilag’s Vice-Chancellor on Nov. 11, the aim is to promote excellence.

    “We admit the best so that we can produce the best,’’ he said.

    He said that the university held 75 inaugural lectures during his five-year tenure in an effort to promote scholarship.

    The professor of chemical engineering noted that the university had held a total of 374 inaugural lectures since its existence.

    Bello said that the university produced 103 professors in the past five years, representing about 20 per cent of the 292 professors it had produced in its 55 years of existence.

    “They just don’t come and get them; the process of becoming a professor in Unilag is very tedious.

    “We have peer review from inside and outside and we have interview internally, so that at the end, you know why you are promoted or why you are not,’’ he said.

    Bello said that Unilag had to change its curriculum in a bid to sustain academic excellence.

    “We are neither a technology university nor a business university; we are comprehensive, except for agriculture.

    “The only agriculture we do is marine.’’

    He expressed satisfaction at the performance of the university in its new fields of study such as cell biology and genetics.

    “When we started them, they were almost nothing.

    “Cell biology and genetics, for instance, are the ones that drive the health sector when you talk about working in the sub-cell region, especially in the area of In-Vitro-Fertilisation ( IVF ).

    He also expressed delight at the performance of the university’s creative arts department.

    “When we started it, some saw it as laughable. Today, most of our graduates are the ones making money in Nollywood,’’ Bello said.

    Bello, the 11th Vice-Chancellor of the university, came into office in 2012, following the death of the then Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Adetokunbo Sofoluwe.

    Bello will be succeeded by Prof. Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, the university’s Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academics).

    NAN