Tag: University

  • Polytechnics/university dichotomy

    Sir: Education is the foundation of every nation; no aspect or level of it ought to be neglected so as to engender all round national development. A polytechnic in Nigeria today offers about 70% of technological programmes which are veritable tools for nation-building and development. On the contrary, polytechnic graduates over the years have suffered serious neglect by the federal government and the labour market.

    Polytechnic graduates cannot proceed directly on a master’s degree programme whether of distinction grade or not; he or she has to be subjected to a minimum of another one year of postgraduate diploma course before proceeding directly to master’s degree as against the university B.sc / B.Eng holder proceeding directly to master’s degree programme. Employers believe polytechnic education is not for those who are intelligent enough to do academic work.

    Polytechnic students are also made to serve or work under university graduates as head of department or units as the case may be. Also, in the civil service, while the university graduate is employed as an administrator, the polytechnic graduate is employed as a Higher Executive Officer.

    Government attitude towards polytechnic education is discriminatory in favour of university education. This is evident in the kind of pronounced infrastructural development work you see in the universities compared with the polytechnics.

    One may be right to see the ill-treatment given to polytechnic graduates by the government, employers of labour and general public as gradually ushering them into extinction, and this has to be prevented immediately, because if they go into extinction, it means that the country will be set back technologically in a manner that all the perceived merits in the arguments and in the eyes of those who see the disparity as wholesome and appropriate will not be justifiable.

    Urgent pragmatic steps need to taken to correct the disparity; individual abilities should be emphasized i.e. what the individual can do rather than names of certificates/academic institutions. Polytechnics should be adequately funded for practical teaching, learning, research and development, infrastructures.

    The ill-treatment should be immediately stopped, because a dispirited person(s) cannot be adequately focused to give his/her best particularly knowing that he/she is not appreciated by his/her immediate society and this will only continue to negatively impact on our dear nation. It is not a taboo for polytechnics and university graduate to be evenly respected.

     

    • Edwin Ovie Eriye,

    Lagos.

  • Apple’s newest courtroom foe is public university

    As a veteran of the global smart phone wars, Apple (AAPL.O) is used to courtroom battles with fierce competitors such as Samsung(005930.KS) and Nokia(NOKIA.HE).

    This week, however, a federal jury returned a verdict against Apple in a lawsuit brought by a different kind of adversary: a public university.

    The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s licensing arm, the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, convinced a jury that Apple had infringed its patent for improving chip efficiency when the company incorporated the technology into some of its phones and tablets.

    Research institutions and universities have not traditionally been major players in patent litigation, and even now schools still launch relatively few patent suits compared to private companies – about 50 cases per year, according to preliminary research by University of Alberta professor Tania Bubela.

    But within that world, WARF has become an aggressive litigator. Since 2000, the foundation has filed 33 lawsuits against 31 different defendants, according to a Reuters analysis of federal court data maintained by RPX Corp, a patent risk management firm.

    In the current case, WARF is claiming $400 million in damages from Apple. As the dispute over how much the iPhone maker owes is hashed out, critics are questioning whether schools receiving public money for research should be engaged in hostile patent litigation.

    WARF, however, has argued that such lawsuits are key to monetizing inventions created at research universities, and that protecting patents encourages innovation. The Apple trial is now in the damages phase, and if WARF gets anywhere close to what it is asking, it would be one of the largest patent payouts ever to a university.

    Attorney Michael Ng, who has represented Australia’s national science agency in U.S. courts, said that universities are feeling forced into litigation.

    “In recent years there has been a greater reluctance, for example in high-tech, to do voluntary licensing deals, and that sometimes leaves holders of intellectual property with no other recourse.”

    In its current lawsuit, WARF hired one of the country’s top patent litigators, Morgan Chu, to go head-to-head with Apple attorney William Lee. And last month WARF sued Apple again over the same patent, this time targeting the company’s newest products, the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, and iPad Pro. WARF also sued Intel Corp in 2008, but the case was settled the following year on the eve of trial.

    WARF, housed on the university’s Madison campus, has been around for 90 years and helps patent and commercialise the university’s inventions. In 2014-15 alone, it provided more than $100 million in direct and in-kind support to the university, it said.

    WARF declined to provide any of its staff to be interviewed for this article, citing the ongoing trial. Apple also declined to comment.

    The patent at issue in the Apple suit was granted in 1998 and covered a “predictor circuit” to boost microchip performance developed by a computer science professor, Gurindar Sohi, and three of his students. Sohi declined to comment.

    In the years leading up to the invention, Sohi’s research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research, which provided about $200,000 yearly, according to court documents. In 1995, he and another professor also received a $2.3 million grant over three years from the NSF and the Advanced Research Projects Agency.

    All three of those agencies are credited in the patent itself, which notes: “The United States has certain rights in this invention.”

    Some legal experts have criticised lawsuits over patents developed with public funding. “Government funding is being used to go after some of our most innovative companies,” said Robin Feldman, a professor at the University of California Hastings College of Law. “Do we want taxpayer money to fund this behavior?”

    Though universities are legally able to obtain patents, considered a private right, on research funded by public dollars, “This policy is being turned on its head,” she said.

    But WARF has argued in the past, as it did to the Federal Trade Commission in 2009, that companies that infringe on university patents should have to pay monetary damages. Such penalties, the foundation says, encourage companies to license patents, providing revenues on which universities depend on to create startups and commercialise their inventions.

    “In short, strong patents and a high cost for infringement stimulate innovation,” its managing director, Carl Gulbrandsen wrote in a letter to the FTC.

    WARF brought in nearly $152 million in income from royalties and investments last year, according to its website.

  • Sprite triple slam activation electrifies University of Ibadan

    …as Patoranking delivers sterling performance

    Excitement was heightened at the University of Ibadan (U.I.) in Oyo State recently, when the Sprite Triple Slam (STS) experiential activation took over the campus with amazing displays of freestyle basketball, music and dance skills by the students, and a brilliant musical performance by award-winning reggae-dancehall singer and songwriter, Patoranking.

    The International Conference Centre of the University of Ibadan, venue of the event, was filled with students who not only experienced the energy of Sprite Triple Slam but got refreshed with Sprite, Nigeria’s leading delicious lemon-lime flavoured drink.

    Commenting on the Sprite Triple Slam Activation, the Senior Brand Manager, Flavours, Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited, Toyin Nnodi, described the platform as a youth-oriented one which is aimed at enabling youths creatively express fresh, free-spirited, originality inherent in them.

    Nnodi said that, “We are aware that Ibadan has a lot of amazing talents. The amazing acts we saw during the five-day town storms and the main activation which held on Saturday underscores the uniqueness of the city. The Sprite Triple Slam Activation is an avenue for Sprite consumers to express themselves in basketball, music and dance.”

    She added that the activation would be held in four other Nigerian university campuses: Enugu State University of Science & Technology, Imo State University, Rivers State University of Science and Technology and University of Lagos will play host to the Sprite Triple Slam train over the coming weeks.

    Students of these universities have a lot to look forward to, as evidenced in the last three activations which held at the University of Benin, University of Calabar and University of Ibadan. From the basketball stunts to the freestyle rap performance and the amazing dance moves, the STS activation is set to thrill attendees at the event.  The performance by Patoranking, award-winning reggae-dancehall artiste, took the event to its crescendo with the crowd singing and dancing to his popular tracks such as ”My woman,” “Murda” and ”Girlie O.”

    Ngom Ukpabi-Eko, who emerged as one of the top winners and is also a member of the Oyo State Basketball Team, said, “Although this is my first experience at Sprite Triple Slam, I love the support Sprite is giving to improve basketball in Nigeria and I know it can only get better.’’

    Enugu State University, Enugu, will be hosting the next Sprite Triple Slam activation on Friday, October 9, 2015.

  • 2016 Ekwueme Research Fellowship at United Nations University, Netherlands

    United Nations University is inviting applications for Ekwueme fellowship, starting March 2016. Fellows must be of Nigerian nationality and must be working on Governance research. The fellowship recipient receives a fellowship including coverage of the tuition fees for enrolment in the years 2, 3 and 4 (6.000 euro each, in total 18.000 euro). The application deadline is 15 October 2015.

    Scholarship can be taken at: Netherlands

    Eligibility -Fellow is younger than 40 when applying

    • The fellowship recipient will complete the application form – and fulfil all programme application requirements, before 15 October 2015.
    • The fellowship recipient applies for the fellowship, starting the GPAC2 programme on 1 March 2016.

    Scholarship Description: Starting March 2016 (application deadline 15 October 2015), the GPAC2 programme offers the option to apply for the Ekwueme fellowship. The fellowship is called after Nigeria’s first vice president and the founder of the political party PDP. He risked his life to stand up to the military dictatorship in Nigeria thus ending the country’s military rule and commencing our present democratic government which started in 1999.

    Duration of award(s): The fellowship will be offered every other year, with first fellow selected in the application round.

    What does it cover?

    • The fellowship recipient will pay him/herself the tuition for year one (8.000 euro), as well as tuition for all years that he/she will remain enrolled after year four.
    • The fellowship recipient will pay his/her own travel expenses , visa/permit expenses, accommodation expenses in Maastricht, fieldwork expenses, books and other expenses.

    How to Apply: Please use the online application form, to apply for the programme. When filling the form you will be asked to provide the documents listed below. Please note that all documents need to be provided digitally; official documents need to be scanned:

    • certified copies of bachelor’s and master’s diplomas and grades
    • proof of proficiency in English – the minimum level accepted is 600 PBT, 100 ICT or 240 CBT (TOEFL) or 7.0 (IELTS). Native speakers and students who have received their bachelor’s or master’s education in English are exempted
    • motivation letter (400- 500 words)
    • two signed reference letters on original letter head (by current or former professors or employers)
    • letter from current employer, including a statement of support of the GPAC² fellow and an indication of ways to support the fellow (for GPAC² applicants only)
    • one-page PhD research proposal
    • curriculum vitae
    • copy of passport
    • passport size picture

    Read more: Ekwueme Research Fellowship for Nigerians, 2016 Scholarship Positions 2015 2016

    Home Apri 2019

     

  • Post doctoral research fellowships at University of the Witwatersrand

    University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa is offering postdoctoral research fellowship at the WADDP Research Unit based. Postdoctoral Fellows who have a keen interest in the field of advanced drug delivery and related biomaterials research can apply for this fellowship. The available positions are contractual over a total of 2 years, with renewal after the first year based on performance and progress. The application deadline is 15 September, 2015.

    Study Subject(s): Fellowships are awarded in the field of Advanced Drug Delivery.

    Course Level: Fellowships are available for pursuing postdoctoral research programme at the WADDP Research Unit based at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits).

    Scholarship can be taken at: South Africa

    Eligibility: Minimum requirements:

    -A PhD obtained within the last 5 years

    -A minimum of 3 articles published/accepted for publication in peer-reviewed ISI journals.

    Additional requirements: Experience would be advantageous; Research expertise aligned with current and past projects at the WADDP Research Unit

    Scholarship Description: Postdoctoral Research Fellowship positions are currently available at the WADDP Research Unit based at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), Johannesburg, South Africa commencing in Q4 of 2015 as well as for 2016 onwards. The WADDP is under the Directorship of Professor Viness Pillay who is an established rated researcher with the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa. Prof. Pillay is also a South African NRF/DST Chair in “Pharmaceutical Biomaterials and Polymer-Engineered Drug Delivery Technologies” at the Tier 1 level that recognizes him as a world leader in the field stemming from his vast research program in advanced drug delivery technology.

    How to Apply: send your CV directly to Professor Viness Pillay by email: viness.pillay-at-wits.ac.za.

    ICFOnest+ Postdoctoral Program (COFUND): International Fellowships in Spain, 2015

    Applications are invited for postdoctoral fellowships available for foreign nationals. The ICFOnest+ Postdoctoral Fellows will be hired by ICFO on a standard employment contract of 24-month duration to perform his/her duties within an existing ICFO research group. Salary and economic conditions are aligned with standard European Marie Curie programs (gross salary in the range 40,000 EUR / 55,000 USD).

    Study Subject(s): Fellowships are awarded for research projects at the forefront of science and technology. Research lines at ICFO include but are not limited to: biomedical optics and biophotonics, nanoscopy and super-resolution imaging, nanotechnology and nanophotonics, nonlinear optics and atom optics, quantum optics and quantum information, atto-science and ultrafast physics, optical sensing and optoelectronics, green technologies and photovoltaics, graphene physics and nanomaterials, single-molecule physics, ultracold quantum matter physics and advanced laser technology.

    Course Level: Fellowships are available for postdoctoral research programme.

    Scholarship can be taken at: Spain

     

  • UI gets new VC

    UI gets new VC

    The Senate of the University of Ibadan has named Professor Abel Idowu Olayinka as the institution’s new Vice Chancellor.

    The professor of geology, who would resume after the expiration of the tenure of Prof. Isaac Adewole on December 1, this year is the first from the ‎faculty of science.

    Announcing the new VC who is the 12th so far in the history of the premier university, the chairman of the council and pro-chancellor, Dr. Umar Musa Mustapha said Professor Olayinka was chosen ‎out of the 13 professors who applied for the post.

    “13 persons put forward a formal application and we screened them after which six names were shortlisted. The selection committee later conducted a free ‎and credible election and again, it was reduced to three out of which professor Abel Olayinka emerged the 12th vice chancellor of our institution.” Mustapha explained.

  • OAU remains best university in Nigeria

    The Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, has been ranked the best university in Nigeria by Webometrics.

    According to the latest web ranking of world universities conducted by the Cybermetrics Lab of Spain, a research group belonging to the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC), OAU was rated as the best in the country

    A statement by the insitution’s spokesperson, Mr. Abiodun Olarewaju, stated that in the newest ranking, which was released last Monday, “Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, was placed, ranked and rated as the best University in Nigeria, while the Universities of Lagos and Ilorin came a distant 2nd and 3rd in positions.

    ” This is the first time in the history of higher education in Nigeria where a particular university, like OAU, would maintain been the first and the best in the country for more than four consecutive times.”

    The statement quoted the institution’s Vice- Chancellor, Prof. Bamitale Omole, as applauding the ranking and ascribing the first position which OAU has been maintaining for the past years to the hard work and dedication to duty of the academic, administrative and technical staff.

    He said the midas touch of the staff has placed the university far and above more than one hundred (100) other universities in Nigeria.

    Prof. Omole re-emphasized his determination to make training and retraining of staff, on constant basis, his topmost priority, adding that he would not rest on his oars until OAU becomes the best in Africa, and one of the top ten in the world.

  • ‘We are improving Nigerians’ welfare in our university’

    The De Montfort University (DMU) in United Kingdom, has promised to provide temporary jobs for six of its Nigerian students after graduation.
    This was contained in a statement in Lagos by the country Director, Mr. Babajide Ogundeji.
    Ogundeji said De Montfort University is committed to improving the welfare of Nigerian students abroad. According to him, Nigerian students who want to study for undergraduate and postgraduate degree would be given a €1,000 discount.
    He said: “Students can study within one of four faculties- Art, Design and Humanities, Business and Law, Health and Life Sciences and Technology. Popular degrees include Business, Engineering, Computing, Architecture and Nursing.”
    Ogundeji noted that the institution places premium on research.
    “Almost 60 per cent of DMU’s research activities were judged as world-leading or internationally excellent in the 2014 REF (Research Excellence Framework), the UK-wide initiative to assess the quality of research in UK universities.
    “The university has recently invested £136 million to transform our campus, creating a modern inspiring environment, which students deserve and the school is well positioned in England, it is only one hour by train from central London.

  • Universities’ Governing Councils not dissolved – Presidency

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved that the Governing Councils of Federal Universities be exempted, for the time being, from the dissolution of Boards of Federal Government Parastatals, Agencies, Institutions and Government-Owned Companies announced on July 16, 2015.

    All Vice Chancellors of Federal Universities, according to a statement by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, have been informed of the exemption through a circular issued by the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mr. Danladi Kifasi.

  • University not the ultimate, graduands told

    University not the ultimate, graduands told

    Usually, during graduations, graduands are counseled to go to the university so as to become doctors, pilots, engineers or take up other juicy professions.

    But this was not the case at the 2015 graduation of Pacific Comprehensive College, Shasha, Akowonjo where pupils were told to pursue their dreams no matter what it is.

    Held at the college’s multipurpose hall the graduation was well attended by parents and well wishers.

    The school’s chairman, Board of Trustees, Mr Omosowon Remi, told parents present that while university education is desirable, it is not the only option.

    “There are options in entrepreneurship, being an artist, sportsman or women, musician, dancer, writer, and many others.  Help your wards discover his or her area of strength and where his or her passion lies. In the choice of an appropriate career and be supportive to them at all times,” he said.

    He said the school takes entrepreneurship programmes for their students including electronic, garment-making, data processing and book keeping very seriously.

    “Book keeping is very important because every successful person no matter their profession must be able to understand records so that their accountants will not cook up figures and cheat them,” he said.

    He advised the graduands to persevere, follow their passion, be creative, learn from others’ experiences of when making any major decision, and dream.

    On his part, the principal, Mr Mekwunye Andrew, said education is a means to an end but not the end itself.

    “You may have played in the school team as a footballer but now you are going to play against the world. You do not need to recite all the laws in Physics and Chemistry to be celebrated. If your calling is in music, drama, comedy, dancing or sports do not hesitate to go for it. Plan you goals in your area of strength and you will succeed,” he said.

    One of high points of the event was the presentation of prizes. The best graduating pupil, Akinrinlola Daniel got N88, 000 for being best in English Language, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Further Maths and Civic Education.

    In an interview, Daniel, who is the outgoing head-boy said he intends to study Electrical and Electronic Engineering in the university in order to help develop the value of electronics and electrical appliances in Nigeria.