Tag: Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH)

  • YABATECH, group partner on ethics training

    To achieve improved productivity and effectiveness for its workers, Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) in conjunction with Global Women Investors and Innovators Network (GWIIN), recently engaged 80 selected academics and non-academic members of staff in Work Ethics, Etiquette and Leadership training.

    The objective of the training was to assist YABATECH to gain competitive edge with workers being exposed to a range of tools and approaches that support good governance, ethics, professionalism and effective leadership qualities.

    The workshop was designed to expose participants to modules relating to innovation, business development and enterprise.

    During the two-day programme at G International Institute Training Centre (GIITC) in Iyana-Ipaja, Lagos, facilitated by Staff Development and Training Department of the College, the founder & Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of GWIIN, Dr. Bola Olabisi, buttressed the main purpose of the training which was to re-train, re-skill, re-tool and take advantage of current and emerging opportunities.

    The participants were divided into seven groups that brainstormed on case studies/scenarios and proffered solution.

    Day one of the workshop focused on work ethics and authentic leadership qualities, making sound decision and values and integrity.

    On the second day, the participants l earnt about the code of conduct for personal development, social etiquette, and the art of fine dining with regards to the do’s and don’ts; dignity and a sense of what is appropriate in a cosmopolitan society; as well as composure and sophistication.

    Certificates of participation were awarded to attendees after the workshop.

  • Lagos students’ accommodation blues

    Accommodation, both on and off campus for students attending tertiary institutions in the heart of the Lagos metropolis, is a challenge. On campus, they are forced to make do with unconducive living spaces; while off campus, they face high cost. BUSOLA SEBIOTIMO, RUKAYAT OMORO and ADEDAMOLA AYODEJI report on the problems they face and the changes they seek.

    After gaining admission, getting accommodation is the next biggest hurdle students of tertiary institutions have to scale.

    Students of the Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) and the University of Lagos (UNILAG) face issues staying on and off campus.

    On campus, they complainED of facilities not meeting their needs; while off campus they complain about the high cost of rent and transportation to and from school.

    Living on campus

    Staying on campus has its advantages.  First, is that hostel accommodation on campus is cheaper than off-campus.  While students pay N25,000 for a bed space at UNILAG, students pay N19,000 at YABATECH.   Students save money they would otherwise have spent on transportation to school; they are able to get to class on time because of proximity. They also do not have to pay utility bills as the institution is saddled with  providing water and augmenting power supply from the national grid.  However, it is not all that rosy for the on-campus students of YABATECH and UNILAG.

    UNILAG

    Many students who spoke with The Nation complained about their halls of residence at UNILAG being dilapidated or overcrowded.  They also complained about having health issues as a result of bad toilets, untreated water, bed bugs.

    A student of Marine Biology resident at Kofo Hotel complained about the poor state of the hostel, as well as overcrowding.The female student, who does not want to be named, lamented that some rooms have double the number of approved occupants, claiming that the hostel porters collected bribes to keep squatters in the hostels.

    “The Kofo Hostel is bad. At times, there will not be water; the accommodation is not even conducive, and our skin reacts to all this. We are 16 in a room but we are supposed to be eight because of the squatters, they do not allow people to squat but when they find out, we will pay.

    “Last week Saturday, a worker was cleaning the louvres and it fell on a girl’s head, just because the glass was already weak. Well, the cleaner is not to be blame for what happened.  And when the lady was taken to the clinic, they did not treat her immediately; she was asked to bring her Identification card before they could treat her,” the student said.

    Another student, who stays at Amina Hostel, said students were being forced to make repairs with their funds because there is no official in the hostel to inform the management of repairs.

    The Petroleum and Gas Engineering student said: “I live in Amina Hostel.  It is OK; but because of the location (it is inside of Education), they do not really pay attention.  There are times that there won’t be light in the hostel. They said there was no hostel manager. There are some things that they are supposed to have renovated but they have not.  When the things are too spoilt, we are the ones who repair them with our money because it is affecting us.

    “Last month, a rat came into our hostel through a net that was torn. We complained but we were told we do not have a hostel manager so we had to contribute money to fix the net.

    “There is also a place in the passage where water comes through inside our room. They came to check it, but they have not done anything.’’

    But not all hostels of the university are so bad. A student of Finance, Opeyemi Sadiq, said he was fine with his hostel accommodation.

    “The hostel is convenient. It costs N25,000 for the hostel on campus,” said the 300-Level student.

    Save for the number of students in her room, another student in the Faculty of Science was comfortable in her room.

    “It depends on the people you are squatting with. We are like 16 in the room. We do not have water issues.  The hostel is comfortable for me,” she said.

    Another student whose, hostel is in the heart of the campus, said her problem was its location from class.

    “I stay on Campus. We are eight in the room. And the room is tight. The only problem I am having is coming from my hostel to school.  My hostel is far from my department.There are other hostels that are comfortable, trust me mine is not,” she said.

    YABATECH

    For students of YABATECH, their problem is not so much about the state of their hostels as the high feeding cost of staying on campus.

    Following a fire that gutted the institution’s Bakassi Hostel, a hostel for both males and females on November 23, 2016, a new hostel, called Hollywood, was built last session to accommodate only male students.  However, students were blamed for the fire resulting in the polytechnic management banning cooking by students in the hostels.  The ban is negatively affecting the students who said they spend as much as N1,000-N1,500 feeding daily.

    A National Diploma (ND) 1 student of Mass Communication, who called herself Victoria, said students still try to sneak hotplates to cook in the hostel.

    “I stay on campus. Not allowing us to cook, is really disturbing us in the hostel. Some people do sneak in the hot plate, but the school would still go round and then seize it.

    “Instead of spending at least N500 (for a meal), I could use that to get food stuff from the market and eat well.  But the reverse is the case.  We spend  almost N1,000 daily on food.  It is really affecting us, as we are not allowed to cook. We are three in my room. The room is comfortable. It is just the issue of cooking that is the major problem all students face,” said Victoria, who stays in Akata Hostel.

    Ruth Oyindamola of the Department of Accountancy, ND1, said sometimes students do not have money to buy food.

    “Staying in the hostel is actually very convenient. We are not many in the room; we are just three. Everything is conducive. We are managing with the  issue of not cooking.  We have to go out and buy food and it is not every time we have money,” she said.

    A second year student of Business Administration, who did not give his name, complained about the hostel facilities and the food.  He complained that the affordable food vendor shut down, forcing students to spend more.  He said the students may protest.

    He said: “We don’t have water; our toilet is bad; we don’t cook in the hostel ; we even want to protest.   I spend N1,500 every day to feed myself because the food they sell is very small they have even closed down the cafeteria where we buy cheap food.  The name of cafeteria is Food Village.  The name of the cafeteria is where the food is costly is Bukola.  If you do not have money you cannot go there.”

    Living off campus

    For some students of both institutions, the challenges of living on campus drove them to source accommodation off campus. For others, they were forced off campus because they could not get campus accommodation.

    A Mathematics student of UNILAG, David Audu (not real names), said he chose to stay off campus because students fall ill in the hostel.

    “I have friends in the hostel. We resumed at the same time. But just one week after, they contracted skin diseases. When we came to the school, they looked fresh.

    “It is not about convincing my parents that I want to stay outside the school but they, on seeing the condition of the hostels, said this could not be a place where their child would stay,” he said.

    Audu urged the university to improve on the hostel facilities.

    Ade Folarin Fosulu said he paid N100,000 for his off-campus hostel accommodation, adding that it is more comfortable.

    “I don’t stay in the school hostel because it is not comfortable. I live in a rented apartment  at Pako; we are three and we paid N100,000 each.”

    Caleb Oni, a 100 level student of Mass Communication, concerned about hygiene, opted for a N150,000 apartment off campus, which he and three of his colleagues are sharing.

    “I don’t fancy hostel. I do not want a situation where I will be pressed and I will not be able to go. Also, another reason is because of the over population in the hostels, and bed bugs.  ‘’Four of us paid N150,000 each for two years,’’ he said.

    Some YABATECH students living off-campus complained about the long time it took before the management allocated bed spaces to them.They said one semester had gone before they got  spaces in the hostels. While they waited, some lived rough – sleeping in classrooms or other spaces; those who could not opted for off campus.

    Uche Janet, a Higher National Diploma (HND) II student, said some students refused to take hostel spaces because they had only one semester left.

    “It took a long time for the school management to allocate the hostels.  And when this was done, the students didn’t really accept the offers because a semester was gone and they thought it was a waste of money to pay.

    ‘’Some had already got accommodation. I come from Ojota every day and I spend at least N500. It is not comfortable for me. I had to make do with this arrangement. This is so because the facilities in the hostel are dilapidated; the toilets are bad. This is beside the food problem,” she said.

    A student (names withheld) said the delay in allocating hostel spaces made students sleep in classrooms.

    “People that paid for hostel paid for this semester only because they did not open the hostel when school resumed. They opened it in second semester and people were sleeping in classrooms or anywhere they liked because they had not got accommodation.  I live in Fadeyi.  We are four in the room and we paid N35,000 each,” he said.

    Grace, a Computer Science student, said she suffered inconvenience commuting from her home in Mile 2 to Yaba everyday but preferred it to the inconvenience of living on campus.

    “I won’t be able to cook in the hostel; I cannot stay in the hostel and be buying food and yet they lock down the reasonable food vendor. I do not know their reason. Those staying in the hostel are still going outside (campus) to look for places to buy food because those places are cheaper than the other food vendor in the hostel.  I spend N600 or close to N1,000 as  transport fare from Mile 2. At times I come to lectures late but I cannot stay in the hostel because of the circumstances around it,” she said.

    Refuting claims by UNILAG students that they were exposed to infection in the hostels, the institution’s Vice Chancellor, Prof Oluwatoyin Ogundipe, said the University does not joke with the health issues.

    “The University does not joke with the health issues. Once a student is sick, even by 12am, the emergency services is always on ground,” he said.

    On the issue of overcrowding, Ogundipe said it was the students who accommodated squatters in the hostels.

    “It is the students that always bring in people and once we try to send them out, they are not happy about it,” he said.

    Speaking on having to spend money on repairs in the hostel, Ogundipe said students were supposed to report to the management to carry out repairs and not spend their own money.

    “It is them that want to spend money. They are to report to their hall mistress and if the hall mistress does not answer; they should tell the Dean, Students’ Affairs.

    “A student messaged me on Whatsapp about an issue and I forwarded it to the DSA and it was solved. My number is everywhere; students can reach me on WhatsApp and I will answer,” he said.

    Reacting to the claims by YABATECH students that hostels were not allocated on time, Public Relations Officer of the institution, Mr Joseph Ejiofor, said the allocation was not done because of renovations on the hostels.

    “It was because of the renovation that delayed the allocation of rooms. It does not happen normally. The rector being a father saw that the former hostels were not good enough so decided to renovate it,” he said.

    Ejiofor added that the rule about no cooking stands.  He said students’ carelessness caused the fire.

    “The burnt hostel was as a result of their carelessness. Every school has its rules and that’s our school’s own.  That is why they have provided a café and restaurant for them to purchase food from. They have to take precautions and that is their precaution,” he said.

    However, Ejiofor noted that the institution had provided more hostel space which would be allocated from next session.

    “Then there are two newly renovated hostels with new bunk beds and mattresses. So there is accommodation readily available for everyone.  The hostels were not allocated because it was already late.  They would be allocated from next session,” he said.

    However, the students complained that at N40,000, the new hostels were too expensive.

  • Singer Seyoung drops new single ‘Faaji’

    Upcoming artiste, Prosper Oluwaseun, popularly known as Seyoung, has released an Afro fusion sound titled ‘Faaji life.’

    The Akwa-ibom artiste released his first single this year ‘Faaji’ to make known the mistakes most guys make in relationships.

    Read Also: DJ Cuppy’s Gelato single tops music charts

    When Seyoung is not busy making music or free styling for his fans on social media, he tries to keep up with lectures in the department of Hospitality, Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH).

    Since his debut in 2015, he has been in the spotlight within and outside campus; performing with other big artistes in the industry like Davido, Mayorkun and Dice Ailes to name a few.

    Seyoung fell in love with music at the early age of 13 when he started songwriting and he went on to record his debut single ‘Tonight’ in 2015.

    Some of his other singles include; Bad girl and Your Love.

  • Five years after, seven sacked workers return

    Five years after their sack, some Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Lagos State workers, who were reinstated in January, relived their fight for re-absorption. KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE reports.

    Theirs is a story of all is well that ends well. Five years after their sack, they were reinstated. To celebrate their return seven chartered accountants with Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) gathered friends, colleagues and members of various civil society organisations (CSOs) for a thanksgiving reception.

    Eight of them were sent away between October 2013 and December 2014 during the tenure of the immediate past Rector, Dr Kudirat Ladipo because “their services were no longer needed.”

    One of them, Basiru Adedeji, died before they were reabsorbed. He died in February, last year.

    At the thanksgiving reception, their leader Mr Olu Ibirogba, thanked CSOs like Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), Civil Liberties Organisaiton (CLO), Coalition Against Corrupt Leadership (CACOL), Centre for the Defence of Human Rights (CDHR) and the media for standing by them in their time of great need.

    “We are here today because of those of you, who have decided to lend helping hands to those who are in distress.  We are using this platform to thank our brothers and sisters for stretching their hands of assistance to us not asking for money to help us.  We thank God eight of us were sent away, but we are back at work,” he said.

    Ibirogba was the bursar when he was sacked in October 2013. Six others, Bamidele Ajinde (Chief Accountant); Olusola Dada (Chief Accountant), his wife, Gbemisola (Chief Accountant); Mopelola Ibitomi (Assistant Chief Accountant); Temilola Akinwusi (Assistant Chief Accountant) and the late Adedeji  were sent away a year later in September 2014.  Charles Akharayi (Chief Accountant), the eighth person, got his termination letter in December 2014.

    Read Also: YABATECH opens water factory

    They resumed on January 15, 2019. But Ibirogba was reinstated five months before others.

    Their  reinstatement followed the verdict of the National Industrial Court (NIC) last year. Ibirogba’s case was the first to be decided last June when Justice O. A. Obaseki-Osaghae directed YABATECH to reinstate him as bursar and pay damages of N21 million-apart from the payment of all his salaries and entitlement for the five-year period.This led to his being recalled in August 2018.

    Justice Obaseki-Osaghae had declared his sack null and void, and “in gross violation of Section 17 (3) of the Federal Polytechnic Act, extant civil service rules and an affront to the judgment of this court.”

    The Judge also directed that relevant law- enforcement agencies like the Police, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) should investigate Ibirogba’s allegations against Dr Ladipo’s administration.

    The cases against the other seven also went in their favour last December and the court asked them to be returned to their jobs with their monies paid. On their return, they were placed in new positions they would have attained if their appointment had not been terminated. Many, who were principal accountants, are now Chief Accountants or Assistant Chief Accountants.

    Ibirogba thanked the government for allowing due process to take its course. “We wrote to many influential Nigerians to help us; some did not do anything. But we thank God the present administration saw the letters written by CDHR, CLO and listened to them.  We are saying this so when you are in trouble you can go to them. We thank the relevant authorities-the government, the Governing Council of the College, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo,” he said.

    Ibirogba is now YABATECH’s Epe Campus Director-in charge of administrative matters for the institution. He was not reinstated as Bursar. Neither was he paid the N21 million based on an out-of-court settlement with the institution’s Governing Council. However, he said he was overjoyed that the eight workers were vindicated.

    “The most important thing is that we have been vindicated.  When the court says you have done the right thing and the relevant authorities of government have said you have done the right thing, I don’t want to pursue that.

    “We already have an agreement now.  It is the agreement we are trying to pursue its implementation.  They (Council) said they would not pay the punitive charges of N20 million and the legal fees of N1 million, but they would pay my entitlements as a principal officer, who has completed his tenure in instalments. That is what we are addressing now,” he said.

    Had he not spent five years in the trenches fighting for his job, Ibirogba said he would have used the time to undergo a Ph.D programme.

    “My first Masters was in 2000 before I joined YABATECH. My second Masters was from the University of Leeds before this issue came up.  I would have used that period to pursue my Ph.D, but I did not have the time and money,” he said.

    On his part, Mr Charles Akharayi said surviving the five years of job wilderness was due to the Grace of God.  He thanked the Governing Council led by Lateef Fagbemi for speeding their reinstatement.

    “It was through the grace of God that one was able to survive.We thank the Governing Council Chairman, Chief Lateef Fagbemi as well as the Management Team headed by the Rector, Olufemi Omokungbe.  They worked assiduously on the matter.  After series of meetings during which it was decided it should be written to withdraw from the court after the consent judgment (agreement to resolve the case), the Council Chairman directed that we should be called back to resume.  We are now doing the job and trying to fit into the system.Other workers are happy for us,” he said.

    Regarding the late Adedeji, Akharayi said the institution was still working on his entitlement which would be passed on to his family. “We are in touch with the family. We visited when his first child wedded 23rd of last month.  The Governing Council is still working on his entitlement and we are following up on it,” he said.

    With both she and her husband affected by the infamous sack, Mrs Gbemisola Dada described the period as a trying one for her family. “You can imagine both husband and wife being affected.  It was not easy.  We thank God it is now over,” she said.

    Speaking at the reception, the Rector, Mr Olufemi Omokungbe, an engineer, said the workers’ reinstatement was worth celebrating.

    “We also give glory to God that everything has come to an end.  Nobody can force anyone to retire at will.  What happened to you, I also experienced a part of it.  I salute your courage and give glory to God. The celebration you are having is worth celebrating.

    “Now that you are back, you have to join hands to work for the progress of the College,” he said.

  • Yabatech Rector marks one year in office

    Wednesday, last week, (March 6, 2019) made it one year since Mr Obafemi Omokungbe assumed duties as Rector of Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH).

    The anniversary was marked with a low-key event by the Rectory staff who presented him a greeting card in his office.

    Though Omokungbe, an engineer, said that one year was insufficient to measure success, he highlighted the progress the institution had recorded since he took the saddle.

    In a speech he titled: “Our path to posterity so far”, Omokungbe said the institution had expanded infrastructure on its Yaba and Epe campuses by reviving abandoned projects among other efforts.

    He said: “The College Central Research Laboratory is now functional and opened to staff, students and the general public for research activities; construction of hostels, classroom blocks and the perimeter fence at Epe and the College water factory, which were abandoned, are nearing completion as the contractors had to be called back to site after a protracted negotiation. The provision of improved students’ service has been established through effective communication and confidence building activities between students and Management; the rejuvenation of the Hall Warden Committee for effective students’ services and Hostel administration; massive renovation of students’ hostels to provide a conducive environment for residents including provision of hostel furniture e.g Bed, Mattresses etc. Efforts are also being made to return the recreational rooms (common room) in the hostels which were allocated to food vendors to the students; and we have made provision of basic amenities like water, electricity, clean and hygienic environment, provision and repair of classroom furniture etc.”

    Omokungbe added that the institution was making efforts to pursue a regular calendar.

    He thanked members of staff and students for their support so far and urged them to continue with him to drive excellence in the institution.

  • Author gifts books to YABATECH

    The former Head of Department (HOD) Urban and Regional Planning, Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Mrs Catherine Kayode George has donated two of her books to six departments of the College.

    Mrs George, a Town Planner, presented the books when she visited the Rector, Mr Obafemi Omokungbe, an engineer.

    Two copies of each of the books, “Basic Principles and Methods of Urban & Regional Planning 4th Edition” and “Urbanisation and the Lagos Mega City” were donated to the Departmental libraries of the Urban and Regional Planning, Architecture, Building Technology, Estate Management, Surveying and Geo-informatics and Quantity Surveying.

    Mrs George said she visited YABATECH to appreciate the College for providing her an enabling environment to work between 1986 and 2000 as a lecturer.  She retired as the Head of Department of Urban and Regional Planning.

    She said: “I am pleased to announce to you about my publication “Basic Principles and Methods of Urban & Regional Planning 4th Edition” which was launched at the Annual General Meeting of Nigerian Institute of Town Planners, Lagos State chapter Nigeria on September 29, 2016.

    “The book has been edited by Nigerian academia and Professionals and is a recommended text for Environmental Science students in tertiary institutions. The book discusses on more principles of Urban and Regional Planning with examples from the country’s situation; also on some urban environmental problems in Lagos Mega-City. It is a useful reference material for governmental offices, consultants in the construction industry, lecturer and students in local and foreign tertiary institutions. It covers syllabus for examination by Town Planners Registration Council of Nigeria for Urban & Regional Planning.”

    She said the second book, Urbanisation and the Lagos Mega City, captures the phenomenal growth of Lagos, the attendant environmental challenges and efforts made to address the issues. It highlights the paotential of investment tourism in Lagos Mega-City.

    She said it would be an asset to private and public libraries and for multi-national corporate bodies, Town Planning Professionals, allied disciplines and government offices as references.

    “Having lived in Lagos from 1965-till date, I have witnessed a greater part of the phenomenal growth of Lagos in my 45 years of Town Planning professional experience. My education at the University of Melbourne, Australia (1971-1972) has also exposed me to international norms in planning theory and practice. I am a fellow of the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI) England, and keep in touch with the RTPI by maintaining my membership.

    “In writing both books, I have spared no cost or expense for best professional practice. Both books also feature some projects I worked on as a foundation staff in Lagos State Civil Service at Ikeja Area Planning Authority/LSDPC (1965-1979); as a lecturer in Urban and Regional Planning at Lagos State Polytechnic (December 1985-June 1986), at YABATECH as HOD, Urban & Regional Planning (July 1986-2000), at Lagos State University (2011-2013), and as a Town Planning Consultant (1980-1985, 2000-2017). I have been external examiner and moderator to University of Lagos, YABATECH and other tertiary institutions on their Urban and Regional Planning programmes.

    “The research and production of the two publications were self-motivated and entirely self-financed. It is my humble contribution to national human resources development and I believe that the College community (lectures and students) will find both books very useful. “

    The Rector thanked Mrs George for remembering the College 18 years after retirement, also for the kind gesture of presenting inestimable valuable materials to the College; and commended her resilient spirit of still writing even though she has retired. He encouraged her not to relent because the books will remain a lasting legacy that people will refer to in years to come. He thereby on behalf of the Management bought 10 copies each of the two publications to the College Library with substantial amount.

  • Yabatech community pray for new administration

    Torrents of prayers went up to God at Yaba College of Technology ( Yabatech ) Tuesday as Christian and Muslim faithful consecrated the College administration for a new season of glory.

    The invocation, held simultaneously at the Chapel of Christ our Redeemer and the Mosque, centred on the need for cleansing and invocation for a new season of glory, on the new Rector, Engineer Obafemi Omokungbe, the Registrar, Dr. S.O. Momodu and the entire College and Governing Council.

    The Rector, read from Psalm 30:1-4 preceding the exhortation by the Regional Overseer of the Mountain of  Fire, Lagos Island, Rev. Julius Okeneye who preached from 2 Chronicles 1:7 charged the new administration to seek God’s wisdom and understanding in the running of the College.

    “When the righteous rule, the people rejoice.” The preacher charged the Rector to continue to champion the people’s interest. “The overwhelming turn out at this occasion is evidence of your acceptance by the people, and it is all because of your disposition to defending the workers. Those things you disapproved in those years, it is time to put them right.”

    The congregation led by guest prayer warriors prayed in turn for the peace of the College, the state, the nation, and the new administration.

    Also at the Mosque, the Imams led by Alhaji Busari Olore thanked God for the dawn of a new season for the College; thanking God for the emergence of an old boy as Rector of the College for the first time in 70 years.

    The Imams prayed for the reign of peace and progress in the College throughout the administration of the Rector and the Registrar.

  • Yabatech, firm sign MOU on students’ training

    Yabatech, firm sign MOU on students’ training

    Yaba College of Technology (Yabatech) and Okunore Twins Limited have signed a Memorandum of Understanding which will empower the fashion impresarios to benefit from the training offered to fashion students by the institution.

    Yabatech Rector, Dr. Margaret KudiratIbiyeye-Ladipo said the coming of the coy has further expanded the horizon of students in entrepreneurial education as students learn from experts outside the classroom thereby enhancing their skills.

    “We are signing this MOU towards executing high impact social initiative with the objective of maximising economic, cultural and development opportunities in the Nigerian fashion industry,” she said.

    Representatives of Okunore Twins Limited, Mr. Kehinde Okun ore expressed appreciation for the strategic alliance with the cradle of higher education in Nigeria. He promised that the fashion unit of the College would be a spectacle very soon.

    The Dean, School of Arts, Design and Printing, Dr. Kunle Adeyemi lauded the initiative saying it would give staff and students the much anticipated lift. “We need it, and I trust it will add value to our training potentials. It is sure a new day for fashion in Yabatech”.

     

     

     

  • YABATECH fire: Rector visits 13 hospitalised students

    YABATECH fire: Rector visits 13 hospitalised students

    The Rector, Yaba College of Technology (Yabatech), Dr Margaret Ladipo, on Wednesday, visited 13 students of the institution on admission at the College Medical Centre and the Military Hospital, Yaba.

    The students were admitted following the fire accident in one of the college hostels in the early hours of the day.

    Mr Charles Oni, the spokesperson of the college, said in a statement in Lagos that the rector prayed for the students and gave them monetary gifts, among others.

    Oni said that the rector reassured the students that the management was with them and would always be by their side in ensuring they return to their studies before the weekend.

    “Already, efforts are in top gear to redistribute the affected students into other available hostels pending the repair of the burnt two floors,’’ he quoted the rector as saying.

    According to the statement, there were moves as at press time to evacuate students from the Bakassi hostel to allow for structural testing of the entire building following the accident.

    The spokesperson said that Ladipo urged parents not to panic as their children were in safe hands, thanking God that no life was lost to the fire.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the management has suspended all academic activities between Wednesday and Friday following the incident.

  • FG plans national framework to end HND/BSc disparity

    FG plans national framework to end HND/BSc disparity

    To end the disparity between polytechnic and university graduates, the Federal Government will soon introduce a National Vocational Qualification Framework (NVQF).

    Dr Margaret Ladipo, the Rector of Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), announced the plan at the 30th pre-convocation news briefing on Wednesday in Lagos.

    Ladipo said that the framework was still being formulated by the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) and would be adopted as soon as the paper work was completed.

    With the framework in place, she said polytechnic graduates would write an examination which would place them at par with their counterparts in the university.

    “The Federal Government is working on the framework, the unions are also working on it and very soon, everything will be okay.

    “If you go to developed countries, the framework is the way to end disparity between the HND and B.Sc.

    “It is all about competency in education and on the job.

    “Once you are skilled, if you have HND, by the time you take the NVQF examination and if you are more skilled than the person with the B.Sc., you are better,’’ she said.

    The rector said that without skilled manpower, no country could develop.

    According to her, developed countries are also addressing the need to have skilled manpower to drive their industries.

    “The disparity will eventually be removed and there will be no problem again.

    “For lecturers, they are not happy about the disparity because they are all parents and want the disparity to be removed.

    “I want to assure that the only way it can be removed is to embrace skills acquisition.

    “YABATECH is a centre for the United Nations Entrepreneur and Vocational Centre (UNEVOC) established to improve the skills of our youths.

    “When our graduates pass through the centre, they do not have to look for white collar jobs,’’ Ladipo said.

    Speaking on the upgrade of YABATECH to a degree awarding institution, the rector said the process was ongoing.

    She added that a committee had visited the college to assess the facilities and staff strength.

    The rector said that the college had also improved on its manpower, noting that many of the lecturers were PhD and Master’s Degree holders.