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Elizade University VC Asks Gov’t for Level-playing Ground for all Varsities

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The Vice Chancellor of Elizade University, Ilara-Mokin, Ondo State, Prof. Olukayode Amund, has asked the federal government to ensure a level-playing ground for public and private universities for effective competition that would engender quality education.

Amund, who said this on Friday while speaking with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) at the university campus, explained that government’s assistance to private universities would be beneficial to Nigerian students in the private universities, and for the growth of the education sector.

He stated that private universities in Nigeria are competing with public universities where fees are low.

“The main problem of private universities is the low-student population.

A level-playing ground should be created by government so that private universities can compete with public ones.

“Government should assist private universities, especially those who had invested tremendously in infrastructure.

“Students at Elizade University are Nigerians. And the teachers and other staff working in the university are also Nigerians. So, whatever the public universities are enjoying, private universities should also enjoy, for example, TETFUND.

“Private universities should all enjoy from such fund for infrastructural development to support Nigerian students. There is need to change the law that set up the fund so that all universities in Nigeria can be included,” he stated.

Amund added that private universities had no subvention nor subsidy to sustain their expenses.

“Here, our students have to pay high school fees because we are not getting subvention from anywhere and nobody has invested in the infrastructure to run our programmes.

“And nobody provides funds to subsidise our operations regarding the maintenance and payment of emoluments. We run all these from the fees we charge,” he stated.

He explained that private universities in the country could not generate enough to meet their needs, hence so many of them are owing staff salaries.

“What we generate is enough, so we don’t owe salaries here. Our main source of income is from the fees we charge. We are not a charity organisation that is running free services like government universities.

“In public universities, government pays for their own operations. There is no free service anywhere. It’s the parents that pay for our own.

“That is why we are suggesting that parents should also pay their children’s school fees in public universities while government provides funds for parents,” he suggested.

According to him, Nigeria should emulate the British model whereby parents pay for their children’s school fees, while they collect their cheques from their local governments.

“But foreign students pay for their school fees because government in the UK cannot be subsidising school fees of people overseas.

“So, that is the way their government is financing education over there. Government does not just give bulk money to the universities, they will collect fees and manage the fees. What goes to university can be managed.

“You know the number of students in university and you know how much is going to university so that you can track every fund that is going there.

“Unlike in our country here, whereby nobody can track money going into universities and that is giving room for mismanagement,” he stated.

The vice chancellor also said that the fees would be better managed, if paid by students, than the government just giving out money to universities.

He frowned at the notion that private universities in the country are after money, saying that founders of those universities spent a lot of money on infrastructure.

“The founder of this university as at today has not taken a bottle of coke from the university, yet he is even funding. There is a N3 billion hostel project that is ongoing.

“We don’t generate N3 billion from fees we charge but the founder is doing it all alone. Last year, we commissioned two buildings: one cost N1.2 billion and the other N1 billion.

“We don’t generate all that amount from the fees we charge here. All we charge here is only used to pay salaries.

“So, we have enough to pay salaries and maintain buildings if there is any need to repair but infrastructure, we don’t have that funds. It is the founder that is doing that. Look at this building we are in now, how many universities can build this?

“So, it is not the fees that are spent in private universities. In fact it is not even enough to meet the needs.

“It is a wrong notion to believe that private universities are after money because we don’t even generate enough to meet targets,” he said.

Amund, who said that the university’s founding philosophy is to be a world class institution, added that the institution harped on researches, and is striving to be impactful on its community, the nation and to influence the world.

“So, the reason the founder has set it (the university) up is to bridge an existing gap in the technological training. In fact, the founder is an entrepreneur, who has made a big mark in the automobile industry as regards marketing.

“So, he is a consumer of engineering, he is a consumer of technology. And that is why he has set out to promote technology in the beginning.

“Technological training has been given a place of pride in the university by promoting basic applied sciences and engineering because these are the pillars for technological training.

“Elizade University is set out to produce ethically sound and entrepreneurial graduates, who will be able to stand alone and be creative wherever they find themselves,” he stated. (NAN)

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Education

Varsity Don Advocates Establishment of National Bureau for Ethnic Relations, Inter-Group Unity

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By David Torough, Abuja

A university scholar, Prof. Uji Wilfred of the Department of History and International Studies, Federal University of Lafia, has called on the Federal Government to establish a National Bureau for Ethnic Relations to strengthen inter-group unity and address the deep-seated ethnic tensions in Nigeria, particularly in the North Central region.

Prof.

Wilfred, in a paper drawing from years of research, argued that the six states of the North Central—Kwara, Niger, Kogi, Benue, Plateau, and Nasarawa share long-standing historical, cultural, and economic ties that have been eroded by arbitrary state boundaries and ethnic politics.

According to him, pre-colonial North Central Nigeria was home to a rich mix of ethnic groups—including Nupe, Gwari, Gbagi, Eggon, Igala, Idoma, Jukun, Alago, Tiv, Birom, Tarok, Angas, among others, who coexisted through indigenous peace mechanisms.

These communities, he noted, were amalgamated by British colonial authorities under the Northern Region, first headquartered in Lokoja before being moved to Kaduna.

He stressed that state creation, which was intended to promote minority inclusion, has in some cases fueled exclusionary politics and ethnic tensions. “It is historically misleading,” Wilfred stated, “to regard certain ethnic nationalities as mere tenant settlers in states where they have deep indigenous roots.”

The don warned that such narratives have been exploited by political elites for land grabbing, ethnic cleansing, and violent conflicts, undermining security in the sub-region.

He likened Nigeria’s ethnic question to America’s historic “race question” and urged the adoption of structures similar to the Freedmen’s Bureau, which addressed racial inequality in post-emancipation America through affirmative action and equitable representation.

Wilfred acknowledged the recent creation of the North Central Development Commission by President Bola Tinubu as a step in the right direction, but said its mandate may not be sufficient to address ethnic relations.

He urged the federal government to either expand the commission’s role or create a dedicated Bureau for Ethnic Relations in all six geo-political zones to foster reconciliation, equality, and sustainable development.

Quoting African-American scholar W.E.B. Du Bois, Prof. Wilfred concluded that the challenge of Nigeria in the 21st century is fundamentally one of ethnic relations, which must be addressed with deliberate policies for unity and integration.

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TETFund Trains 1,000 Students, 15 Staff in Bauchi Varsity

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The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) on Monday trained 1,000 students and 15 staff members of Sa’adu Zungur University (SAZU), Bauchi, on career development.

Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof. Fatimah Tahir said that the training reflected the institution’s commitment to preparing students for both academic achievement and professional excellence.

The training had the theme: “Empowering Future Professionals: Mastering Career Tools, Building Networks, and Navigating Opportunities.

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Tahir said that the workshop focused on building the capacity of nominated Faculty Career Officers and dedicated staff who would serve as faculty anchors for future career programmes.

She commended TETFund for supporting the establishment of the university’s Career Service Centre, saying its intervention was transformational in creating sustainable structures for students and alumni career support.

Also speaking, Dr Wasilu Suleman, Director of Human Resource and Career Development, SAZU, described the initiative as a turning point, which placed career development at the heart of academic excellence.

He emphasised their critical role as mentors, facilitators, connectors, and enablers, in helping students discover purpose, build competence, and compete in the modern labour market.

During the sessions, facilitators guided participants on resume and cover letter writing, internship and volunteer placements, mock interviews, and negotiation strategies.

One of the participants, Malam Adamu Ibrahim, said they were expected to be better equipped to navigate career opportunities, strengthen professional networks, and bridge the gap between academic learning and workplace demands.

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Stakeholders Blame Exams Body, Parents over Mass Failure

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Stakeholders in the education sector said, the mass failure in the 2025 West Africa Senior Secondary Certificate Examinations (WASSCE) stem from systemic issues attributed to the examination body, parents and the students

The stakeholders spoke in separate interviews in Abuja on Thursday.

Founder, Exam Ethics Marshall International (EEMI), Ike Onyekere faulted the systemic malpractice and deep-rooted corruption within Nigeria’s examination ecosystem.

The West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) had revealed a sharp decline in performance in the 2025 SSE results compared to the previous year.

Out of a total of 1,969,313 candidates who sat for the examination across 23,554 schools, only 754,545 candidates, representing 38.

32 per cent obtained a minimum of five credits, including English Language and Mathematics.

Onyechere decried the 38.32 per cent credit pass rate recorded in this year’s examinations as a “very poor result,”

He, however, noted that the decline was not unexpected due to challenges encountered during the exams.

According to him, there were serious logistical issues during the exams such as power outages, poor supervision, and lack of proper oversight which contributed to students’ poor showing.

“I am not surprised because these logistical issues, as critical as they were, they were ignored during and after the exams.

“No person talked about how those kinds of issues should be addressed in terms of how they affected the performance of those students.

“No person talked about what happened after their papers were collected from them, when they did finish their allotted time and when there was no light.

“So these are some of the questions we need to address,” he said.

Onyechere further criticised students’ growing reliance on “magic centres” and malpractice rings, arguing that many students no longer prepare sincerely for their examinations.

He said most of the students have their mind fixed on magic centres, and other forms of malpractices unfettered and with no consequences.

He accused WAEC and its sister examination body of enabling malpractice by repeatedly failing to name and shame individuals and institutions complicit in exam fraud.

“Every year, WAEC releases statements saying schools were involved in malpractices but where are the names? Who are these schools? Who are the supervisors?

“They recycle these supervisors and protect them,” he said

Citing his experience in the Federal Ministry of Education, he alleged that past attempts to publish and blacklist indicted schools and individuals were stifled.

He praised the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) for its comparative transparency, saying, “at least, JAMB names CBT centres and schools caught in malpractice and takes them to court.

Onyechere admonished WAEC to take cue from JAMB, in addressing the menace of malpractices.

For meaningful change, he called on WAEC to publish names, sanction schools, blacklist corrupt officials, and take concrete action, not just about release of statements.

He also advised students to reject malpractice, rather, discover and develop their true talents.

Also, Dr Jekayinfa Olatunji, a Fellow with the National Mathematical Centre (NMC), called for a national education emergency roundtable, reforms in exam preparation strategies, and closer monitoring of learning standards at all levels.

Olatunji said until tangible solutions are implemented, the futures of millions of Nigerian students would hang in the balance.

“In 2024, no fewer than 1,805,216 students sat for waec exams out of which 1,332,089 students passed at least 5 subjects including English Language and Mathematics at credit level and above, representing 72.12 per cent pass.

“Ordinarily, the results may seem good, but, what about the remaining 27.88 per cent who didn’t get five credits with English Language and Mathematics?

“The students might not have progressed in their education that year.

“Now, the worst has happened in 2025. Out of 1,969,313 students who sat for WASSCE exams, only 38.32 per cent passed five subjects including English Language and Mathematics.

“The remaining 68.68 per cent didn’t pass five subjects including English Language and Mathematics.

“What this means is that only 754,641 students out of 1,969,313 succeeded in having scores that could earn them tertiary institution admissions,” he said

He advised the education stakeholders to take proactive steps to forestall a repeat of the woeful performance in 2026.

Similarly, a civil servant and a parent, Ijeoma Osita, attributed the poor performance in the examination to both students’ attitudes and the role of parents in fostering academic irresponsibility.

Osita decried increasing culture of academic laziness among students and misplaced priorities by parents.

She further lamented that the quality of learning was fast diminishing due to an over-dependence on technology without critical thinking and originality.

According to her, many students no longer commit themselves to studying or building academic discipline, choosing instead to rely heavily on shortcuts such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), examination malpractice, and plagiarism.

“From what I have observed, many students are not ready to go the extra mile to study, build their capacity and equip themselves academically.

“They rely so much on AI and ‘expo’. Unfortunately parents endorse the negative trend, in having their children pass exams.

“They fail to harness the potential in their children by encouraging them to study harder, or even employ extra hands to coach them in the areas of weakness.

“The parents prefer to hire “machinery,” sometimes to write exams for their children.

“Some will even encourage and finance their children to leave the school, where they have attended for years, to register them in ‘miracle centres’,” she said.

She urged parents to take more responsibility in guiding their children, stressing the importance of discipline, hard work and quality education over superficial success.

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