Education
Bank of Industry disburses N2bn to NYSC Graduates
The Executive Director, Small and Medium Enterprise in the Bank of Industry (BOI), Shekarau Omar, on Tuesday, hinted that it has disbursed about two billion naira to graduates in partnership with the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).
It announced its willingness to engage the graduate’s Graduate Employability Skills and Terraskills (GES) Foundation by helping them take their interest to the next level.
Omar gave this hint at the official launch of the Graduate Employability Skills – Maiden Edition – organized by TerraSkills Learning Systems Limited in Abuja
According to him:” Bank of Industry have graduates empowerment scheme in collaboration with National Youth Service Corps and have disbursed close to two billion naira to Corps members who are about leave the camp. We train them on various skills and quite a number of them are doing very well on their own.
“Capacity building is key to improving the economy. I have gone through the document and the seven objectives are equivalent to 100 or 200-page documents that is what we need at various levels in Nigeria, if we are able to do this a lot of people will not be roaming the streets carrying arms or doing drugs. If you build people’s capacity, you are building their lives.
” If you give people knowledge in terms of capacity, you have given them power for life. What Tarraskills is doing today is saving lives. We are looking forward to many Nigerians that can join this train in given capacity to Nigerians”, he added.
Similarly, the Director General of, the Industrial Training Fund (ITF), Sir Jose Ari said what has given the west edge over Africans is skills and they have used their skills to develop their economy.
He added that it is not sufficient for us to have a graduate with a certificate who is hungry and another with skills and has food on the table. You can have the certificate and be hungry and you might have skills and you will never go hungry. So we must find the meeting point and that is what we are talking about today.
Ari further stated that unemployment is a common thing in most homes, is either your siblings, husbands, wives, family, or friends are unemployed and to overcome these challenges we need skills.
He said what skills do in terms of employment is that its skills enhance productivity either at the individual or national level.
For us at ITF, we see skills as the currency of the 21st century because of what drives economic skills. You must have skills to be able to multitask when necessary.
Earlier in his address of welcome, the General Manager, Terraskills Learning Systems Limited, Donald Ogbuwa said they have been able to train over 4000 graduates between the ages 20 and 30 on different skills.
According to him:” The Terraskills Learning Systems Limited founder, Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi, the Deputy Chief Whip discovered the challenge of skill mix match among graduates and took it upon himself to find a solution to bridge the skill gap among the Nigerian graduates and workplace requirements.
“The issue of kidnapping, banditry, and terrorism are all problems of unemployment. When you are skilled and employed you will become a hot cake in any industry.
“This Programme provides tools and resources needed to build up graduates which will give significant and lasting impact on all graduates that have benefitted from the programme”, he said.
Education
Oyedepo advises universities to invest more on research
The Chancellor of Covenant University, Ota in Ogun State, Dr Bishop David Oyedepo, has advised universities in Nigeria to invest more in research to proffer solutions to numerous challenges confronting the country.
Oyedepo gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Ota, Ogun.
He said that universities should be solution centres, with life-applicable solution outputs that would solve problems in Nigeria and other nations of Africa.
The chancellor said that it was time for universities to arise and begin to wage intellectual wars against social vices with all zeal and zest.
Oyedepo said that the country needs to begin to see the dividends of university education.
“No institution loses value until it stops solving problems.
“Also, the relevance of any university is in the problem it solves,” he said.
Oyedepo said that the ability of universities to make huge investment in research would help to solve the country’s challenges and proffer solutions to myriads of global problems.
Education
Peter Obi Fulfills Pledge, Donates Bus, N5m to Kogi Nursing College
Peter Obi Fulfills Pledge, Donates Bus, N5m to Kogi Nursing College
Former Labour Party presidential candidate, Mr. Peter Obi, returned to Grimard College of Nursing Sciences in Anyigba, Kogi State, on Tuesday to fulfill a promise made during a previous visit.
Obi had earlier donated ₦10 million to the college to support learning and pledged to assist further in meeting their urgent needs for accreditation.
During his visit three months ago, the Proprietor and Rector informed him that the school’s immediate need was a 32-seater coaster bus for students’ clinical experience trips.
After discussions with Bishop Most Rev. Dr. Anthony Adaji, Obi was told that a fairly used bus costing between ₦20 million and ₦30 million would be sufficient, as the price of a new bus had risen above ₦100 million.
True to his word, Obi returned to the college to present a fairly used bus within the specified range, aiding the students’ clinical assignments.
He also donated an additional ₦5 million to cover the cost of the bus’s registration, insurance, and other expenses for a year.
Obi expressed his gratitude to the institution’s leadership for their warm reception and commended their efforts in advancing education and healthcare.
He reassured them of his continued support, emphasizing his commitment to building a better Nigeria.
Education
ASUU threatens indefinite strike, says FG fails to honour agreement
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has threatened to embark on indefinite strike over failure of the Federal Government to honour the 2009 aggrement reached with it.
Prof. Timothy Namo, the Bauchi Zonal Coordinator of the union said this during a news conference on Friday in Jos.
Namo said that the union after its National Executive Council (NEC) held between Aug. 17 and Aug. 18, issued a 21-day ultimatum.
“As we speak, government has not honoured any of the agreements or address our concerns.
“At the expiration of the 21-day ultimatum, we again issued another 14-day ultimatum that commenced from Sept. 23.
“So, we want Nigerians to blame the federal government if ASUU decide to down tools and shut down public universities,” he said.
Namo highlighted the lingering issues to include, non conclusion of the re-negotiation of the 2009 agreement, non release of the three-and-half month salaries of academic staff, unpaid salaries of all academic staff on adjunct appointment and outstanding third-party deductions.
Other lingering issues he said were, poor funding for the revitalisation of public universities, none payment of Earned Academic Allowances (EAA) as captured in the 2023 budget, proliferation of universities, non implementation of the reports of visitation panels to universities, among others.
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