Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students

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Date: November 22, 2009, 11:26 AM
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omotee4eva
Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« on: November 03, 2009, 11:29 AM »


A TOTAL of 32 polytechnics across the country have been barred from admitting students into Business and Art programmes by the regulatory body of polytechnics, National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).

The board has also released the 2007/2008 academic year carrying capacity, admission quota for all the programmes run by polytechnics based on the available resources necessary for imparting knowledge at the institutions and in line with the National Policy on Education (NPE) stipulated 70:30 enrolment ratio in favour of technology-based programmes.

Executive Secretary of NBTE, Engr. Nuru A. Yakubu, who disclosed this yesterday in a statement issued by Head, Media and Publicity of the board, Malam Lawal Y. Hafiz lamented that over the years polytechnics have derailed from the objective of training technical manpower in preference for management and business related courses.

The NBTE boss vowed that the board would correct the anomaly by suspending admissions into non-technology based programmes in institutions with low enrolment in technology-based courses until the ratio is corrected.

The board’s action, he explained, was not punitive but necessary steps to restore the quality of training being given to students in the institutions and to achieve the national target of 70:30 enrolment ratio, pointing out that the institutions and Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) had been formally notified of the development.

Expatiating further, he said the board’s guidelines demand that admissions into individual programmes should not exceed two class streams of 30 students for technology-based programmes and 40 students for non-technology-based programmes.

“The decision to enforce the carrying capacity as well as the 70:30 ratio followed the discovery of outrageous enrolment in total disregard to the board guidelines. For instance, in a recent survey it was discovered that in a particular polytechnic, up to 85 per cent of the students were enrolled in business and related programmes. Yet in another polytechnic where the carrying capacity was barely 5,000, it had enrolled over 30,000 students, majority of whom were on part-time business programmes,” he noted.

The affected institutions include Federal Polytechnic Ilaro, Abuja School of Accountancy, Allover Central Polytechnic Sango Otta, Rufus Giwa Polytechnic Owo, Osun State Polytechnic Iree, Federal Polytechnic Mubi, Federal Polytechnic Idah, Federal Polytechnic Ede, Kwara State Polytechnic Ilorin and Kogi State Polytechnic, Lokoja.

Others are Lagos State Polytechnic Ikorodu, Federal Polytechnic Kaura Namoda, Nuhu Bamalli Polytechnic Zaria, Nasarawa State Polytechnic Lafia, Federal Polytechnic Oko, Abia State Polytechnic Aba, Grace Polytechnic Lagos, Institute of Management and Technology Enugu, and the Polytechnic of Ibadan, among others.

salaksmana
NBTE
« #1 on: November 03, 2009, 12:00 PM »

They are not serious, so we business and art students don't need to go to school because our work can't benefit the country abi, they have virus.
estilo (f)
Re: Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« #2 on: November 03, 2009, 01:50 PM »

As a matter of urgency, they need to go format their brains.

Nonsense
Pharoh
Re: Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« #3 on: November 03, 2009, 11:26 PM »

Polytechnics were not meant to train large quantities of business students so the above decision was right.
skfa1
Re: Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« #4 on: November 03, 2009, 11:32 PM »

Quote from: Pharoh on November 03, 2009, 11:26 PM
Polytechnics were not meant to train large quantities of business students so the above decision was right.

So where should they go? has the universities in Nigeria admitted all the students? Lets think.
Pharoh
Re: Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« #5 on: November 03, 2009, 11:55 PM »

Quote from: skfa1 on November 03, 2009, 11:32 PM
So where should they go? has the universities in Nigeria admitted all the students? Lets think.

It is not about admitting the students but doing things the proper way, the polytechnics were meant to train science, engineering and technology students. They also fall under the category of advance technical and vocational education.

They also train some business students that more inclined to trade and lower end employees in a business organization.

Even if all the schools are allowed to run freely we will still have this problems.  The admission problem we are having today has its roots from the secondary school education where most people run to the commercial classes because they feel science and technical classes are too difficult.

We are producing too much business students from the secondary schools that the higher institutions can absorb and also Nigeria does not need such amount.  Let me stop here because i am just deviating from the thread. It is a topic for another day.
Mr Fox (m)
Re: Polytechnics Barred From Admitting Business, Art Students
« #6 on: Yesterday at 06:23:12 PM »

Though the topic of this thread is misleading. I agree with NBTE that the number of students admitted in polytechnic should be in the proper ratio and that the institutions should not over admit students e.g. 30,000 where the capacity is 5,000, that is 600% =overload

Certainly, no quality education can come out of that.

If this NBTE's plan annoys anyone, please stop for a moment and consider that this could be the reason why employers discriminate against  OND and HND.

The institutions are just producing bulk rubbish. Imagine a class of 1000 financial studies students. Quality can not come out of that class. Can a lecturer assess their assignment or teach them properly? He will only sell hand-outs.
A class that has more than 60 students is extra large. At least for quality knowledge transfer between lecturer and students.

We cant keep condoning these money making schemes called "polytechnic education" It must be corrected so that HND graduates can be attractive to employers once again.

The technical courses are not the oversized classes if we look closely.
This not a fight against Business and Art courses, its an effort to ensure quality and standard in education.
We need quality business and art graduates in this country so they should get quality training in properly sized classes and not oversized parttime evening classes.
Good luck.
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