Adejoro74's Posts
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Obiagu1: Chameleon will take your thread to no man's land that you'll end confused what the topic is all about.The baboon almost derailed this one. I will no longer give him that pleasure. |
SW= Land of certificate forgery 20 Ekiti varsity students caught with fake exam permits News Monday, April 30, 2012 By GBENGA ARIYIBI ADO-EKITI – No fewer than 20 part- time students of Ekiti State University, EKSU, were, Friday, caught with with fake examination clearance papers during the ongoing first semester examination. advertisement Advertisement The development led to the suspension of the examination on the ground of alleged failure of the students to.pay their school fees. According to the Director of Part-Time Programme, Professor Edward Ogunleye, the alleged culprits were caught during the screening of students who have paid their fees. In a desperate bid to partake in the examination, some students forged exam permits which they smuggled to the hall. Having found out that a lot of the students were yet to pay their fees, the management of the university decided to stop those who were yet to pay their fees from sitting for the exam. This led to a violent protest by the students and the destruction of some property by the part-time students. Subsequently, the examination has been suspended indefinitely by the school authorities to prevent breaking down of laws and order http://odili.net/news/source/2012/apr/30/327.html |
20 Ekiti varsity students caught with fake exam permits News Monday, April 30, 2012 By GBENGA ARIYIBI ADO-EKITI – No fewer than 20 part- time students of Ekiti State University, EKSU, were, Friday, caught with with fake examination clearance papers during the ongoing first semester examination. advertisement Advertisement The development led to the suspension of the examination on the ground of alleged failure of the students to.pay their school fees. According to the Director of Part-Time Programme, Professor Edward Ogunleye, the alleged culprits were caught during the screening of students who have paid their fees. In a desperate bid to partake in the examination, some students forged exam permits which they smuggled to the hall. Having found out that a lot of the students were yet to pay their fees, the management of the university decided to stop those who were yet to pay their fees from sitting for the exam. This led to a violent protest by the students and the destruction of some property by the part-time students. Subsequently, the examination has been suspended indefinitely by the school authorities to prevent breaking down of laws and order http://odili.net/news/source/2012/apr/30/327.html |
alj harem: Bros you are fighting the wind. Yes I have admitted that yorubas are not educated but is that the reason why Igbo boys are dropping out and committing crime in the society from Maiduguri to Ibadan down to Onitsha.Why are Yorubas joining motor park business en masse and killing themselves in the process? Why are Yoruba youths so into human rituals, cultism, armed robbery and kidnapping? Ibadan: Why I killed, severed head, hands of woman I slept with - Suspecthttp://odili.net/news/source/2012/apr/28/605.html |
From primary to secondary to tertiary levels, you YORUBA people have lost it all. How did you reach such a pass in such a short time? Awo must be gnashing his teeth in his grave. |
alj harem: fighting the wind, you still have not answered my question you know ?''I will spend more of my time and energy to talk about the fall in standard of education in Yorubaland than I would for one prominent position or the other''. -Mimiko http://tribune.com.ng/sun/news/6598-yorubas-emphasis-must-be-education-mimiko |
''I will spend more of my time and energy to talk about the fall in standard of education in Yorubaland than I would for one prominent position or the other''. -Mimiko http://tribune.com.ng/sun/news/6598-yorubas-emphasis-must-be-education-mimiko |
Yoruba youths drop out of School Nigeria Written by Olubusuyi Adenipekun E-mail | Print | PDF Some prominent indigenes of Yorubaland who are not comfortable with the poor state of education in the geo-political zone have formed a steering committee for mobilizing the people to contribute money to the Yoruba Education Trust Fund(YETFUND) for the purpose of returning the education of the zone to its glorious past. The trust fund targets an initial capital outlay of N10 billion which is to rise to N50 billion as the monetary contribution by the critical mass of Yoruba people, their friends and their associates will be a continuous exercise for some years to come. These disclosures came from the Steering Committee Chairman of YETFUND and former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Ola Vincent during the press briefing/fund raising activities for the trust. According to him, the amount of N50 billion will form the seed money for an Endowment Fund that will be professionally managed to guarantee the sustainability of the project, adding that income accruable from the investment of the Endowment Fund will cater for the sustainability of the body. The Yoruba Trust Fund, which has as its Board of Trustees people like Prof Wale Omole, former Vice Chancellor of OAU, Ile-Ife; Mr Ola Vincent, former CBN Governor; Prince Bola Ajibola; Dr Tunji Otegbeye; Erelu Abiola Dosunmu; Chief Priscilla Kuye; Senator Olabiyi Durojaiye and so on, will spread their intervention in the zone's education beyond classroom activities. "This project is not just for the classroom alone, we will give vocational training to the unemployed youths in Yorubaland. We will be out to influence legislation towards allocating additional funding to education. We want to help educational administrators to run the sector properly, we will call on professionals to intervene and we also want to encourage students to face their studies;" says the former CBN Governor. There are many other areas in which the Trust Fund also want to intervene such as unequal access to education in the zone, grossly inadequate facilities in schools and overpopulation in classrooms, with many schools presently having 60 pupils in a class instead of the United Nations recommendation of one teacher to 25 pupils per class as well as scholarship assistance to deserving students, adding that these are some of the areas the Endowment Fund will be channeled to. These critical areas are in tandem with the objectives of YETFUND which include: to raise funds for promoting the education of Yoruba people, to help provide for the development of manpower in the education sector, to help build, finance or support the provision of educational infrastructures within Yorubaland and to promote and encourage education-focused conferences, seminars, lectures and workshops. The inspiration driving the people behind YETFUND derives from the enviable policies of late Chief Awolowo and their impact on the socio-economic development of the region. The former CBN boss says much of this "Chief Obafemi Awolowo realised the virtues of education and exerted everything in his power to elevate it as the foundation and focus of his programmes. The Free Education Programme and other innovative policies introduced in the West served as examples for the rest of the country. These policies resulted in the trail-blazing developments recorded as far back as the 1960s by the Yoruba people, and this made them the envy of their neighbours. If the pace of development in education and other fields initiated in the West had been followed through, the whole country would have benefitted immensely; and some of the problems currently facing the Yoruba race and indeed the whole country would have been obviated." "We should not sit down around listlessly bewailing the lack of facilities and progress all over the country. Rather, individually and in groups, we should wake up and tread the path of good planning, dedication and sacrifice in order to achieve wider and deeper levels of development of educational and health facilities for all." All the altruistic educational programmes of late Chief Obafemi Awolowo in the West, according to Vincent, have been jettisoned, with the Yoruba people fast becoming educationally disadvantaged, a situation that forces the rich to send their children to overseas schools. His words: "Since the unexpected termination of the Second Republic, our education descended to the doldrums. Scholarships stopped. Bursary assistance took flight. As a result, today in Yorubaland, 2.2 million children do not have the benefit of formal education. This has come about not through their fault but through the socio-economic situation of pauperised families and the gradual extinction of the middle class." "This happens in a country that spends far less than the 26 per cent minimum of annual budget that UNESCO prescribes. In several of our states, we have cases of up to 120 students in one class, many of them finding seating space on the bare floor." Drawing attention to the extent of the education rot in Yorubaland, Vincent revealed that in one of the most sophisticated states in the South-West, dropouts litter the entire spectrum of schooling, with statistics from the state showing that almost 67 percent of primary school children cannot enrol there; of those who enrol, only 20 per cent finish primary school; only 12 percent of children starting primary school go on to complete secondary education; only 40 per cent of primary and secondary school students complete schooling; education expenditure and share of Gross National Product being a paltry 0.7 percent; life expectancy being 47.4 years and infant mortality put at 96 for every 1,000 births." To allow this unsavoury trend to continue unchecked, says Ola Vincent, will hang the nation's future on a slow-boiling volcano of area boys, area girls, area fathers and area mothers, adding that YETFUND was initiated to build a pool of sustainable funds that can serve the youth today and in the future. He explained that YETFUND derives its drive solely from a spirit of altruism, urging other ethnic groups to join the crusade to ensure a rapid educational development of all parts of the country. http://nigeria.codewit.com/nigeria/nigeria-yorubaland-in-moves-to-shore-up-education-560 |
This is a mediocre association. It smacks of inferiority complex to have a black-only association of cardiologists in a country such as the USA. They dont have Association of White Cardiologists there. Let him go and compete in the general USA association of cardiologists, win, and let us praise him. Half-baked people. |
Drawing attention to the extent of the education rot in Yorubaland, Vincent revealed that in one of the most sophisticated states in the South-West, dropouts litter the entire spectrum of schooling, with statistics from the state showing that almost 67 percent of primary school children cannot enrol there; of those who enrol, only 20 per cent finish primary school; only 12 percent of children starting primary school go on to complete secondary education; only 40 per cent of primary and secondary school students complete schooling; education expenditure and share of Gross National Product being a paltry 0.7 percent; life expectancy being 47.4 years and infant mortality put at 96 for every 1,000 births." To allow this unsavoury trend to continue unchecked, says Ola Vincent, will hang the nation's future on a slow-boiling volcano of area boys, area girls, area fathers and area mothers, adding that YETFUND was initiated to build a pool of sustainable funds that can serve the youth today and in the future. He explained that YETFUND derives its drive solely from a spirit of altruism, urging other ethnic groups to join the crusade to ensure a rapid educational development of all parts of the country. http://nigeria.codewit.com/nigeria/nigeria-yorubaland-in-moves-to-shore-up-education-560 |
alj harem: We are dropping out just cause we feel like. Now answer my question, How does yorubas dropping out affect Igbo people doing drugs ?Nigeria: Yorubaland in Moves to Shore Up Education Some prominent indigenes of Yorubaland who are not comfortable with the poor state of education in the geo-political zone have formed a steering committee for mobilizing. http://nigeria.codewit.com/nigeria/nigeria-yorubaland-in-moves-to-shore-up-education-560 This shoring up thing was several years ago. Still the same outcome. Losers |
alj harem: dude you are getting boring. Yes Yorubas are very very bad, you still have not explained why the most educated Igbo boys are dropping out of schoolYou have to explain yours first before you expect an answer from another. Charity begins at home. Why do Yorubas drop out of school? Why is that that despite Igbos dropping out of school (as you claim), the number of Igbos in schools is still by far greater than that of your people? Your article was written in 2006. You are not current, dude. |
emmatok: How do you define BIGOTRY.Okay! Then every bigot is defending their people's interest. You have answered yourself. |
See what your brothers are doing in Malaysia http://afrocosmopolitan.com/2012/01/caught-on-video-nigerian-con-men-419-in-malaysia/ |
alj harem:Is it so you can run to London and steal their money that you drop out of school? Why is 99% of Nigerian corruption reported in the UK perpetrated by your people? |
Can you tell me why the NURTW is only active in Yorubaland, killing maiming and burning each other? |
alj harem: Well that is an Igbo man like youThe man who reported the Yoruba almajiri is Yoruba, Hakeem Jamiu |
Two Yoruba Nigerians Jailed Over £2.3m Olympic Authority Fraud In London https://www.nairaland.com/926296/two-nigerians-jailed-over-2.3m |
alj harem: Yes Yes Yes, for every 1 Igbo boy that drop out 1000 yoruba people drop out, does not matter. We are not boasting to be the best.What is causing Yoruba youths to drop out of school? And why are the ones in UK stealing UK govt's money every day? |
alj harem: Yes sir, how is it my fault that Igbo boys are dropping out ?10 Igbo youths drop out to learn a trade or begin to buy and sell 20 Yoruba youths drop put and join the motor park tout business, agbero and almajirism. I wonder which is better. |
Emerging trend of social almajiri in Yorubaland By Hakeem Jamiu https://www.nairaland.com/149827/emerging-social-almajiris-yorubaland |
Yoruba Cities Littered with Homeless Beggars, all Children and Women Daily Independent, Hakeem Jamiu https://www.nairaland.com/223963/yorubas-littered-homeless-beggars-all |
Even if some Igbo youths drop out of school, the number of those in school is greater than those from the SW. WAEC and JAMB figures show that. Alj Harem how about Yoruba youths who drop out of school in pursuit of motor park jobs and almajirism? Is it because you guys live in denial and do not discuss your problems? |