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Ipasco's Posts

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SportsRe: Nations Cup Or Under 17WC by ipasco(op): 11:03am On Nov 12, 2013
As for me i choose FIFA under 17 WC, reasons been that its broad and more exposing
SportsNations Cup Or Under 17WC by ipasco(op): 10:59am On Nov 12, 2013
Which is more important winning the Nations Cup or the FIFA U17 World Cup? Pls do state your reasons
EducationRe: ASUU Strike Called Off-students To Resume 18th Novembér by ipasco(op): 9:18am On Nov 12, 2013
Lolz
PasD: The op knows what he meant. Academic Staff Union of Non-entities
EducationRe: ASUU Strike Called Off-students To Resume 18th Novembér by ipasco(op): 9:16am On Nov 12, 2013
Noted n corrected!
Charles545: OP: ASUU NOT ASUN..
EducationRe: ASUU Strike Called Off-students To Resume 18th Novembér by ipasco(op): 9:15am On Nov 12, 2013
Noted n corrected!
harbydase: no b only ASUN na barbecue
EducationASUU Strike Called Off-students To Resume 18th Novembér by ipasco(op):
This has been making the rounds that the 4months old ASUU strike has been called off but not just announced yet and student would resume November 18, 2013.  

Read the full story below; 
A source close to top guns in the Academic Staff Union Of Universities (ASUU) has revealed that lecturers will ditch their four month old strike this weekend so students could resume on November 18 (next Monday). 

The source said there was no way the union could reject the new offer of N220bn a year tabled by President Goodluck Jonathan during a marathon meeting with ASUU last week Tuesday. 

ASUU had come out of that meeting to tell Nigerians it needed time to deliberate on the new deal and reach a consensus among it members before talking to the press. 
A top official of the union, has however said the government could not be trusted even on the new offer, and that ASUU’s members were divided over the government’s offer. 

He, however raised a beam of hope by saying the majority still decided to give the government the benefit of the doubt. As ASUU executives meet this Wednesday, if the fate of the strike is down to a vote among the striking lecturers, as suggested by ASUU chairman, Nasir Fagge, the four month old impasse may surely end this week. ASUU went on strike July 1 over the non-implementation of a 2009 agreement it had with the government with a key component of the memorandum of understanding the allocation of 26% of Nigeria’s total budget to education. 
Although the government is planning to allocate just 9% of the 2014 budget to education, ASUU now seems set to end the strike after government offers that would surely boost lecturers’ take home pay and improve varsity infrastructure.
Car TalkRe: Lagos Restricts Danfo Drivers To 8-Hrs Of Work by ipasco: 12:23am On Nov 12, 2013
Good thinking i must say, by The way did u school in lagos??
pastormustwac: What if a danfo driver drives more than one bus? He drives bus A for 8hrs plying route 1, bus B for another 8hrs plying route 2?
Nairaland GeneralRe: The Worst Rumour About Yourself by ipasco: 5:54pm On Nov 11, 2013
My own portion of The rumour is stil on-going sef, i traveled to my village and i came back today to my greatest surprise everybody was just congratulating me that am part of The golden eaglets. Surprise wan kill me!
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ethiopia- WCQ (2 - 0) On 16th November 2013 by ipasco: 5:31pm On Nov 11, 2013
Ori e ti gbale
Lankaline: undecidedPls,mk una no vex,,I have a question,,this tin had been bodering me since I opened the thread,,m juhs as confused as wateva cos I don't even knw where to start,,,after few minutes of confusion,,I juhs decided to ask this ma question,,















What is Ethopiahuh,and why are they going to fight with us in calabarhuh? undecidedPls,mk una no vex,,I have a question,,this tin had been bodering me since I opened the thread,,m juhs as confused as wateva cos I don't even knw where to start,,,after few minutes of confusion,,I juhs decided to ask this ma question,,















What is Ethopiahuh,and why are they going to fight with us in calabarhuh?
Music/RadioWande Coal Now Signed To D'banj's DB Records. by ipasco(op): 1:48pm On Nov 11, 2013
This Information is authentic until it is proven not by both team! The news was passed across by a member of the DB RECORDS which name has been withheld. Wande coal left MAVIN records in June 2013 but he officially left the label after a PRESS RELEASE
SportsRe: Oliseh Prays For Golden Eaglets by ipasco: 9:10am On Nov 04, 2013
Itumo?
alfredo4u: SB JH HB l offing HK
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Uruguay Fifa U17 World Cup (2 - 0) On 2nd November 2013 by ipasco: 10:35pm On Oct 30, 2013
Wetin I do now?
slimthugchimee: abeg ban this guy
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Uruguay Fifa U17 World Cup (2 - 0) On 2nd November 2013 by ipasco: 5:55pm On Oct 30, 2013
Police is your friend, like this if you think its a lie.
SportsRe: Mexico V Nigeria: FIFA U-17 World Cup (1 - 6) on 19 Oct 2013 by ipasco: 3:49pm On Oct 19, 2013
If u have a long lost friend come to NL viewing center you will find him/her here. See people shocked
SportsRe: SHOCKER: Victor Moses Parents Alive In Edo State? by ipasco: 3:22pm On Oct 11, 2013
END TIME THINGS
SportsRe: Nigeria Vs Ethiopia Will Be Shown On SuperSport by ipasco(op): 3:18pm On Oct 11, 2013
This is for your information and necessary action please.
SportsNigeria Vs Ethiopia Will Be Shown On SuperSport by ipasco(op): 2:47pm On Oct 11, 2013
Afcon champions, Nigeria’s Super Eagles, will flaunt their credentials in Addis Ababa, on Sunday, when they confront Ethiopia, in the first leg of the final round of the Brazil 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifiers.

The continent’s premier sports network, SuperSport, will broadcast the titanic clash in the spectacular pictures of High Definition live from 2.30pm CAT on SS3HD and SS3.

All eyes will be on the Super Eagles to maintain their prestige as champions after featuring with the best in the world at the last Fifa Confederations Cup, in Brazil.
Super Eagles

Super Eagles

It’s another opportu-nity for Stephen Keshi to make history as the first Nigerian to qualify two countries for the World Cup after his 2006 feat with Togo.

Interestingly, SuperSport’s broadcast will be backed with crisp audio and surround sound capabilities of HD.

According to Mr Felix Awogu, General Manager of SuperSport, the company will equally deploy its top talents and crew to ensure perfect production that will complement the expected action on the field.

SuperSport will also produce and broadcast what promises to be the biggest match to be played by the Afcon champions this year, at their fortress, the U.J. Esuene Stadium, Calabar, when both sides converge for the crucial second leg.

It will also be available in SuperSport High Definition.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/10/dstvs-supersport-showcases-eagles-addis-ababa/#sthash.GUQ290JE.dpuf

PoliticsRe: Three Severely Burnt In Lekki Gas Fire by ipasco: 3:01pm On Oct 08, 2013
End tmie tnhigs
SportsRe: Ethiopia To Play Super Eagles On October 13th by ipasco: 10:03am On Sep 26, 2013
Hope Sunday Mba will score that day, it's been a while.
PoliticsRe: Why Is Nobody Saying Anything About The Government Oweing Workers Salary by ipasco(op): 10:37am On Sep 13, 2013
its really pathetic this time around o
speedyboi: Do Government still owe people salary? undecided
PoliticsWhy Is Nobody Saying Anything About The Government Oweing Workers Salary by ipasco(op): 8:34am On Sep 12, 2013
ITS THREE GOOD MONTHS NOW THAT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS NOT PAID SALARIES OF ITS WORKERS AND THIS IS SO DISTURBING TO SEE THAT NOBODY IS SAYING ANYTHING ABOUT IT, THE OPPOSITION HAS NOT SAID ANYTHING, NO CIVIL SOCIETY HAS SAID ANYTHING EVEN THE WORKERS THEMSELVES ARE QUIET AS IF ALL IS WELL, FOR HOW LONG SHALL WE CONTINUE LIKE THIS, THIS IS NO LONGER BEARABLE AND IF NOBODY TALKS, IT WILL JUST SEEMS THIS IS THE RIGHT THING TO DO AND IT MIGHT SOONER OR LATER EXTEND TO EVEN PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS,PLEASE THOSE WHO ARE IN THE POSITION TO TALK PLEASE TALK O, CHILDREN ARE SOON RESUMING SCHOOL O,LABOUR! LABOUR!! LABOUR!!! ARE YOU SLEEPING?
SportsRe: What Do You Say About The Eagles Progress Since Febuary? by ipasco(op): 3:53pm On Sep 11, 2013
THIS IS A RESEARCH PROJECT O
SportsRe: What Do You Say About The Eagles Progress Since Febuary? by ipasco(op): 3:52pm On Sep 11, 2013
MAKE UNA COMMENT NOW, ABI?
SportsRe: The Secret Behind The Super Eagle’s Success by ipasco: 12:39pm On Sep 11, 2013
how did he Bleep up at the end?
Ayire: FR real u Cld av made it to FP bt u f.up FR d end
SportsRe: The Secret Behind The Super Eagle’s Success by ipasco: 12:38pm On Sep 11, 2013
how did he Bleep up?
modextus: This thread would have made front page but you fucke.d up.
SportsWhat Do You Say About The Eagles Progress Since Febuary? by ipasco(op): 12:19pm On Sep 11, 2013
7 months after beating burkina faso in the AFCON final, the Super Eagles triumphed against them 4 - 1 in a friendly, what those this say of the Super Eagles progress since February?
PoliticsRe: Suntai Addresses Taraba People On Videotape by ipasco: 9:29am On Aug 29, 2013
history keep repeating it self in Nigeria
EducationRe: 21 Years Old? No Admission For You Here by ipasco(op): 10:23am On Jun 18, 2013
photos
EducationRe: 21 Years Old? No Admission For You Here by ipasco(op): 10:22am On Jun 18, 2013
why am not able to upload photos? angry
Education21 Years Old? No Admission For You Here by ipasco(op): 10:20am On Jun 18, 2013
Besides the agricultural and academic revolution that the Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti is spearheading, SEGUN OLUGBILE, who visited the institution on Friday, reveals more unique traits

Universities anywhere in the world come in different shapes and sizes. But they usually have similar missions, which include promotion of learning, research and community development.

While the story is not different in Nigeria, many of its universities have their own principles. They have rules and regulations that, they believe, can help in making them achieve their missions. As is noticeable in several other private institutions, the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State serves this example. For one, its authorities say it is not a business venture.

What does its founder, Chief Afe Babalola (SAN), mean by this? “I did not set up this university to make money, because I don’t believe that education should be a business concern. Rather, it is a social service.”

Babalola, however, adds that even if profit comes, it will be ploughed back into the system. Yet, what defines the institution is far larger than that.

When our correspondent visited ABUAD last Friday, it was discovered that the institution is on a mission to revolutionise academic and agricultural business in the country. Located in a purely agrarian setting, the university has a set of rules that some could variously consider discriminatory, anti-labour, strict or good for the production of disciplined and focused graduates — depending on the individual’s beliefs or ideologies.

For instance, if you are above 21, don’t bother to seek admission into the university. ABUAD law forbids offer of admission to a candidate that is older than this age. The university also does not admit students of other Nigerian universities seeking a transfer.

Skimpy dresses, ragged jeans, sagging, ‘spaghetti’ and any other type of dress that exposes parts of the body that are supposed to be covered are outlawed. Though the over 3, 500 students of the institution are allowed to use phones, BlackBerry or any other phone that could enable them to access the Internet are not allowed. In fact, Nokia 5030, which has a torchlight, is the official phone of the university.

Well, far from being a fashion arena, bead wearing and use of flamboyant jewelery are also forbidden.

The fully residential university also mandates students and lecturers, who are called ‘teachers’, to sign attendance register by 8am and at 5pm of every working day. The university does not also have a general wage regime for its lecturers. It operates what the founder calls the Personalised Salary Scale, whereby each lecturer negotiates his or her pay with the governing council at the point of entry. Promotion is not based on number of years but on productivity and contribution to knowledge, learning and development of the university.

“Here, a lecturer must get published at least twice per session in international journals to earn promotion. So, you can join us this year and in three years you can be earning much more than your colleague who started with us earlier,” Babalola says.

Besides, unionism is outlawed for students, lecturers and other cadres of staff members.

Yet, whoever thinks the university is just about rules misses the point. When our correspondent visited the institution’s farm, it was discovered that the management has taken full advantage of the agrarian environment. Arguably, the farm could be the largest university farm in the country.

With 276 functional fish ponds — and another three yet to become operational — hundreds of hectares of maize plantation, over two and a half miles of mango tree plantation, over 1,000 hectares of tick and moringa tress and a feed mill, ABUAD’s farm is poised to be the one to beat.

The institution also boasts a tourist centre which doubles as a training centre for students undergoing degree programmes in hospitality and event management. A professor at the university, Israel Orubuloye, explains that the centre also serves as a relaxation centre for lecturers and members of staff. But students are only allowed there for educational purposes.

“This university is not just about agricultural development, though we have a bulldozer, eight tractors, harvesters, planters, a feed mill and all the machinery required to run a mechanised farm for our students’ use. Our colleges of law, sciences and engineering are also equipped with state-of-the-art facilities,” he says.

A visit to the institution’s colleges of law and engineering proved Orubuloye right. Facilities there are of what can be described as international standard. The moot court is like the typical court, and it is ICT-driven. The physical library is equipped with relevant volumes, while the e-library, which enables students to access foreign universities’ libraries, is exceptional.

Power generation, which, Babalola says, costs the university N15m per week, is efficient. A female Law student, Taiwo Adekanbi, explains that though she has been to other Law faculties in some first generation universities in the country, she has never seen one that could beat ABUAD’s in terms of aesthetic, good e-library, provision of relevant books and quality of lecturers.

“Even the proprietor teaches us. He’s been a wonderful role model like most of our lecturers,” she says.

The facilities at the Law college and those at the Engineering complex are also fascinating.

“The engineering college complex will be completed in September. But equipment for the laboratories and workshops have been acquired. However, the challenge we first faced was that almost all our lecturers could not handle them and in order to resolve this, we brought in experts from Germany to train them. So, they have been trained and engineering programmes, including Mechatronic Engineering, will start in earnest,” Orubuloye says.

Chatting with our correspondent after a visit to the university farm, Babalola explains that the urge to change the face of university education in Nigeria, with the view to producing highly skilled and socially relevant graduates, who are capable of applying scientific knowledge for the resolution of social problems, informed his decision to set up the university.

But what impact has the institution made on the host community? Babalola says it has so much impacted not just the host community but also the state, such that it has become the highest employer of labour and highest tax paying institution in Ekiti State.

“Apart from all that, we have impacted the way our people farm. We have agricultural extension services where people come to learn new methods of farming, fishery, and agricultural business in general. We give scholarships to the poor members of the host community,” he notes.

Babalola, who argues that private university remains the only hope of the country in terms of education delivery, adds that inept leadership and corruption have combined to ruin government-owned businesses and even tertiary institutions.

“That is why we have rules here and they are sacrosanct. The problem with Nigeria is lack of good leadership in public institutions and indiscipline. You will not see these vices in private universities. That is why private universities remain the hope of this country,” he says.

Now, Babalola is 84. His university became operational in 2010. Why did it take him so long before he started the university? He says lack of enabling law and his belief that institution of scholarships for the poor, endowment of chairs and donation of physical infrastructural facilities to tertiary institutions prevented him from starting earlier than now.

But his experience at the University of Lagos, where he served as the pro-chancellor and chairman of council and won the Best Pro-Chancellor Award of the National Universities Commission twice, motivated him to start the university.

“I just wanted to put my ideas about university education into practice because I believe that education is a social service and not a business concern. I believe that nobody should be denied education because of lack of fund. The rich should fund the education of the poor. And that is what we are doing here; we give scholarships on an annual basis to those who cannot afford education,” he explains.

He adds that most of the university rules and regulations for students and lecturers are designed to promote excellence, productivity and efficiency.

“We don’t admit candidates who are older than 21, or take transfer-seeking students because we don’t want them to pollute the students we are teaching good character. We also pay personalised salaries because we believe that productivity should be the major factor for promotion, unlike in many public universities where indolence is celebrated,” he says.

On how he hopes to sustain the institution, considering his age, Babalola reveals that his children are not very keen to join him to run the university. But he says he has a master plan for this.

“We discuss that a lot. My children are successful in their chosen careers and they are not interested in the university, but I cannot force them. However, sustaining this institution will not be a problem. Look at Joe Harvard, the reverend gentleman that created Harvard University. I don’t think he even had any child, but Harvard is still standing and thriving up till today. So, what I plan to do is not to do a Will because, from my experience as a lawyer of 50 years’ experience, Will doesn’t solve any problem. What I’ll do is to set up a foundation and incorporate everything into it. ABUAD will never die. It will grow and produce world changers. So, there is no problem about sustainability at all,” he enthuses.

Asked to react to the criticism that mismanagement of fund is the bane of public university system in the country and not inadequate funding, Babalola says no.

“I disagree. I have been there and I can tell you that public universities in the country are ill-funded, grossly underfunded and inadequately catered for. Look at this year’s budget: only N425bn was earmarked for education. Don’t forget that this amount is to cater for all the federal universities, federal polytechnics, colleges of education and other agencies. How far can that go? Then compare that to the University of California, a single institution that has a budget of $4.4bn or about N670bn and $1.2bn for research for a year. So, how can public university system in the country grow to compete in the world?

“So, if we are serious, we should do more for education. Old products of these institutions should help by contributing towards their development — like Harvard that has an endowment fund of about $520bn,” he says

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