Kazrem's Posts
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7. 1. Start early on your dream. 2. Take action 3. Never say never 4. Do what you can when you can 5. Adapt 6. Money is not enough reason 7. Document your life. |
Ayog25:I meant registration is not on. |
Ayog25:It is not |
Are you the busy type? Or you want to score 30/30 in your Tma? Let the capable hands do it for you. Call or WhatsApp us on 07030340696. |
Do you know what it means to score 30/30 in your test before even doing exam? All you will need to score A in your exam is 40+ Wouldn't that be great? Contact us today to get your Tma solved. We are just a phone call or message away. 07030340696
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We all have seen now that things have changed in noun. Gone are the days when registration will be shifted after a particular date has been slated for closure. Draft timetable is out now. No time. The difference between you and exam is period of this festive. Avoid late hour rush. Don't wait till when they will announce date for closure of Tma. You know what happens by then. Heavy traffics leading to slow network and unsuccessful submission of Tma. Let capable hands handle your Tma and be guaranteed of 10/10 in all. We are just a call or message away. 07030340696
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Pet1620:Were her courses dropped to? I don't think so. She should not worry herself if her courses her not dropped. It's a system error that will be corrected. |
AmbitiousHayzee:Cost of course and exam registration is there. You didn't navigate the portal well. Anyway, go prepare 65k for your maiden semester |
DJCentiz:What was it saying? Not Yet Uploaded? If yes, just chill. It will be loaded. If not, follow these steps: Note: Your TMAs are uploaded once you do the Exam Reg.. *Steps on how to go about it* Step 1: Click on view *Your Course*.... Step 2: click on second semester 2017 on the Box below. And click *SUBMIT* Step 3: Click on *PROCEED*... Below Step 4: Click on *2017/2 EXAMS* step 5: A page which contains the exam courses registered will appear *TMAs* are at the right hand side of each course...To start click on *TAKE TMA*... a must note, you have to submit TMA 1 before seeing TMA 2. |
segebobo:No minimum amount. I even generated #500 for someone on Monday |
DJCentiz:Let's talk on WhatsApp. Chat me or call on 07030340696. |
fabour8312:Miscellaneous |
If you are having issue with payment of money into remita, use first bank. Very fast and hitch free. Contact us for your Tma answers and be guaranteed of 10/10 in all courses. 0703030696. |
AmbitiousHayzee:The form is always on. Though course registration for the current semester will end on the 20th this month. But you can still obtain your form and apply against next semester. You can chat me up on 07030340696 hollayemy89 you can chat me up nah. |
Things you need to know 1. Course and exam registrations are the ones closing on 20 December not Tma submission 2. If you don't do exam registrations, you can see your Tma 3. If you have done exam registrations and yet do not see your Tma, ensure the codes have not been changed. Old course codes cannot show Tma 4. If you are sure the codes are correct and still the Tma is not available, be calm, they will upload it soon. 5. If you are the busy type and do not have time to do your Tma, you can contact us. 6. If you desire to score 10/10 in all your Tma, you can as well contact us. Contact us on 07030340696. Also be aware that whether you score 0 or you score 10, the system, on attempting to view your results shows 10. You only see your real score immediately after you submit it as shown below. So be aware.
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McIrx:After doing RRR Check, did you go back to your portal to check wallet payment details? Do that and see if it will as it should. |
This guy can run for Africa face down. |
strangest:1. There is nothing you can do. The best is to apply for remarking which cost 10k and no guarantee that it will still not be F if they even remark it at all. So the best is to move on and re-register the course. It happens sometimes, you know. 2. School calender says POP starts Jan 20 something. There after, eexam. It now depends if you are writing POP or eexam. Whichever way, I think it will still clash with your program in Kenya because the exam (PoP) will overlap till February and eexam will overlap from February to March. So the best is to default the semester. No special process to defer. Just be looking. If at all, only portal registration/update. For your tma solution and academic challenges, contact us today on 07030340696 |
I have read many self-imposed pity posts, disparaging comments and unwarranted attacks on the Muslim young lady, Amasa Firdaus, who flopped her privilege to be called to the Nigerian Bar yesterday. In a brazen breach of a long-established legal tradition, but also an apparent exercise of religious freedom, the Muslim young lady had simply refused to remove her hijab that was tucked underneath her practice wig and collarette. Actually, her open and brazen defiance was not the first of such defiances in the history of call-to-bar and law school dinners in Nigeria. It will certainly not be the last. I guess the struggle does not even have an end in sight for now. Meanwhile, wearing the hijab is not a mere decoration for Muslim girls. It is an OBLIGATORY religious adornment/garment, especially prescribed for all Muslim girls of maturity. It is a fundamental aspect of the Islamic religion that is expressly written in the Holy Qur'an of Muslims. While some Muslims use mere scarfs just to cover their heads, others use flowing gowns (jilbaab) with wider coverage. Some don't even use anything at all to cover their heads/hairs. All simply depends on individual's level of faith and sense of commitment to religious obligations! I understand that our call-to-bar lady under reference actually used a hijab that only extends around her neck. She was not also reported to be wearing a flowing gown (jilbaab)! Never mind that lawyers actually wear flowing gowns to call-to-bar, courts, and other official ceremonies! However, there is no doubt that the noble legal profession is a conservative one with certain established ethos and etiquette. It is therefore imperative for subscribers to the noble profession to be mindful of such requirements before making their choices. One of such ethos and etiquette is the long-established TRADITION (not necessarily LAW) of a certain manner of dressing for all legal practitioners and aspirants to the Bar, particularly at the call-to-bar ceremonies. This manner of dressing - a received English tradition handed down as part of Nigeria's colonial legal heritage, requires ladies, for example, to leave their heads uncovered with anything other than their practice wigs during call-to-bar and in courts. This tradition apparently contradicts the religious right of Muslims or others who are obligated not to open their hairs or heads to the public. What happened yesterday was, therefore, a CONFLICT between a long-established tradition of a noble profession and the religious right of a certain subscriber to that profession. In that case, which one should trump the other? The near-law and almost sacred call-to-bar tradition or the citizen's right to freedom of religion and practices as guaranteed under section 38 of the 1999 Constitution? I think the answer here is not straightforward, but also not difficult to tell. This is particularly so that freedoms are generally not absolute. There are simply potent and plausible arguments on both sides. What is straightforward to tell however is the modern standard approach to such or similar conflicts in other climes. I say with authority that such modern approach, especially in the non-Islamic West, is to accommodate diversity and respect peoples' religious believes that is not fundamentally at variance with other ethos or etiquettes in the society. Can anyone in good conscience and with a sense of objectivity say, for example, that wearing of the hijab, a religious obligation upon Muslims, is fundamentally at variance with being a lawyer or appearance of a lawyer, an engineer or a doctor? When does the hood begins or stops to make the priest? Isn't the priest who actually makes the hood? Furthermore, when compared to the military and other strictly regimented forces or institutions, the legal profession is not actually a regimented discipline as such. Yet, even in the military nowadays, especially in the non-Islamic Western societies, Muslim military and paramilitary personnel are now allowed to wear hijab (usually small scarf or cap) in addition to their official uniforms. Such societies have simply embraced diversity and acknowledged the religious rights of individuals to certain fundamental practices of their faiths. These societies did not necessarily change their constitutions to accommodate such diversity or liberalism. They only give expressions to the extent provisions of their constitutions and international instruments on the freedom of religions and other freedoms. Under several international instruments (International law) and in the U.S., for example, there are provisions on "conscientious objectors" which protect those enlisted in the military against state or professional practices that violate or contradict their "conscientious" religious believes. In other words, a commissioned soldier in the U.S. whose established and sincere religious belief is against participating in a war may refuse to enlist in a war without losing his commission in the Army. Nobody in that society will argue that he shouldn't have enlisted in the Army if he was not prepared to go to the war front. Yes, it is not every time that one may plausibly argue that people should not go to the stream if they abhor the splashing of water. What about guaranteeing their rights to be at the streams without being splashed with waters? For me, the constitutional provision of section 38 on freedom of religion may also be deployed or interpreted to serve this purpose. Indeed, a full panel of the Nigerian Court of Appeal had actually handed down a decision in 2016, that wearing of hijab by Muslim girls is a religious right protected by the Constitution. So, while there is no doubt that our Muslim lady under reference actually breached a long established call-to-bar tradition, the sight must not also be lost of her freedom of religion to freely make choices and stand by them. It must also be noted that a TRADITION, though long established, which conflicts with express freedom of religion of a citizen is unconstitutional, highly discriminatory and unfair. It is therefore in view of the foregoing that I wish to advise people to stop their pity-parties, attacks and name callings for the young Muslim lady under reference. What if she never really wanted to be called to the Nigerian Bar? What if her longtime ambition was to get so close without getting in? What if all she wanted was to show defiance, resistance and then draw attention to an old, discriminatory, unfair and non-value added practice? So why take a pain reliever for a person who may not really be at pains? I think she just made her choice and it is open to her alone to savor or regret the consequences. We can never do that on her behalf because we may never know her real motive. But then, It's also possible that she actually wanted to be called to the Nigerian Bar yesterday and then flopped that possibility by her choice to breach a tradition while asserting her religious right. Even at that, I do not think she deserves castigations, attacks or name-calling for her personal choice to assert her religious belief. She is free to express her religious belief and decide which path to take in the event of any conflict between a TRADITION and her FAITH. It is all her choice and she's entitled to it. It is the society that actually owes her a duty to protect her right to become a lawyer without sacrificing an innocuous aspect of her FAITH. NB - I would have actually preferred that she "conforms" momentarily, gets enrolled and then help us to swell the numbers of qualified and practicing lawyers agitating for the abrogation of the discriminatory, worn-out and unedifying tradition. But then, that is my own personal opinion. It is beside the real point here. The issue at hand is all about her choice and I may never know her real motive. To her, the legal profession may not actually be noble or enviable as it is for me or you! By Misbau Alani Lateef Barrister, Lecturer, OAU, Ife. Source: http://www.hotproforum.com/topic793.html mynd44 lalasticlala |
Things you need to know 1. Course and exam registrations are the ones closing on 20 December not Tma submission 2. If you don't do exam registrations, you can see your Tma 3. If you have done exam registrations and yet do not see your Tma, ensure the codes have not been changed. Old course codes cannot show Tma 4. If you are sure the codes are correct and still the Tma is not available, be calm, they will upload it soon. 5. If you are the busy type and do not have time to do your Tma, you can contact us. 6. If you desire to score 10/10 in all your Tma, you can as well contact us. Contact us on 07030340696. Also be aware that whether you score 0 or you score 10, the system, on attempting to view your results shows 10. You only see your real score immediately after you submit it as shown below. So be aware.
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Ribasandez:Sure they will. Thy are uploading daily. |
Lekz:http://www.nouedu.net/article/postgraduate-transcript-application-guidelines How to apply for transcript |
UncleSnr:Send me a pm or WhatsApp the number in my signature |
stinville:Good. 2. Use another network. 3. Be calm. Pending Tma will be loaded next week. Meanwhile, was it saying "Forbidden" or Not Yet Available? |
UncleSnr:What exactly do you want? Say it and lets see the help we can offer |
Skye bank can never be. How can they self when they told my wife that it will take them 7 working days to reverse money. We have started counting the days o. Sebi 7 days go reach. |
stinville:These are likely things that may cause it. So answer the following. 1. Have you done exam registration? 2.Are you using glo network? If yes, use another 3. Is it all your courses or some? 4. Are you using Chrome browser? If no, use chrome. If you have answered the above then you can follow the following steps to view your Tma: After logging into your portal, click on Your Courses. Under it choose Your Courses. Enter 2017 2nd semester in the box and submit. Click proceed on the following page. On the new page, click on 2017/2 Exams. You will see the list of your registered exam courses. Click on the Tma link and there you will see your Tma. If says not yet available, check other courses. It means it has not been uploaded. So you keep checking. Wish you best. |
Rafaelyte:Why not wait till then. 2018/19 is still a long time. |
LionInZion:Undergraduate-#5,000 Post graduate-#7,500 |
Rafaelyte:Obj |
frixie:It's not that hard. The IT guys might be under pressure to reply or be of help. Just take it easy. Noun can be frustrating some times but be sure your issue will get solved. Since you have paid, go here https://www.nouonline.net/unqid_check.php enter your rrr code to generate unique ID. Then proceed here https://www.nouonline.net/172admform_ug.php fill as appropriate. From there you should progressively proceed. Contact me on 07030340696 for further issues. Gracias |
hollayemy89:Submitted 2 in the morning without hassle |