Tuesday 6 February 2018

SUG PRESIDENT AND 4 OTHER EXCOS RUSTICATED IN UNIBEN



Sunday 4 February 2018

Students Beg Federal Government To Intervene In SSANU, NASU And NAAT Strike

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has appealed to the Federal Government to intervene in the ongoing strike embarked by the Joint Action Committee(JAC) of the Non-academic staff union of Nigerian universities.
Mr Aruna Kadiri, NANS President made the appealed at a news conference on Monday in Abuja.
The associations that make up JAC include the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), and the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU).

         ARE YOU A STUDENT OR ASPIRANT
START YOUR ACTING CAREER AS AN EXTRA
TO MAKE AN IMPRESSION 

The unions embarked on an Indefinite nationwide strike on Dec 10, 2017 over non-implementation of agreement entered with the Federal Government in 2009 and 2017.
We are urging the Federal Government as a matter of urgency within 14 DAYS to do the needful for JAC (SSASNU, NASU and NAAT) to suspend the industrial action. Failure to comply with our demands will lead to mass mobilisation of Nigerian students and union leaders to occupy the streets of Abuja.

NASU Strike: Why they missed the point – ASUU

Interviews •
ASUU , Dr. Aniekan Sampson...
• February 2, 2018
Dr. Aniekan Sampson Brown is the dean students Affairs of the University of Uyo and immediate past chairman of Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) University of Uyo, chapter. Before he bowed out as chairman last week, he spoke to the newsmen on the current strike embarked upon by the Non Academic Staff Union of Universities (NASU), maintaining that NASU has no basis to go on strike. ESSEH IKORA presents the excerpts:
Lectures are ongoing while NASU is on strike, one would have thought that ASUU in the spirit of unionism would join in the strike, what is the position of ASUU?
As lecturers in the university system, our job is to teach the students, that is what we are doing. We have access to learning and teaching materials. We have access to the keys. We have taken up our responsibilities, just to get our own job done. We are not NASU. We are not on strike. We are not sure of why NASU are on strike, otherwise we would have joined in the strike in the spirit of unionism. In the campus you hear of JAC (Joint Action Committee) which is made up of Senior Staff Association of Nigeria Universities (SSANU), Non- Academic Senior Staff Union of Universities (NASU), and the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) you will not have ASUU there. There are some dichotomies that have been factored into the strike. ASSU is an organized labour union. The concept of sympathy strike, we have to be informed. We operate as a union. The directive to go on strike has to come from the headquarters of our union. As we speak, JAC is on strike not ASUU. I don’t know the basis of the strike. You have some of them saying that they are obvious of the fact that they are working in the same with ASSU why should the government give them certain amount of money without giving them same. As Chairman of ASUU I cannot tell you why they are on strike. Normally, when ASUU embarks on strike action, we do our own best to communicate with the other unions.



ARE YOU A STUDENT OR ASPIRANT WHO WOULD LOVE TO ACT
START YOUR ACTING CAREER AS AN EXTRA AND START EARNING
TO MAKE AN IMPRESSION CLICK





One of the Complaints is that their members are not paid Earned allowance, what is Earned Allowance and who is qualified to earn it?
The basis of Earned Academic Allowance is predicated on been earned. That means it is not for everybody, not all academic staff earn it, you must be able to earn it. For instance, teaching services allowance, supervision allowance and excess work allowance among others. The excess work allowance is computed in the instance of the credit hours you teach. The number of students you teach, the number of lecturers who participated in the teaching, determines it. Earned Allowance varies from department to department, faculty to faculty. It is possible to have people who are professors in the university, yet, they didn’t earn it, yet they have not withdrawn their services.
Another form of earned allowance is the responsibility allowance. If you are one of those you are not entitled to earn it. It is not a general allowance and people must prove where it is earned. If you are teaching two students for instance, you are not entitled to earn any excess allowance because you are not doing any excess work. Every additional student to the programme, the government pays the lecturer excess allowance as agreed to by the Federal Government in 2009 agreement. That is where NASU has missed it. As Chairman of ASUU, I know of professors who merely work, they are not factored into earned which NASU is compelling the government to pay because they don’t merit it.
Sir, why the disparity?
Government pays members of JAC overtime allowances and no ASUU member is complaining. Our union is that of intellectual, we run along with extended agreement and principles.
What is your advice to the Federal government?
It is a decision on the realities of public universities. Public universities the world over you will agree with me that, beyond academic staff in the university, others are support staff. I will want government to stand up with the height of responsibility to let Nigerians know the context of university system, and on that note it would shock you that as we speak academic staff are not paid hazard allowance but NASU members are been paid hazard into our agreement of 2009 we don’t bother. Government should take the responsibility by letting the system know how the system should run.


Saturday 3 February 2018

UNN Orientation Exercise 2017/2018 Announced

This is to inform all newly admitted candidates of University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) that the management of the university has announced the date for the commencement of the 2017/2018 Orientation Exercise.
According to the information released by the management of the university, the 2017/2018 Orientation programme will hold as follows;

UNN Matriculation Ceremony 2017/2018 Announced

This is to inform the new students of University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN) and the entire University Community that the 44th Matriculation Ceremony of the University  for 2017/2018 academic session has been announced.

The Matriculation Ceremony will take place on Saturday, February 10, 2018 in various Faculties at all the Campuses of the University. This will make all new student full members of the University.

Breaking: Buhari renames university after Alex Ekwueme

  • Federal government renames had renamed the federal university Ndufu Alike to Alex Ekwueme Federal University.
  •  reports reaching us that the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo made the announcement on Friday, February 2, during the funeral service of the late elder statesman, 
  • Dr Alex Ekwueme Family, friends, and well-wishers including government officials among other dignitaries were present at the event which is ongoing in his hometown in Oko, Anambra state
  •  Former President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Patience, as well as former vice president Namadi Sambo are among those present at the event. 
  • State governors in attendance include Willie Obiano (Anambra), Rochas Okorocha (Imo), Ifeanyi Okowa (Delta), Okezie Ikpeazu (Abia), and Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos) among others.

5 Important Things You Need To Know About JAMB 2018


1) Registration Deadline

JAMB 2018 process is ongoing, the registration which began on 6th of December will be closing by 6th February.

2) Mistake in JAMB registration
in case of mistake/loss of profile: to correct error in name send the (correct surname, first name, middle name) to 55019 as a text message from the same mobile number used in the registration. to retrieve lost profile code, send (RESEND) to 55019.

3) Exam date
The exam date is scheduled from 9th - 17th March, all candidates are expected to come with the required materials.

4) Subject combination
During the course of registration, a lot of students neglect the subject combination thereby filling the wrong ones, the truth is that no university will admit you if you did not fill your subjects well. If you made a mistake do well to correct them by visiting any JAMB accredited centers

5) It is easier to pass JAMB
It is very easy to pass JAMB if you keep by the rules, make sure your registration is correct, read and prepare, practice JAMB Mock CBT before the examination date
Wish you the best of luck

Thursday 1 February 2018

University of Ibadan tops 2018 Webometric ranking of Nigerian universities

Professor Idowu Olayinka, VC, University of Ibadan
NIGERIA’S premier university, University of Ibadan, has again confirmed its lead position by ranking as the topmost university in the country in the January edition of the 2018 Webometrics.
It, however, ranks 1099 in the world (still the only Nigerian university in the top 1000 bracket in the world).
University of Ibadan is trailed in the second position by the Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State (the only private university in the top 46 bracket) and the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State, in the third position.
Covenant University and Obafemi Awolowo University rank 2,140th and 2,267th in the world respectively.
The University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), University of Lagos (UNILAG), Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) and the Federal University of Technology, Minna rank fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh positions respectively.
Nigeria’s most subscribed university, University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) ranks eigth in Nigeria and 3,118th globally; followed by the Federal University of Technology Akure (ninth Nigeria, 3176 world) and the University of Benin (10th Nigeria, 3512).
Others are University of Port Harcourt (11th, 3535th); Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (12th, 3,638th); and the Federal University of Technology, Owerri (13th, 3665th).
Despite being held down by protracted and debilitating industrial crisis last year, the Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, still got rated as the best state university in the current Webometric ranking, 14th in the country and 3680th in the world.
Bayero University, Kano (15th, 3760th); Lagos State University (16th, 3807th); University of Uyo (17th, 3823rd ); University of Calabar (18th,4153rd); Nnamdi Azikiwe University (19th, 4277th) and the University of Jos (20th, 4323rd) complete the top 20 on the list).
The next best performing private university after Covenant (which is ranked second best university in Nigeria) is the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti, on the 21st position and 4329th in the world.
The University of Maiduguri, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State; American University of Nigeria, Yola, Adamawa State and Federal University of Oye-Ekiti are ranked 22nd, 23rd, 24th and 25th respectively in Nigeria. The  ranked polytechnic is the Auchi Polytechnic 48th in Nigeria and 8623rd institution in the world; followed by the Yaba College of Technology (65th Nigeria, 10,911th world) and The Polytechnic, Ibadan (77th Nigeria, 12,202nd world).



*Update on the on going *SSANU*, *NASU, NAAT *Strike.*

FG threatens to invoke ‘no work, no pay’ against SSANU, NASU, NAAT

Federal Government has threatened to invoke Section 43 of the Trade Dispute Act of the labour law against the three non-teaching staff of universities, who have been on strike since December 2017.
The Joint Action Committee, JAC, which comprised Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, SSANU; Non Academic Staff Union of Educational Institutions, NASU, and National Association of Academic Technologists, NAAT, embarked on strike over alleged failure of government to keep its own part of the agreement with the unions.
The Section 43 of Trade Dispute Act has recommended what it called “no work, no pay,” although labour law and International Labour Organisation, ILO, Convention make provisions for labour union to embark on strike to demand for their rights.

Speaking exclusively to Vanguard on the lingering strike embarked upon by the non-teaching staff in the universities,  Minister of Labour and Employment, Senator Chris Ngige, stated that the strike was illegal, claiming that the unions went contrary to the agreement reached by the two parties.

He said: “They are on strike and it is an illegal strike because you go on a strike, reach a collective bargaining agreement and then you were not quick in accessing the money and the other union, ASUU accessed plenty of it, about 70 per cent or 80 per cent of it, I don’t know, and then you return and say you are going on strike, it is illegal.

“We don’t want to bring hardship to homes but I am inviting them to come back because if they don’t come back, I will invoke Section 43 of the Trade Dispute Act, but I don’t want them to be the first group of unions that I will invoke that because if I do so, the story will not be palatable.”

Happy New Month to you all.

TEAM BELIEVE.
#B.O.B.

Wednesday 31 January 2018

5 things you can do before NYSC to keep life interesting

When you find your post-graduate life getting boring while waiting for NYSC posting, gear up yourself with these five tips Let's first congratulate you in advance if you're still in your final year.
For those who have written their final exams and have poured water on one another to wash their graduation, congratulations and three gbosa for you all.
It's not easy to be a graduate.
I hope you guys didn't forget to answer the number one question in the exams. Yea, that compulsory question that carries 20 marks.
So, now that you've graduated, you must surely be missing your friends, the lecturers and all the campus fun.
Sitting at home, waiting for NYSC posting now seems more boring than watching a paint dry.
But life shouldn't be so boring after graduation. You can spice things up with these five post graduate engagement.
1. Catch up with the TV series you've misse Now that you have no assignment and project supervisor to chase you around, you can relax and enjoy the series you've always wanted to watch without feeling guilty. So,  instead of sleeping away your idleness, get yourself those interesting series and occupy yourself with fun.

2. Read some books
While waiting for NYSC posting, you can start reading books about your field of interest. This, instead of sleeping all day will expand your knowledge in that field.

3. Learn something new
Of course, your degree shouldn't be the end of learning. Having spent four, five or seven years (depending on the course) studying a course in the university or polytechnic, you can still learn something new and very interesting.
With so much free time between your graduation and NYSC posting, you can learn a new language, new skill, and instrument. And guess what...the new skill set can be added to your CV.

4. Make some friends
Hey, you don't have to hole up in your room all day waiting for NYSC posting, if you aren't watching any series or reading any book, just throw yourself out there and make new friends.

5. Travel
Travel, travel just travel. Visit old friends, go to neighboring states you've not been before. Leave your community and see life in other areas. Travelling gives you the opportunity to know about other places. Just travel and enjoy yourself.

5 bad academic habits you have to get rid of

Certain habits affect students academic performances, if you have any of his five habits, you need to get rid of it.

These 5 productive habits that can help you survive higher institutions can get you going on campus  (Lie Happy Magazine)

  • A lot of students have the desire to graduate  with first class degree.
  • Many want to improve on their academic performance and start getting good grades in both tests and exams.
  • But they aren't giving proper attention to those delightful actions that affect our academic output.
  • Perhaps, you don't realize that, that moment you play away take a toll on your grades... in a way.
  • But I am sure you care about your grades and this is why this piece is put together to remind the habits that slowly eat up your grades.
  • 1. Procrastination
  • So many students are guilty of this habit (you are guilty too). Do you remember how many times you've delayed an assignment you could have finished in one hour?
  • Hesitating to complete a task on a time is a very bad academic habits students need to avoid.
  • You can get rid of this by organizing and scheduling your school work using  apps like google  calendar 
  • 2. Not having enough sleep
  • Sleeping late is becoming a culture you know. You always want to see an episode or two of that fantastic series. After that, you go to Twitter to see who is trending and the victims of savage tweet replies.
  • By the time you're done, it is almost midnight and you are too weak to revise what you learn. You, therefore, wake up tired and then go for lectures with little or no enthusiasm.
  • 3. You'll probably not understand the lectures.
  • But hey, let these not affect your academic dreams, you can enjoy your movies and social media and still have your sound sleep.
  • 3. Playing away the weekend
  • Your weekend is the best time for you relax, regain your strength and prepare for a new week. You can play as much as you want but you don't have to play your weekend away like a game.
  • Instead of devoting the whole weekend to watching matches, catching fun and spending a good time with friends, you'll do well to get a little more studious and complete some assignments.
  • 4. Not paying attention in the class
  • One of the things Nigerian lecturers dislike to see in their lecture room is to see students that are not paying attention to their lectures.
  • This habit has earned some students their lecturer's wrath because the lecture could not understand why students would be disturbing his class while he is teaching.
  • 5. Skipping Classes
  • When the bad academic habit gets to the points that you begin to skip classes, your grades will likely drop in a way you never imagine.
  • It may be excused to skip a class when you're very tired...just take your time and attend to yourself...go to the school clinic. But, if you deliberately skip classes, it may reflect on your grades.
  • Take this seriously and compare your grades to the previous ones. You'll thank me later.

5 materials JAMB banned for 2018 UTME


Materials JAMB banned: JAMB has banned 2018 UTME candidates from coming to the exam hall with some items. If you are writing this exam, don’t go to exam hall with these five things. The 2018 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination is around the corner, and as part of efforts to curb malpractice in the examination, JAMB has set new strategies in place. According to JAMB, CCTV cameras and electronic jammers will be installed across all CBT centres in the country to deactivate mobile networks.
JAMB has also announced that all lens detectors will also be made available in all centres to check all eyeglasses.
Due to these new strategies, the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board has banned and warned candidates from coming to centres with these items.

1. Wristwatches.
JAMB says it has discovered that during the conduct of the 2017 UTME, electronic devices including wristwatches and other devices were used to perpetrate examination malpractice.
Image result for watches
“So, for next year, (2018) we have banned the use of wristwatches and pens by candidates and other persons in the examination hall. JAMB said.

2. Writing materials
There is no need to go to exam hall with pens, pencils, erasers, and sharpeners since the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination is now computer based.

3. Spectacles
Any candidates going for the 2018 UTME is not expected to wear spectacles as JAMB listed eyeglasses as part of the banned items.
This according to JAMB Registrar, Prof Is-haq Oloyede is the reason the exam body install lens detector in all CBT centres.
Image result for Spectacles are not allowed in exam halls
He said, “the lens detectors will also be made available at all centres to find out the status of all eyeglasses if a candidate or anyone must go in with it.

4. Mobile phone
Your mobile phone too is not allowed to be taken to the CBT centres. According to JAMB, your phones will be deactivated if you bring it to the exam hall.
ALSO READ:99% of tertiary institutions comply with January 25 admission deadline – JAMB
Image result for Mobile phone
To all the CBT centres, the rule this year is that electronic jammers will be installed across all the centres to deactivate all mobile phone networks because we have seen what many of them have done with phones and other electronic tools”

5. Calculators
Just like other electronic devices, JAMB has banned the use of calculators in the UTME exam hall.

2018 UTME: Know The Right UTME/O'level Subject Combination For Your Course

With the end of the 2018 UTME registration just two weeks away, we believe the number of registrations in the remaining days will be quite intense.
However, we understand that most candidates are still finding it difficult to match their intended course of study with the right UTME and O'level subjects requirements.
One of the first steps to your admission success is choosing the right subjects combinations for your intended course of study.
Each course of study has a specific O’level and UTME Subjects requirements you must meet before you are admitted to study that course. What works for an Engineering course won’t work for a medical course.
No school will admit you to study a course you do not have the requirements for. Even if your name manage to make it to the school's admission list, you will be disqualified during the screening, verification or clearance process.
We therefore advise all candidates who will be registering for their UTME in the coming days to ensure they first go through the online jamb brochure to be able to know the courses available in each higher institution, the O’level and UTME Subject combination or requirements for the courses. The Myschool online JAMB Brochure is quite easy to use.
If you are still a bit confused about the O’level requirements of the course you wish to study in any institution. You can post the name of the institution, course, your O’level subjects and UTME Subjects you intend to sit for.
Enlightened Myschoolers will help you determine if you are good to go or not. An Admin will equally respond to you if necessary.
Feel free to use the comment box, 

Goodluck!

2017 Admission Deadline: 99% of tertiary institutions complied - JAMB

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, has stated that the level of compliance by tertiary institutions to its January 25th admission deadline was 99 percent.
About 1 percent of the tertiary institutions were unable to meet the deadline though no reason was given for this.
Also the names of instkitutions that comply and the ones that did not comply were not mentioned. We equally do not know if any sanction will be given to schools that did not comply as this was not disclosed by the board.
Dr Benjamin, stressed that a uniform deadline became necessary to enusre that Academic Calendar is adhered to.
He urged candidates who have gained admissions into various institutions and are yet to register or do not have admissions by January 25 to begin making preparations for the 2018 UTME.

PRESS RELEASE FROM THE DESK OF THE PRESIDENT, STUDENTS' UNION GOVERNMENT OF THE GREAT UNIVERSITY OF ABUJA

HOSTELS HAVE BEEN OPENED

When your struggle is consistent and genuine, your victory is always assured, because the spirit of Aluta always succeed.

Just this morning, the number one student servant of the great university of Abuja was on the move to all the hostels as promised to ensure that the hostel are opened for students.

After much engagement with the management, I can authoritatively tell you that HOSTELS HAVE BEEN OPENED for students to stay.

Finally, it's worthy to note that the condition of the hostels may not be perfect as the staff of NASU are on strike, we also urge the students on ground to maintain decorum, certain prinples will be employed to make sure the hostels are habitable, endeavour to corporate with the Hostel Representatives on ground that is enabbling peaceful coexistence in the hostels and its environs.

Kindly, report any observation or inconvenience to the hostel representatives. SUG EXCOS and the representatives are always available to respond to your needs immediately as we are all here to serve you. Thank you

Viva Aluta

Signed:
-Asiwaju B A OBASANJO
President
Students' Union Government

Tuesday 30 January 2018

99% of tertiary institutions comply with January 25 admission deadline - JAMB - Vanguard News

By Joseph Erunke
ABUJA – THE Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, said yesterday that the level of compliance by tertiary institutions to its January 25 admission deadline was 99 percent.


Click to www.Vanguardngr.com
to continue 

Monday 29 January 2018

SSANU, NASU, NAAT strike: NANS appeals to FG to intervene

The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has appealed to the Federal Government to intervene in the ongoing strike embarked by the Joint Action Committee(JAC) of the Non-academic staff union of Nigerian universities.
NANS President, Chinonso Obasi
Mr Aruna Kadiri, NANS President made the appealed at a news conference on Monday in Abuja.
The associations that make up JAC include the Non-Academic Staff Union of Educational and Associated Institutions (NASU), National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT), and the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU).
It would be recalled that unions embarked on an indefinite nationwide strike on Dec 10, 2017 over non-implementation of agreement entered with the Federal Government in 2009 and 2017.
“We are urging the Federal Government as a matter of urgency within 14 days to do the needful for JAC (SSASNU, NASU and NAAT) to suspend the industrial action.
“Failure to comply with our demands will lead to mass mobilisation of Nigerian students and union leaders to occupy the streets of Abuja.
“We are also urging JAC to shift ground so as to see a final solution to the impasse as when two elephants fight it is the grass that suffers.
“We also want to appeal to the leadership of JAC to look into institutions that have peculiar cases which are about to start exams and backwardness in academic calendar and temper justice with mercy.
“As anything that will distract the exams will affect the academic calendar of most institutions that are academically backward as well as the students’ academic performances,” he said.
Kadiri also said that the association frowned with dismay over the insincerity of government in handing the labour crisis in the Nigerian universities that had led to the loss of lives of students and property.
He added that the ongoing strike had caused more harm.
He listed one of the harms to include the inability of students that had been mobilised for NYSC to get their testimonials to report for camp for example University of Jos.
According to him, students are becoming idle at home due to some universities that are totally shutdown, adding that the students now indulge in all sorts of social vices at home.
“Institutions that are about writing exams are now under threat by non-teaching staff of such institutions.
“That is why we are pleading with the government and the unions to shift ground, ‘’he said.
He further called on the Nigerian students to be patient and also show solidarity in the struggle to call off the strike.

Sunday 28 January 2018

TIPS TO HELP YOU FINISH UP WITH AN EXAM WITHIN THE ALLOTED TIME

Most Accounting and law students complain about the amount of time allotted to law exams. Most likely, it is based on the false assumption or mindset that one can’t answer their questions within that amount of time.
Examiners always seek something from their students but if a student spends most of his time in the exam hall trying to figure what is expected of them or beating about the bush, it is most likely that such student may not finish their exam questions.
The successive paragraphs are tips to help you in managing your time in the exam hall;
Time management skills: This goes beyond having a wrist watch in the exam hall. It involves the effective use of your time to achieve something productive. It is simply the ability to meet deadlines, in this case, at the finish time.
Pre-exam activities: This involves activities which are directed to prepare one’s self for an exam. In order to maximize your time in the exam hall, you need to prepare yourself beforehand. This preparation includes reading, practicing past questions and so on. It is also advisable that you practice past questions before the exam with a timer and under exam conditions, this will help you to predict questions and to develop yourself in the use of your time. Most students often overlook this aspect or procrastinate it but it always an important part of any exam.
Have a timer: This is as important as the pen you take to the exam hall. To maximize your time, you need to be able to allot time to different question and you can only do this effectively when you have personal clock or a wristwatch timing you. It is desirable to have a personal watch rather than share with a colleague in the exam hall as it may be a source of distraction in the long run. You could also set the time a bit faster than the exam time, this way, you can be able to make up for lost time.
Take time to study the question: One recurring mistake that law students often make is jumping into questions without taking time to study it. Sometimes a question may look too easy on the first look and that might be to the detriment of your answer. It is advisable that you take 2-5 minutes of your time, depending on the question, to study the questions. You can also jot down with a pencil, if allowed, bullet points on the chosen questions. This will help in remembering some of what you read when answering these questions. For example, cases, quotes titles etc.
Divide your time among the questions: For a 3 hour paper of 4 questions for instance, it’s advisable to make use of 30 – 35 minutes for each question, however, it’s your decision really. Since you have allotted 2-5 minutes of your time to study the question and arrange your thoughts, you have less than one hour to go. It is not entirely impossible to finish one question within 30 minutes, however, where there is an incomplete answer, the remaining time is used to complete it and go over your whole work too.
Have your introduction and conclusion steady: You shouldn’t just be thinking about how to approach a question or conclude it in the exam hall. Structure your introduction, body and conclusion intuitively. You can bullet point this at the first stage. Note further that you can predict the likelihood of the question through the scheme of work, answering past question or area(s) of concentration.
There is more often than not the problem of what question to answer in the exam hall. This is only peculiar to each student. This problem may be resolved by practicing past question with a timer. By doing this, you will get to know which questions require a bulky answer and it also helps you determine your strength in answering questions. Examples of questions that should not take most of your time includes short notes question, lecturer specific question [these are questions which the lecturer would not require so much of] and so on. It is safer to start with the question you are good at or the question that carries much weight. This is because the answers are still fresh in your mind, as starting with a trivial or uncomfortable question might tamper with it. Do not waste your time staring at ‘difficult’ questions.
Discipline: This is very important when writing your exams. Remember that you have given yourself time for each question. Its discipline when you stay true to that time. Exceeding the time can affect the other questions. In a situation where you can’t finish the question within that amount of time, for example 30 minutes, it is advisable to pick a convenient stop and leave enough space that can contain the continuation of your answer.
You may have the best answer to the exam question but where you are unable to manage your time effectively, it can affect your success at the exam. Do away with any assumption that exam time is not enough. Conclusively, pre-examination activities should be taken seriously, build up your time management skills and time won’t be an excuse.

TIPS FOR WRITING A GOOD COVER LETTER

Job seekers and students, more often than not, send cover letters for employment or internship application to various firms, organisations or companies for one position or another. This letter, beside the résumé or curriculum vitae, is seen as a marketing tool as well as a means of introduction to prospective employers. They are expected to use this to relay their practical experience, suitability, qualification and ideal skills or values. Your cover is meant to make you stand out from the crowd and present you as a better fit for that desired position.
Hence, job seekers as well as students must give premium to their cover letter and make it top-notch to better their chances of being called up from the flooded applications recruiters receive from potential employees due to competitiveness in the job market.
“A cover letter is a letter of introduction attached to, or accompanying another document such as a résumé or curriculum vitae.”
With the foregoing in mind, this article will therefore proffer a few tips on writing a better cover letter.
1. Have a good grasp of the firm, company or organisation you intend to apply to.
Prospective employees or interns should ensure that they have a comprehensive understanding of the company they intend to apply to. They should understand their objectives, area(s) of practice, what they look out for from applicants and so forth. Given the technological advancement of our world, including easier Internet access, you can get this information from the firm’s website. And in the event that they don’t have one, strive to get in touch with people who know something about them that would be helpful to you. You have to dig deep into the firm by engaging in extensive research. Relevant Information obtained may be used to modify your cover letter accordingly.
2. Employ Precision and Brevity 
Most times, one is tempted to be too impressive and expository.
Hence, a lengthy cover letter is usually written. This should however be avoided by all means as the cover letter is expected to be succinct, detailed, to-the-point and engaging. Thrive to ensure that information entailed are good enough to entice, persuade and convince the recruiter to invite you for an interview. Don’t tell stories, just hit the nail on the head!
3. Avoid Duplication.
As a cover letter is meant to provide additional details, aside your résumé or curriculum vitae about your experiences, skills and values, it is important to note that you’re not supposed to regurgitate what’s on your résumé or curriculum vitae as this could portray you as clueless and unfit. Rather, put down specific information that makes you specially fit and qualified for that position as a compliment to what’s on your résumé or CV. It is said that you should think of your cover letter as a sales pitch that will market your credentials or qualifications and help you get the interview, and ultimately the job.
4. Have your Cover letter reviewed before it’s sent.
This, to some, might seem trivial. But it is very important you have your work carefully scrutinized to avoid mistakes and typos, no matter how little. It is even advisable to have it read and accessed by someone else who is knowledgeable and experienced. By so doing, your cover letter gets a better chance of being exquisite and impressionable. It makes a big difference, don’t make a mess of it!
5. Be Positively Expectant!
You should ensure your letter is written in such a way that shows interest in the position, and anticipation to meet your prospective employer personally. The last paragraph of your cover letter should be concluded by asking the recruiter to read your résumé as attached to the letter. It should equally ask them to contact you about an interview. Try something easy like: “Find attached a copy of my résumé. I will be glad to hear from you soon. Thanks.”
In conclusion, in order to give your cover letter a unique touch and make it effective, you need to dedicate great effort to make it such. So, be flexible, interesting, consice, confident and optimistic!

Saturday 27 January 2018

7 things new university students should know

Real-life advice on roommates, getting into a full class and why engineer parties are worth checking out
Engineering students at U of T during frosh week. (Vince Tolatta/Toronto Star)
1. You’re not always stuck with a terrible roommate.
Residence brochures show students laughing together as they sit on beds, knees nearly touching. The message is that those two strangers became best friends and so will you and your new roomie.
Hey, it happens. What can also happens is you get the girl who lies around listening to screamo bands at 3 p.m. in the afternoon while you’re trying to study.
Luckily, you can always turn to a residence assistant (a.k.a. don, a.k.a. floor fellow) for advice, and to document the problem.
If things are really bad, you may even get a room change. Schools strongly discourage switching rooms in the first couple of weeks, because they want you to give your roommate a chance, and because they simply don’t have the beds. However, a few students will drop out by October, freeing up rooms for legitimate roommate refugees.
2. People aren’t hooking up as much as you think.
Movies set on college campuses show wild party scenes where even the most socially inept manage to find love. But films are only fantasy. The reality is much less sexy.
According to one of the biggest-ever studies of student health conducted last year, almost a third of Canadian post-secondary students admitted to having had no sexual partners in the 12 months before the survey, while nearly half had just one.
That means most people aren’t hooking up, no matter how much they brag about the hotties they met on Tinder.
3. The engineers seem nerdy, but are totally legit.
Engineers have a reputation for being nerdy outcasts, partly because they have higher course loads that force them to isolate themselves in the library until ungodly hours every night, and partly because they’re actually pretty nerdy.
On top of that, in a program with such a huge gender imbalance (about four in five are men), the straight guys can be a bit awkward around girls.
But that doesn’t mean female students should shun their parties. They may be impressed by the contraptions they’ve built.
4. The high school social structure is dead.
High school society is organized hierarchically with male hockey/basketball/football players and female skaters/dancers/cheerleaders on top, and other social strata below. Some people manage to reproduce these structures in residence, but it doesn’t last long.
By reading week in February, most have found a new social group based on common interests instead of geography. They’re writing for the school newspaper, volunteering at an animal shelter, playing on the underwater hockey team, attending meetings of the Medieval Historical Society or meeting people for drinks and a study session every Wednesday after chem.
If you don’t find friends in residence, or aren’t living in residence, there are plenty of other places to meet new people.
5. You can get into almost any class.
At some point in your campus career, you’ll be forced to make your timetable after all the classes have been picked over. History of Hip-Hop Culture will be full, while the only arts credit with space left will be Feminist Responses to Everyday Life in Victorian Rural Ontario.
But a fact little known among first-years is that you can always sign up for the course you don’t want, as a back-up, and just go to the class you want. There ought to be enough seats in the lecture hall of the class you desire (someone is always sick or skipping).
Meanwhile, you can keep checking online until someone drops (someone usually does) freeing up an official spot for you. Just remember to drop Feminist Responses so it doesn’t show as a fail.
Alternatively, you may be able to sweet-talk the professor into “signing you in” above capacity.
6. The first-year workload is crazy, but you don’t have to do it all.
You’ll be assigned far more work than you’ve ever seen before. It will often seem impossible to do every single reading and all those practice quizzes. Sometimes it really isn’t possible.
But instead of freaking out and giving up, do as much as you can. If you can’t make it through a long article before class, skip ahead to the conclusion. If you sleep through a lab, ask a classmate if you can copy their notes before the next one. If you get to the night before the final exam and realize you lost your notes that time your laptop died, find the lecture slides online and read them so you can at least make educated guesses.
Most first-year exams are multiple choice, so they’re easy to pass even if you’ve slacked a bit. Your GPA will suffer, but you can make up for that in second year, so long as you’ve learned your lesson.
7. Don’t be intimidated by big classes.
First year is the only time you’re likely to be in a lecture hall with several hundred peers (classes get smaller after that). Those huge classes make it seem like your professors are too busy to answer small questions. Not true.
Professors hold office hours where you can line up at the door to ask specific questions about lectures or discuss paper topics. The line at office hours is rarely long and the wait, if any, is almost always worth it.
If your problems are more general—say you don’t know how to write a sociology paper without plagiarizing—there are people stationed in most schools (writing centres, libraries) who can help.
There are also private tutors who can get you past bigger roadblocks, like teaching you the calculus you missed in high school.
Just make sure you get help before you fall too far behind.

Friday 26 January 2018

Good news as JAMB recommends 1.6m candidates for admission into various tertiary institutions

JAMB says 500,000 candidates have accepted their admission into various tertiary institutions
- The JAMB spokesperson, Fabian Benjamin, states that admission numbers this year is far beyond numbers recorded for other years
- JAMB advises candidates to avoid illegal registration centres
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has recommended 1.6m candidates for admission into various tertiary institutions for the 2017/2018 admission year.
The board’s head of media, Fabian Benjamin, who disclosed this during an interview with Leadership on Friday, January 26, said of that amount, only 500,000 have accepted their admission as at the time of filling this report.
The JAMB spokesperson said that admission numbers this year was far beyond numbers recorded for other years.
He however stated that candidates were to accept their admission before the admission is said to be complete.
“ We have over 500,000 accepted admission already. By the time the 1.1 candidates accept, we are now looking at 1.6 admission. So until the 1.1 candidates accept, by the time they accept, with the 500,000 that have accepted, we will have about 1.6 million accepted,” he said.
He explained that in CAPS, institution forwards recommended list to JAMB desk officer, the desk officer processes recommended list and generates list of provisional admissions, JAMB contacts candidates to accept or decline admission. If candidate accepts, admission is concluded for candidate.
Meanwhile, the Plateau state coordinator of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, Paul Darius, has advised candidates registering for the 2018 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) to do so at approved CBT centres.
Darius told NAN on Tuesday, January 23, in Jos that the advice was necessitated by the experience of many candidates who had fallen victims of fraudsters.
9jaskol.blogspot. gathered that Darius disclosed that many candidates have been exploited financially by some operators of cybercafes not approved by the board.
Applicants lament bitterly over JAMB registration

JAMB POSTPONEMENT OF MOCK EXAMINATION FOR 2018

The 2018 JAMB UTME Mock examination which was ealier scheduled to hold between January 22 and 24 has been moved to the first week in February.
The reason for the postponement was necessitated by the fact that some of the CBT centres located within campuses cannot be used due to the ongoing strike action by NASU.