Powered By Blogger

Monday, 13 October 2014

Aviation Minister N10 Million Scholarship for Indigent Students

Aviation Minister established a N10 million scholarship scheme for indigent school children.
                                                Minister of Aviation, Chief Osita Chidoka,
The Minister of Aviation, Chief Osita Chidoka, on Saturday instituted a N10 million scholarship scheme for indigent school children in Obosi, Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra. Chidoka made the scheme public at the third Obiora Festival and reception held for him by the Obosi community.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the festival marks the beginning of the consumption of new yam by Obosi community. Chidoka said that his friends who were interested in ensuring that indigent members of the community acquire high level of education would provide funds for the scholarship scheme.

“The community had produced such personalities as the former Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Chief Emeka Anyaoku.

“With a minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the community cannot afford to go back on education pursuits,” Chidoka said. Chidoka also commended the people of Obosi and the traditional ruler of the town, Igwe Chidubem Iweka, for organizing the reception.

Earlier, Iweka, said that the minister had excelled as the Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Commission. Iweka said that the festival had always been celebrated yearly to usher in the new yam harvest and to reiterate the importance of the farm produce as a fruitful crop.

He said that the new yam festival provides members of the community opportunity to offer prayers to God for peace in Obosi community. Speaking on the sidelines of the event, the FRSC Deputy Corps Marshal in charge of Training, Mr Omidiji Adeyemi, told NAN that the occasion presented another veritable window for the showcasing of the rich cultural heritage of the country.

“The occasion also signifies the unity of Nigeria as seen in the attendance by people from different parts of the country,” said Oyeyemi, who represented FRSC Corps Marshal, Mr Boboye Oyeyemi. Dignitaries who attended the occasion included the Deputy Senate President, Mr Ike Ekweremadu, a former governor of Anambra, Dame Patience Etiaba, and Gov. Isa Yuguda of Bauchi. (NAN)

Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter

UNIUYO 2014 Sandwich Programmes Application Form

University of Uyo, UNIUYO sandwich programmes admission application form for the 2014/2015 academic session is out.
The University of Uyo (UNIUYO) is inviting applications from suitably qualified candidates for admission into the 2014 Slot of the Sandwich Programmes of the School of Continuing Educations University of Uyo, Uyo.

UNIUYO Sandwich Programmes

(i) B. A. (Ed.) in: a. English b. Fine Arts c. French d. History e. Religion f. Music.
(ii) B.Sc. (Ed.) in: a. Biology b. Chemistry c. Mathematics d. Physics e. Integrated Science f. Physical Education g. Health Education.
(iii) B.Sc. (Ed.) in: a. Economics b. Geography c. Political Science.
(iv) B.Sc. (Ed.) in: a. Business Education (Accounting) b. Technical Education c. Home Economics Education d. Agricultural Education.
(v) B. Ed. in: a. Pre-Primary & Primary Education b. Guidance and Counseling c. Special Education d. Social Studies.
(vi) B. L. S. (Ed.) in: Library & Information Science.
UNIUYO Sandwich Admission General Requirements

Only holders of the following qualifications are eligible to apply:
i. NCE with a minimum of eight (8) points and above in Education and the teaching subjects.
ii. General Nursing and Midwifery/Psychiatry Nursing with at least three (3) years post qualification experience, may be eligible for admission for Health Education.
iii. Candidates with (i) or (ii) above must, in addition, possess five (5) subjects at GCE (O/L), NECO/WASC/TC II, SSC including English Language at not more than two sittings and any other specific departmental requirement.
iv. Programmes in Sciences, Vocational Education and Library Science require a credit pass in Mathematics. Holders of Diploma in Library Science with at least Lower Credit are also eligible for admission into BLIS Library & Information Science.

Please note that a credit pass in Chemistry is a requirement for candidates intending to offer Home Economics Education and Agricultural Education.

NOTE: Non-viable programmes that do not have up to ten (10) students admitted may not be mounted during the period. Students so admitted may be required to change their programme.
Duration of UNIUYO Sandwich Programmes

Candidates will complete the programme in five years (slots) of nine (9) weeks each.
UNIUYO Sandwich Method of Application

Application forms are obtainable from Uniuyo Microfinance Bank, T own Campus, Key Stone Bank (former Bank PHB) Uniuyo Branch on the payment of a non – refundable application fee of N7,500.00 (Seven thousand, five hundred naira) only. Receipts of payment must be obtained at the point of payment in the bank.

Application forms can also be obtained from the UNIUYO Liaison Offices in Lagos at No. 2 Modupe Street, Off Kofoworola Crescent, Off Awolowo Way, Ikeja (GSM No. 08145223041, 08036040440) and Abuja at No. 15B Blantyre Street, Wuse II, Abuja (GSM No. 08188967822, 08067979235). Bank Draft should be made payable to the School of Continuing Education, University of Uyo, Uyo. The full name and address of the candidate must be written on the reverse side of the Bank draft

All completed application forms with photocopies of relevant credentials and Original copy of receipt of payment for the application form should reach the office of the Administrative Secretary, School of Continuing Education, University of Uyo on or before 11th November, 2014.

Applications received after the above deadline may not be considered. Contact 08096236702 for enquiries.

Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter

Sunday, 12 October 2014

Things you should know about Jamb 2015/16

12 things you should about Jamb 2015/16




I heard that Jamb 2015/16 is going to be a real tough one... If you are doubting it, here are 12 things you need to know about the exam

JAMB 2015/2016 UTME Registration Commences Sept. 15th - Jan. 19th, 2015

The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has announced that sales of application form for the 2015/2016 Unified Tertiary and Matriculation Examination (UTME) will commence on Monday 15th September, 2014 and closes Thursday 15th January 2015. Website for online registration closes Monday 19th January, 2015

Prospective candidates should note the following;

1. The 2015/2016 UTME will be Computer Based Test (CBT) mode only.

2. The Registration Fee is Four thousand, Five Hundred Naira (N4500)

3. The Registration cards can be obtained from the following banks and NIPOST: Zenith Bank Plc, Skye Bank Plc, Union Bank Plc and First Bank

4. At the point of Purchase the following documents shall be made available to the candidates

- Syllabus for the examination in a softcopy

- Guidelines on admission (Brochure) in soft copy detailing list of tertiary institutions and available programmes of study (All these are at no extra cost)

5. Candidates are to pay N500 to obtain the newly introduced book “The Last Days at Forcados High School.” However, this will be issued to candidates at the point of registration after showing evidence of payment.

6. Only Computer Based Centres are authorized to register candidates for the 2015/2016 UTME

7. The venue of the examination will be at the candidates chosen town during registration.

8. Candidates are to note that irrespective of their choice of course of study or method of testing, they will also be tested on a general book: “The Last Days at Forcados High School” by A.H. Mohammed

9. The 2015 JAMB CBT will be conducted on Saturday 28th February to 14th March 2015

10. Candidates who damage or lose their scratch cards before registration will have to purchase another one

11. Multiple registrations are not allowed. Candidates who register more than once will have their entire result cancelled

12. Candidates are to note that there will be no extension of the date of registration.

Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter

See what Alicia Keys has to say about the over 200 abducted Chibok girlls after the 180th day rally at Abuja yesterday

Alicia Keys Is Still Upset About The Chibok Girls! See What She Has To Say!

Just after the Bring Back Our Girls campaign group in Abuja, held a candle light vigil to mark the 180th day of the abduction of the over 200 Chibok school girls last night, American R&B singer Alicia Keys has also lend her voice. Here is what she said during an interview with on of Our reporters. Thank you Alicia!





“Putting the spotlight on these girls is very, very important to me and I thought that it is my job to help shine the light on what is going on and show people: this is still happening and we must not forget and it is going on for six months.”

“Six months and nobody is back and the girls are just there because of the need of education and they are abducted? So that is why we must say that we are not allowing this to dissipate, no, we are going to continue to say we are not standing for this, it is not okay,” she said.


Follow us on Facebook
               on Twitter

Saturday, 11 October 2014

What Wole Soyinka Says About The Man (@MrAyeDee) Who Tried To Take Down Linda Ikeji (READ)

                                    Africa's first Nobel Laureate Professor Wole Soyinka
Those following the Linda Ikeji saga will forever remember her adversary, who goes by the Twitter handle @MrAyeDee.

His real name is Mukhtar Alex Dan’Iyan. My views about the whole episode may be summed up in this interview with 9jafeminista. I promised to share on Twitter Professor Wole Soyinka’s views of him; it is rather harsh, but is very important to understand the man that Linda Ikeji was up against.

I have known Mukhtar since the early 90’s, first on Naijanet where I was the towncrier, and then as members of the Association of Nigerians Abroad, where I served as Secretary General, and then as adversaries and allies inside the pro-democracy movement.  I shall have more to say about those heady, exciting and dangerous times, indeed I felt it was necessary for folks on Twitter to know his real name, it wasn’t obvious that they did.

I don’t regret that outing, folks needed to know what they were up against. I shall have more to say about that someday. Let’s just say he was formidable enough to attract the attention and ire of Professor Wole Soyinka, a rage which spilled into his memoir, You Must Set Forth at Dawn. Here is a direct quote from Soyinka on Mukhtar:

    “One was a self-hating Igbira, a minority tribe from the Nigerian hinterland, whose yearning to be mistaken for a Fulani aristocratic scion had resulted in his changing his name from Daniyan to Dan’Iyan. Partnering him was an ambitious youth from Swarthmore College, Jude Uzowanne. The third member was a labor unionist from Edo in southern Nigeria, Tunde Okorodudu, an activist in his own right who fell under the spell of the fourth member and center of intrigue, the liaison officer for the U.S. Boston chapter, Maureen Idehen, a pharmacist who had worked closely with me and was central to the coordination of activities for much of the United States. Together, this Gang of Four—the accolade was spontaneously bestowed—succeeded in serving a timely lesson on the power lust even among a yet inchoate formation that sought to curb power at its most virulent and malignant. It was a low point in the career of the anti-Abacha movement, suddenly compelled to confront the banal distractions of trite intrigues and personal ambitions. Expelling the miscreants took its toll. The liaison officer, the Boston-based Maureen Idehen, made off with our scant funds, leaving behind a trail of bad checks.”

Now read what Soyinka had to say in its entirety. I am intimately familiar with most of he issues, I lived it along with Mukhtar and many others. Soyinka was NOT happy with “The Gang of Four.” I don’t think he should have mentioned them in his memoir and in some cases things got muddled up a bit. One day, there may be a need for a Truth Commission to unpack all of this. Oya read… Linda Ikeji never knew what hit her. Mukhtar Dan’Iyan is one of the most brilliant and tenacious fighters I have ever engaged in my life. As an adversary and as an ally, I grew to respect and in some cases fear his mind. Those were the days. Oya read…

“I HAD HARDLY recovered from that exercise when, thanks to a meeting with the South African poet Breyten Breytenbach, a former prisoner of apartheid, we found an opening through which we could advance the newly unified organization from the beginnings made at the Johannesburg/Oslo meetings. The George Soros–sponsored Goree Institute in Dakar, of which Breyten was a board member, agreed to facilitate the second meeting of the umbrella group, now going by the name of the United Democratic Front of Nigeria (UDFN). That gathering took place over strong diplomatic representations by the Abacha regime. The Senegalese government replied that it did not make a habit of intervening in “cultural” meetings, which, to the best of its knowledge, this was meant to be, since it was sponsored by the Goree Institute.

“It was a moment to be savored, the solidarity of the Senegalese government with the democratic cause and the coming together of twenty-seven organizations spread all over the globe, from Australia to Canada. Alas, the affliction I sought to escape in NADECO traveled with the luggage of a handful—a mere quartet, American-based—of the delegates. It served to increase my bewilderment at the craving for position and power in human disposition, one that seems especially absurd when an intervention in the fate of millions is initiated from the position of a weak challenger.

“It proved to be a near death at nativity; a movement that had been formed to liberate a nation from the very bane of power found itself enmeshed in a tawdry tussle for position. I had declined any formal position within the new body. This, however, signaled a contest for what the ambitious quartet read as an opportunity for self-promotion into a vacuum and the complete takeover of the organization. The plot had been hatched well in advance.

“It began from the moment that the liaison officer for Boston discerned, with absolute certainty, that I would not run for office and would remain content with my functions as an informal ambassador to the movement. The irony of such jostling was totally lost on the conspirators.

“One was a self-hating Igbira, a minority tribe from the Nigerian hinterland, whose yearning to be mistaken for a Fulani aristocratic scion had resulted in his changing his name from Daniyan to Dan’Iyan. Partnering him was an ambitious youth from Swarthmore College, Jude Uzowanne. The third member was a labor unionist from Edo in southern Nigeria, Tunde Okorodudu, an activist in his own right who fell under the spell of the fourth member and center of intrigue, the liaison officer for the U.S. Boston chapter, Maureen Idehen, a pharmacist who had worked closely with me and was central to the coordination of activities for much of the United States. Together, this Gang of Four—the accolade was spontaneously bestowed—succeeded in serving a timely lesson on the power lust even among a yet inchoate formation that sought to curb power at its most virulent and malignant.

“It was a low point in the career of the anti-Abacha movement, suddenly compelled to confront the banal distractions of trite intrigues and personal ambitions. Expelling the miscreants took its toll. The liaison officer, the Boston-based Maureen Idehen, made off with our scant funds, leaving behind a trail of bad checks.

“I should have been warned by the extralong talons, garishly decorated, that she affected in place of fingernails, but this highly efficient intriguer was the daughter of an old schoolfriend and classmate. His visits to his daughter in Boston had even served as an updating source for much of what was happening on the ground at home, and his support of the cause was quite vocal. As it turned out, he had also immersed himself in position grabbing on behalf of his daughter, even to the extent of poring through the minutes of the Dakar meeting and placing transatlantic calls to argue with my son—elected secretary-general of the UDFN—to assert the position of his daughter in the movement.

“To say that the entire episode constituted a personal embarrassment would be understating an experience of intense chagrin. I had the unpleasant duty of reminding the doting father that he was not a member of the movement and would he kindly keep sons and daughters outside an already draining undertaking. Ironically, it was the “vengeance” of one of the subversives that raised the profile of the opposition in the mind of the Abacha regime, far above its own ambitions or capabilities.

“A “confession” appeared in a Northern-based newspaper run by the brother of the inspector general of police, Alhaji Ibrahim Commassie, contributed by Jude Uzowanne. In it the writer claimed that he had been involved in the recruitment and training of a secret army, that he was in fact chief of staff of this force under my military command. In the meantime, naturally, he had had second thoughts, was now opposed to violence, had voluntarily quit the organization for this reason, and was doing his patriotic duty by revealing these terrorist plans.

“Of all the fabrications put out by Abacha’s men about our activities, this was by no means the wildest. In any case, armed struggle, even from the start, was a subject that was openly introduced into discussions. This young man’s claims, self-ingratiating concoctions though they were, did have one decidedly negative effect. They had, after all, emerged from one whose earlier membership could not be denied, albeit that he was now expelled and had turned into a born-again pacifist. He had come into the UDFN through an affiliating group and been assigned the role of mobilizing the youth wing of the movement. If young Uzowanne’s claim had been true, it would have been his second conversion within a year.

“Revelations came tumbling in, confirming earlier rumors of his instability. He was confronted with a position paper he had sent to Sani Abacha, outlining how the dictator could turn himself into the Pinochet of Nigeria. His intellectual prowess, of which he had no modest estimation, was humbly offered to Abacha for the historic transformation. A small, ambitious Walter Mitty character, emotionally unstable, Uzowanne would indeed have been a most unusual choice for a military assignment, additionally being shortsighted, virtually blind, behind his inch-thick lenses and of such physical insubstantiality that the slightest wind from the heat of New York streets threatened to blow him right off the sidewalk and on to summary execution by the traffic.

“Alas, some of our supportive foreign embassies in Nigeria did swallow this “revelation” without any qualification and reported to their governments, which began to distance themselves from the opposition movement. This would have been a minor nuisance, on balance, since we were also positively served in other ways by this egregious piece of fiction. Certainly it played havoc on Abacha’s peace of mind; all reports indicated that it contributed to imbuing in him a holy terror at the very mention of W.S. or NALICON.”

Acknowledgment: Soyinka, Wole (2007-12-18). You Must Set Forth at Dawn: A Memoir (pp. 402-404). Random House Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter   

Ganja Bad Boi: Wizkid & His Newly Acquired Dreadlocks Pictured Puffing ‘Smoke’

Lil boy man wonder Wizkid shared this photo on Instagram. His new hairstyle (dreads) are growing so fast. What we thought was a one-time fashion statement seems like it’s here to stay. Midlife crisis anyone?

Btw, wht is he ‘puffing’? Shisha or Mary Jane?


 Follow us on Facebook
                 on Twitter



LETS TALK EBOLA!!!

 

Social media users in Sierra Leone are turning to chat apps to have private conversations about Ebola

"There are certain things that the authorities don't want the public to know" says Emerson Fowai, who works with a public health NGO in Kailahun in eastern Sierra Leone. Over 3,000 West Africans have died from Ebola and the town of Kailahun has been badly hit. There are good public health reasons to monitor the flow of information in the midst of an epidemic - to prevent panic and misinformation. But Fowai is concerned about the restrictions. He claims the government has been downplaying the situation and is reprimanding unofficial voices. "I spoke [publicly] about people who have been quarantined and the authorities asked for my arrest," he says. "So people are afraid to divulge second hand pieces of information."

This pressured environment has had an impact on how people share information. In the early days of the Ebola crisis, social networks like Facebook played an important role. But Facebook isn't completely private. As a result, private groups are being set up on WhatsApp, a smartphone instant messaging service, so that information about Ebola can be shared in a space where conversations can take place more freely.

Fowai says he is part of 32 different closed groups on WhatsApp. JLOeduconsult's Trending has joined four such groups, to get an insight into what is being shared. The groups were initially set up to share news and information about Ebola when little was known about it. Quotes from press releases and news briefings populate the conversations, with updates on aid facilities throughout the country. But people also share more sensitive information. "An ambulance with 8 Ebola patients has fallen into a bridge," one member of a group reports - a claim we can't independently verify. Others share pictures of recent Ebola victims, alive and dead. The groups have also become a forum for people to report their own experiences. One message reads "this is me with surviving Ebola patients in Koindu. They live on the border with Liberia and Guinea. Some of them are orphans, widows and widowers. Their story was rather pathetic." The user uploads an accompanying photograph featuring the survivors in question.

Other WhatsApp posts are of people reminding each other to remain hopeful. One post is entitled "The A-Z of Ebola" and the first for letters are: "A - accept that Ebola is real; B - be careful not to get infected; C - cancel traditional practices that promote the spread of Ebola" and "D - don't touch". 



Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter
 

BREAKING NEWS: 

Host nation Morocco wants Africa Nations Cup 2015 postponed because of Ebola


According to JLOeduconsult Online Sports handle, It was reported the the Moroccan government has called for the Africa Cup of Nations to be postponed because of the dangers of the Ebola virus. The 2015 Africa Nations Cup is supposed to start January 17th in Morocco, has to be postponed. 
    The 2014 West Africa Ebola Outbreak has claim alot of lives in west Africa because, The West African Medical Doctors Association(WAMDA) is yet to get a cure for the deadly Ebola Hemorrhagic Fever that has suffocated the the West Africans. Since West African countries will e participating the AFCON 2015, at Morocco, the Government has called for the competition to be postponed

Follow us on Facebook
                on Twitter






STUDENTS REACTION OVER LASU SCHOOL FEES UPWARD SLOPE

With the sudden outrageous increase in the Lagos State University school fees from a reasonable N25,000 to a jaw-dropping N250,000, one will wonder if there are plans to turn the school to a private university.

Nelson Mandela asserted that education is the most powerful weapon which can be used to change the world. But I will rather agree more with Mark Twain when he said..”Education is the path from cocky ignorance to miserable uncertainty”.

The State Government has thrown thousands of seeds that want to be educated into a miserable uncertainty. I mean, how can an increase in fees be raised 100% just at a time? Who does that? Do you know there are parents who have more than a child in the school? Do you know there are many parents who cannot even boast of a three square meal a day but still struggle to pay the #25,000? Do you also know that some of these students are the ones fending for themselves and even pay their own school fees?

Students and Lecturers alike express their views below:

Bababunmi, Mass-communication 400l

“It is so sad that a government which is suppose to be a defender of the people is actually adding burden to people.It is totally unfair; We don’t receive the same treatment private institutions receive..why should we pay same amount?  I just hope the government can be reasonable and understand the feelings of the common man.”

Oloko Sodiq Abiodun, Microbiology 300l


“My parents thought it was a one time payment but now it’s getting too hard for them to even pay….My dad is a pensioner and my mum is a full house wife. How do I expect them to meet up with that kind of amount 216k?I’m even worried I may end up being a drop out at the end.The annoying thing is I’ve paid this money twice 258k and 216k but there’s nothing to show for it. Learning environment is still not improved and the school premises is an eyesore.”
Damilare, Microbiology 400l

” Its a public institution! From N250 to N25K, now 250-300k + ?Not good enough! If students can afford that they could have gone to a private school where issues like strike never come up and they get accommodation, security and a good environment. All the government, know how to do is take money from the Masses to take care of their responsibilities.”
Oscar, Theatre Arts

“I am a graduate but I have grievances. It is so appalling that the total fees I paid from my first year to my final year and more is what these students will pay for each session now…These increase is inhumane and it is really pushing students to do anything to get their school fees paid! Aside from the big library that is still under construction,the school still remains as it is,no new thing about it.”


Abiola Adekogbe, Music Graduate.


“I think the government should just consider the fact that a lot of youth nowadays are the ones sponsoring themselves.They should please bring down the fee.”


Anonymous, Theatre Arts 400l

“Well to start with, Governor Fashola came to our school and in his speech, he said and I quote..”Education is not for the poor people”..And I believe the Lagos state government does not want education for the poor. I can tell you that Lasu Is not worth paying such outrageous amount for; Everything about the school is crazy. Academically, LASU is good but there are no good roads in the school, no conducive learning enviroment…and for the practical students like theatre arts and the likes, no equipments.”

Anonymous Female Lecturer

“I will say that I agree that the initial money being paid by the students that was 25,000 was ridiculously low but I consider the new fee regime outrageously high as well. The fact is that reality demands a school fee increase but not to the extent we are having it now. We  lecturers look at the bigger picture. We might still get our salaries at the end of the day not necessarily as at when due because we are on strike but when we resume and that’s a lot of discomfort for us too. We should also bear in mind that we have lecturers who have children in the school and some of us are running or hoping to run post graduate courses in the school, so we are as affected as the students. We cannot fight physically with the government we are using the only weapon we have. it is just sad we have a management and government that waits for crisis to arise before doing anything otherwise the issues at stake- fees and staff welfare- should have been resolved during the national strike.”

Nurudeen, Yusuf Temilola, Law 400l (SUG President)


“The fee hike is barbaric, it is also against the progress and development of education in the nation. We have had series of actions but we couldn’t get results but we are optimistic of achieving results; We are bent on the fact that the fee must be reduced!We strongly frown at students dropping out of school due to the fee hike; We don’t want it anymore!

If education is not for the poor, as the State Governor allegedly said, does it mean education is for the fools? Because only a fool will pay such an amount of money as his/her ward(s)’s school fees in a public university where necessary learning equipments are not available,cultism is prevalent, frequent strike actions that make the academic calendar to be inconsistent and many more!

Surprisingly, fifteen members of the current Lagos state House of Assembly graduated from Lagos State University….are they saying they do not know what is happening presently in their alma mata? Is it that they don’t have the power to reduce these fees that have no justifiable back up?

It is a shame on the entire Lagos State Government to have allowed themselves to be this gullible. If the school functioned well with a fee of #25,000 before now, what is the need for the outrageous new amount? Aside from the big library that is under construction, what else does the state government have as an argument? Field trip? has anyone of the students gone on any before? Basic equipments for learning? Can the students boast of that?

Dear State Governor, we shall not be deceived! We shall also not be fooled! You were part of the generation that enjoyed an “almost free” if not totally free, education.Why is there need for denying younger generations what you enjoyed while you were young? Please sir,do the needful and let these future of ours go back to school.

Feel free to share your opinions in the comments section.
Follow us on Facebook
               on Twitter

Thursday, 9 October 2014

The management of the Afe Babalola University, Ado-Ekiti (ABUAD) invites application from suitably qualified candidates for the positions of SENIOR LECTURER  in the following programmes in the COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING:

    Chemical Engineering
    Civil Engineering,
    Computer Engineering,
    Electrical/Electronics Engineering,
    Mechanical Engineering,
    Mechatronics Engineering, and
    Petroleum Engineering.

ACADEMICS QUALIFICATION

Candidate applying for the post of Senior Lecturer must possess a PhD with at least 6 years teaching and cognate experience supported with a suitable number of publications and ICT proficiency.

SALARY PACKAGE

Salary and allowances which are personal and negotiable are higher than Federal Government consolidated unitary salary structure. Salary increment is based on productivity and contribution to the development of the University.

RETIREMENT, PENSION AND OTHER WELFARE SCHEMES.

The University operates a contributory Pension Fund as enacted by the Act of the National Assembly. It is mandatory for all staff to take part in the contributory pension scheme. The University shall pay 7½ percent of the staff monthly basic salary to the pension fund while the staff shall pay 7½ percent towards the fund. The University has also put in place insurance scheme for all staff. A staff shall not be hindered by the University from drawing from the pension and insurance schemes in respective of the service status in the University.

In addition, the University offers highly subsidized accommodation facilities for staff on the campus with adequate water and electricity supply, sports and recreational facilities in a quiet and serene environment.

MODE OF APPLICATION: Interested candidates for the positions advertised should visit: http://vacancy.abuad.edu.ng to apply.

    You will be required to upload your application, detailed Curriculum Vitae and other credentials in a single document (in either doc,pdf or odt format)
    Your Curriculum Vitae is expected to contain the following information among others:

PLEASE NOTE:

    Full Name (surname first in capital letters)
    Post applied for
    Date and place of birth (attach birth certificate/sworn affidavit)
    Sex
    Nationality
    State of Origin
    Local Government Area
    Permanent home address
    Current postal address including mobile telephone number
    Marital status
    Number of children and their ages
    Institutions attended with dates
    Academic/professional qualifications (attach copies of credentials)
    Work experience with dates
    Present employment status and salary
    Conference/courses attended (state title of papers presented if any)
    Professional accomplishments with Research interest and activities
    Publications with dates
    Service to national and or international bodies
    Extra-curricular activities
    Any physical challenge?
    Names and addresses of three (3) referees who must have been closely associated with candidates/work experience one of which must be the head of department or Dean/Provost of the applicant







REQUIREMENTS



    Candidates applying for any of the positions are advised to request their referees to forward three (3) confidential reports on them directly to the Registrar. The reports should be duly marked “CONFIDENTIAL” in a sealed envelope.



OTHER REQUIREMENTS



The Applicant:



    must have passion for teaching
    must be disciplined, dedicated, loyal and well dressed.
    must be ready to imbibe ABUAD’s philosophy to reform Education by example.
    must have the ability for team-work and have a high level of human relation skills.
    must be ready to engage in high quality academic research and contribute meaningfully to human development.
    must be computer literate and capable of using modern teaching and research facilities including electronic interactive boards, intra-communication platforms and online libraries.



Contact Us: Facebook- JLOeduconsult Twitter- JLOeduconsult