Thursday, 21 November, 2024

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Why I signed NOUN amended law, by Buhari


President Muhammadu Buhari said his prompt signature on the amended law of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) has resolved the long-term non-recognition of graduates of the institution.

He stated this on Saturday during the university’s combined 9th and 10th Convocation Ceremony, where 32, 000 students received degrees in different fields.

Buhari, who was represented by the Deputy Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Ramon Yusuf, stated: “NOUN is delivering on its mandate by taking education to the doorstep of Nigerians.”

Buhari, who is a visitor to the university, said that his administration has placed a great premium on education, especially in ensuring lifelong learning via the Open and Distance Learning (ODL) mode.

While saluting the efforts of the university’s management in continuing to expand access to higher education for Nigerians, the president acknowledged that NOUN has remained the only single-mode ODL institution in Nigeria.

Vice-Chancellor of NOUN, Prof Abdalla Uba Adamu, said the combined ceremony has seen the graduation of a total of 32,725 students from various courses of study in undergraduate and Post-graduate studies.

Adamu, whose tenure as VC ends next month, disclosed that a total of 24,300 graduands were drawn from the year 2020, the convocation ceremony of which was shelved due to the enforced lockdown necessitated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

He said 2021 has a total of 8,425 graduands, making it a cumulative 80,418 students who graduated within his five-year stint at the university.

The vice-chancellor said: “It became necessary to hold a combined convocation due to inability to hold the 9th convocation in March 2020 due to Covid-19 pandemic.

“The virtual convocation is not the first in the country due to Covid-19 restriction, but it is the most significant in leading way to the largest single event mass graduation of students in the history of higher education in the country.”

Adamu, who took time off to explain his achievements, said the recorded strides were a culmination of “dedication and singular focus in moving the university from a static provider of ODL to the dynamic process of transformation of higher education delivery models in Africa.”

The Chancellor of the university, His Royal Highness, Amb. (Dr.) Lawrence O.C. Agubuzu, thanked the federal government for its support to the university.

On his part, the chairman, Governing Council, Prof Peter Okebukola, said the combined convocation conducted virtually was unique in many ways, as it will set a standard for other universities in Nigeria.

He said: “This is the last convocation under the leadership of Professor Abdalla Uba Adamu, whose five years go down as the best in the annals of the university.

Credit: The Nation

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