Thursday 23 February 2017

JAMB: REG TO COMMENCE IN TWO WEEKS TIME AND NO MORE SELLING OF SCRATCH CARD

Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Registrar Prof. Ishaq Oloyede yesterday said the much-awaited Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) will hold in May as part of steps to check malpractices.
He also said the agency had handed over 10 officials to the police for investigation in connection with fraud associated with sales of scratch cards.
Prof. Oloyede said JAMB had eliminated

U.S: Trump Rescinds Rules on Bathrooms for Transgender Students

President Trump on Wednesday rescinded protections for transgender students that had allowed them to use bathrooms corresponding with their gender identity, overruling his own education secretary and placing his administration firmly in the middle of the culture wars that many Republicans have tried to leave behind.
In a joint letter, the top civil rights officials from the Justice Department and the Education Department rejected the Obama administration’s position that nondiscrimination laws require schools to allow transgender students to use the bathrooms of their choice.
That directive, they said, was improperly and arbitrarily devised, “without due regard for the primary role of the states and local school districts in establishing educational policy.”
The question of how to address the “bathroom debate,”

Nigeria: 10-year-old girl makes history in TUMA Maths contest

Chinaesom Jacqueline Anyanwu and Victor Chinedu Madumere both had strong reasons to want to win the fifth The Ultimate Mathematics Ambassadors (TUMA) competition last Saturday.
For Chinaesom, a primary six pupil of Tripplecross Schools, Ikeja, it was to make history as the first girl to lift the trophy in the history of the competition. For Victor of God’s Pride Group of School, Ota, it was to repeat the feat achieved by his brother, Samuel, in 2012 edition of the competition.
It was, therefore,

Nigeria: OTA HOME OF MATHS CHAMPIONS

                                        The Ambassadors College Ota A School that claims all                                                                                                   cowbellpedia award                                                 
For years, secondary schools in Ota, Ogun State, have excelled in mathematics competitions.  Educationists are seeking recognition for the town over this feat, report ERNEST NWOKOLO and KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE.
Ota, an industrial and densely-populated town, is the headquarters of Ado/Odo/Ota Local Government Area of Ogun State. It is the traditional headquarters of the Awori.
The ancient town hosts former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s farm, Winners’ Chapel, the Covenant University, the Africa Leadership Forum, and the Bells University of Technology, among others.
It is a trading point because of its proximity to Lagos and link to the border with the Republic of Benin through Idiroko Road.
But beyond this, the town is fast becoming the nation’s hub for upcoming mathematicians. Secondary schools in Ota have distinguished themselves in mathematics and other science competitions, especially the one sponsored by Promasidor Nigeria Ltd, which is regarded as the most prestigious mathematics competition in the land, considering the prize money and the large number of participants from across the country.
Ota schools’ maths laurels
In the history of the Cowbell National Secondary School Mathematics Competition (NASSMAC), which became a nationwide competition in 2001, and its successor, the Cowbellpedia Television Quiz Competition, which made its debut in 2015, schools in Ota have always won the slot to represent Ogun State in the final stage.

U.S: Dismal Results From Vouchers Surprise Researchers as DeVos Era Begins


The confirmation of Betsy DeVos as secretary of education was a signal moment for the school choice movement. For the first time, the nation’s highest education official is someone fully committed to making school vouchers and other market-oriented policies the centerpiece of education reform.
But even as school choice is poised to go national, a wave of new research has emerged suggesting that private school vouchers may harm students who receive them. The results are startling — the worst in the history of the field, researchers say.

France and Canada: The 58th and 59th countries to endorse Safe Schools Declaration

Education International has welcomed the move by France and Canada to endorse the Safe Schools Declaration, committing themselves to protect students, teachers, schools, and universities during times of war.

Education International (EI) and its affiliates congratulate the French and Canadian governments for becoming the latest countries to endorse the international political commitment known as the Safe Schools Declaration.The commendation was issued by the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack(GCPEA), an inter-agency coalition formed in 2010 to address the issue of targeted attacks on education during armed conflict.

Keeping education safe from the types of attacks the GCPEA works to highlight is the other dimension to the EI/United Nations Girls’ Education school-related gender-based violence initiative.This initiative seeks to keep schools free from violence that can be committed by students, teachers and education support personnel, who can also all be victims of such violence.
The endorsement came during the international conference on the protection of children in armed conflicts being hosted by the French foreign ministry in Paris on 21 February. This conference marked the 10th anniversary of the Paris Principles and Commitments, dedicated to protecting children from unlawful recruitment or use by armed forces or armed groups.
International support
Fifty-nine countries have now endorsed the Safe Schools Declaration, including most of the European Union and NATO member states. The Safe Schools Declaration is an inter-governmental political commitment that facilitates countries to express support for protecting students, teachers, schools, and universities from attack during times of armed conflict. It stresses the importance of continuing education during armed conflict.
By joining the Declaration, countries pledge to restore access to education when schools are bombed, burned, and destroyed during armed conflict, and undertake to make it less likely that students, teachers, and schools will be attacked in the first place. They agree to deter such violence by promising to investigate and prosecute war crimes involving schools, and to minimise the use of schools for military purposes so they do not become targets for attack.
Background
The Declaration was developed through consultations with states in a process led by Norway and Argentina in Geneva, Switzerland, and opened for endorsement at the Oslo Conference on Safe Schools in 2015. The Second International Conference on Safe Schools will be held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 28-29 March this year.

Kenya: 10 Bridge International Academies to Close down

Ten schools owned by the edubusiness Bridge International Academies will have to close in Kenya because of low educational standards.

A High Court in Kenya has upheld the decision to close 10 out of 12 Bridge International Academies schools (BiA) in the city of Busia, in western Kenya, because of low educational standards. This decision is yet another blow to the for-profit education chain that had to close schools down in Uganda for the very same reasons. The ruling determines that the affected children must be relocated to public schools at the end of the current term.
The county education board of the city of Busia decided to close BiA schools last November for non-compliance with basic educational standards. In its recommendations, the board highlighted the fact that the schools did not employ trained and registered teachers. The report also noted the lack of managers and appropriate facilities, as well as an environmental impact assessment.
The Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT), affiliated to Education International, has written an official letter to the Minister of Education demanding that he “take action on these illegal and scandalous schools with immediate effect”, by directing the county education boards to verify the quality of the education delivered by BiA schools and, in case of noncompliance, close them.
The union calls on the Minister to remember the promise he made to take action on the academies – a promise he made to Kenyans when he launched KNUT’s report on BiA schools at the end of 2016. “We expect the Cabinet Secretary for Education to reign in these illegal and scandalous schools with immediate effect and do only one thing and that is to close them down,” said Wilson Sossion, General Secretary of the KNUT.

Tuesday 21 February 2017

Nigeria:Lagos to recruit more Yoruba teachers


                                 
Gov. Akinwumi Ambode of Lagos State on Tuesday announced his administration’s plan to recruit more Yoruba teachers into all public schools in the state, to promote the language.
Ambode, represented by Mrs Anike Adekanye, the state Tutor-General, made this known at the celebration of International Mother Language Day, organised by the Yoruba Teachers Association in Lagos.
The theme of the event is: “The Traditional Values of our Culture Must Not Go into Extinction.’’
According to an online publication, calendarlabs.com, International Mother Language Day is celebrated every year on Feb. 21.
“The main purpose of celebrating this day is to promote the awareness of language and cultural diversity all across the world. It was first announced by UNESCO on November 17, 1999.’’
Ambode decried the attitude of those that studied the language at degree level, but deviated to other disciplines.
“This is happening because the system has not encouraged them to take pride in the language.
“To prevent the language from going into extinction, a day has been set aside to conduct plenary in Yoruba Language at the Lagos State House of Assembly (LAHA).
“The initiative came about when an American visited the assembly and addressed the lawmakers in Yoruba Language and that challenged the legislators,’’ the governor said.
Ambode urged teachers in the state to put in their best and reciprocate the government’s commitment to their welfare.
In her remarks, Mrs Adebimpe Akinsola, Special Adviser to the governor on Arts and Culture, said that parents have role to play in ensuring that the language did not go into extinction.
“We should appreciate and embrace our language, culture and values, that is the only way we can handover unadulterated language to the coming generation,’’ Akinsola said.
Also, Mrs Adebola Lawal, President of the association, said that teachers in the state were committed and dedicated to the teaching profession.
Lawal said that the planned recruitment of more Yoruba teachers would boost the language among students. (NAN)

Iraq: building peace and understanding through art

                                   Iraq
Education union members in Kurdistan’s Iraqi region have shown their willingness, through a joint teachers’ and students’ art and handicraft exhibition, to work together towards building peace and understanding across their region and country.

An innovative art and craft exhibition by education union members in Kurdistan promises to have far-reaching consequences for peace in the region. The department of arts and handcrafting of Kurdistan’s Education Ministry, with the help of Education International’s affiliates, the Iraq Teacher’s Association (ITU) and the Kurdistan Teacher’s Union (KTU), opened an exhibition of teachers’ and students’ drawings and handicraft on 4 February in Erbil, the capital of Kurdistan’s Iraqi region. The department of arts and handcrafting from education ministries in Kirkuk, Baghdad and Diwanyah also participated.
Continuous collaboration
Both the KTU and ITU presidents highlighted their unions’ continuous efforts and collaboration to enhance teachers’ capacity and skills in all Iraqi areas. They also stressed the need and opportunity that education offers to highlight teachers’ and students’ talents. Participants agreed that such activities must be continued.
“These activities, beyond showing arts and imagination in handcrafting, are a great push towards bringing all of Iraq’s tribes and nations together, therefore building peace and living together,” KTU President Abdulwahed Muhammed Haje said.
He emphasised that KTU and ITU are collaborating and helping each other on “all areas serving humanity, justice and democracy in the nation”.
Education International: Inclusive education
Education International’s Shashi Bala Singh added: “I am very glad to note that KTU and ITU joined together to build peace and inclusive education.”

U.S: Investigation of Former City College President Expands

                     
Federal prosecutors have expanded their investigation of the financial dealings of the former president of the City College of New York into whether she received tens of thousands of dollars in unauthorized payments over several years from the school’s oldest alumni fund.
Lisa S. Coico, the college’s former president, was already being scrutinized over the improper use of federal research money, and the accounting of her personal expenses from the 21st Century Foundation, the college’s main fund-raising vehicle. She resigned unexpectedly in October after The New York Times reported that a memo concerning those expenses had most likely been fabricated to deceive prosecutors, and that she did not return a $20,000 security deposit for a rental home.
The new avenue of inquiry looks at a second source of money — the City College Fund, which is supposed to provide scholarships to indigent students, underwrite campus programs and organize alumni reunions — and it represents a notable expansion of an inquiry that began last summer. It has spread to other groups affiliated with the college’s parent entity, the City University of New York.
This month, the office of Robert L. Capers, the United States attorney for the Eastern District of New York, subpoenaed records related to payments to Ms. Coico from the City College Fund. Among other issues, prosecutors are trying to ascertain why the fund, which has been run for years by one of Dr. Coico’s most trusted confidantes, apparently paid Dr. Coico or entities connected to her yet failed to get approval from university officials or report the arrangement on its tax returns.
                  
The existence of the subpoena was confirmed last week by Vincent G. Boudreau, who took over as the City College interim president after Ms. Coico resigned.

The federal inquiry, together with a related state investigation into broader university practices, comes at an inopportune time for CUNY, the country’s largest public urban university and a longtime engine of upward mobility. City College, its flagship, has been known as “the poor man’s Harvard.” For years, states have been slashing spending on public higher education while tuition has been climbing, and at CUNY, the lack of funding has contributed to deteriorating facilities and overcrowded classrooms.

But the frustrations at CUNY have been compounded by the perception that top administrators have been enriching themselves at the expense of a predominantly poor and minority student body, more than half of whom report family incomes of less than $30,000.
The future of CUNY, which receives the bulk of its funding from the state, has also drawn increasing attention from Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, as well as state and city lawmakers.
After Dr. Coico’s resignation, William C. Thompson Jr., the chairman of CUNY’s Board of Trustees and a former New York City comptroller, asked for a thorough investigation of “all of the college foundations, alumni associations or other affiliated entities.” Weeks later, Catherine Leahy Scott, the New York State inspector general, criticized the university’s financial practices as “ripe for abuse” in an unusual interim report, prompting Mr. Cuomo to call for sweeping reforms and precipitating a shake-up at CUNY’s central office.

At City College, Dr. Coico’s annual compensation was $460,000; $160,000 of that came from the 21st Century Foundation. She also received a $90,000 housing allowance. But people who have been briefed on the investigation and spoke only on the condition of anonymity said that prosecutors appear to be focusing on whether she received thousands of dollars on top of that from the City College Fund, possibly over several years, without the knowledge of either the current CUNY chancellor, James B. Milliken, or his predecessor, Matthew Goldstein.
According to Dr. Boudreau, the latest subpoena is seeking documents like annual financial statements, annual filings with the Internal Revenue Service and all payments that may have been made to Dr. Coico or any related entities in which she or her family had a financial stake.

Dr. Boudreau said he welcomed “efforts to fully examine the way these foundations have worked” because “I think there’s a tremendous need for transparency.”
“Anybody probably would have anticipated that every one of these entities at City College would be investigated,” he said. “To get to the bottom of this is ultimately going to be a good thing for the university and City College.”

Last week, CUNY instituted new procedures for payments to faculty and staff, in addition to their regular salaries, from sources like the CUNY Research Foundation to require advance approval of the CUNY chancellor.A spokeswoman for Mr. Capers, the United States attorney, declined to comment. A lawyer for Dr. Coico, Catherine M. Foti, also declined to comment.

But in an interview, Elena Sturman, the City College Fund’s executive director, said that “former President Coico and her family members never received any supplemental salary from the City College Fund.” When asked whether the fund had ever written checks to Dr. Coico or any entity connected to her, Ms. Sturman stressed: “There was no supplemental salary.”
Established just after World War II, the City College Fund has for years helped students afford a college education that was once free, but now costs $6,300 a year in tuition.

As City College’s ambitions grew in the 1990s, the administration established another fund-raising vehicle, the 21st Century Foundation, to solicit bigger contributions from prominent alumni. The most notable, perhaps, came in 2005, when Andrew S. Grove, the former chief executive of the Intel Corporation, donated $26 million. According to its most recent tax returns, the 21st Century Foundation now has $192 million in net assets, while the City College Fund has $70 million. The 21st Century Foundation is far more integrated into the college’s operations, relying on college employees and adhering to its rules. By contrast, the City College Fund functions as a small and independent nonprofit, with a separate board and database.
At least twice in the past decade, management consultants have criticized the City College Fund’s finances and operations as too opaque, and urged that the two organizations, which occupy offices across the hall from one another, be merged. Together, the two funds could leverage their resources and avoid redundant operations and staffing, while still using the more established City College Fund name, according to people who have seen the reports or been briefed on their contents and who spoke on the condition of anonymity.One school official called the funds “silos” that don’t talk to each other, making it easier for funds to possibly be misused.
Ms. Sturman, who was described by several officials as one of Dr. Coico’s three or four closest allies on campus, said that she was aware of the reports. “Moving forward, we have a close relationship with the executive director of the 21st Century Foundation and with the interim president,” she said. “We work as a team.”
Dr. Boudreau, a political scientist whose research focuses on social movements, particularly in Southeast Asia, has vowed to make the school more accountable. Last month, in an unusual step, Dr. Boudreau responded to a Freedom of Information request for details of payments by the 21st Century Foundation to college administrators made by Jamal T. Manassah, an engineering professor, by posting the information on the faculty senate’s website. The data showed that the 21st Century Foundation had doled out $2.35 million in salary supplements to dozens of officials — including Dr. Coico and Dr. Boudreau himself — in the 2015 fiscal year, up from the $1.92 million the previous year.
The newly released documents “reflect past practice,” Dr. Boudreau wrote on the senate website.

“It would be a mistake to see this list as tagging people for receiving something improper — although if such cases exist, we won’t shy away from addressing them,” he wrote.


Monday 20 February 2017

I Almost Die!! Say's UNN Best Graduating Student 2015/2016

                                                                    Eke Ifeayichukwu Emmanuel
                                                           UNN Best Graduating Student 2015/2016

The book champion Mr. Eke Ifeanyichukwu Emmanuel who is the 2015/2016 best student of University of Nigeria, with a Cumulative Grade Point Average of 4.83. Disclose is experience during School in an interview with Vanguard Learning, Eke revealed that in order to survive as a student, he used ropes as belt and drank garri gaily. See full interview below as extracted from Vanguard

         May I know you?
 
I am Eke Ifeantichukwu Emmanuel, a first class graduate of the department of Microbiology, University of Nigeria, Nsukka. 

        How do you feel having emerged as the overall best? 

I feel excited. I see it as a realized dream. During the 2012/2013 award night ceremony, I was opportune to have attended the award night. At the ceremony, I was so excited seeing students like me shaking dignitaries and principal officers of the university. That day, I desired to be like them. I was motivated. That same night, I went back to my room and brought out my diary. I wrote a prayer request to God, that God, I want to be a first class student of Microbiology in my department and in the whole institution; I want to be the best. It is a realized dream.

AAUA Supplementary Admission List 2016/2017 Released


The management of Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba (AAUA) has released the supplementary admission list for 2016/2017 Academic Session.

Candidates can visit the school's portal to check their admission status.

How To Check Your Admission Status
-Visit https://eportal.aaua.edu.ng/frontend/welcome/ugadmissions

-Enter your JAMB Registration Number and Password in the spaces provided.

-Click on "Login" to access your admission status.

Congratulations to the admitted ones!

To Practice JAMB 2017 CBT online for free - Click Here

See official list of courses offered in AAUA

Tanzania: Innovative collaboration targets early childhood teachers

In partnership with the Tanzania Teachers’ Union, Education International has launched the “Developing teachers, improving early learning in Tanzania” project, which aims to improve the professional knowledge, skills, and competence of early childhood teachers.

Knowledge, skills and competence are at the heart of a new project launched by the Tanzania Teachers’ Union (TTU) and Education International (EI).
‘Developing Teachers, improving early learning in Tanzania’ will “raise teaching and learning standards in early childhood education (ECE), and contribute to better learning outcomes in primary and other levels of education in Tanzania”, noted EI’s Dennis Sinyolo during the inception workshop organised on 6-7 February in Dar es Salaam.
Activities
·         Outlined project activities included the:
·         Development of consensus-based and government endorsed competence profile for early childhood teachers
·         Training of ECE teachers through a competence-based approach
·         Advocacy of the government to implement the ECE policy
·         Reinforcement of national cooperation
·         Establishment of inclusive and integrated management mechanisms
·         Capacity building training on project management effectiveness and collaboration

Saturday 18 February 2017

ABU Professor guilty for enticing married woman- Supreme Court

The Supreme Court on Friday affirmed the conviction and sentencing to two months in prison of Professor Festus Kolo, a lecturer at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria for enticing a married woman.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the pronouncement was without an option of fine.
Delivering the judgment, Justice Clara Ogunbiyi held that the appellant had failed to dispel the prosecution evidence that linked him to the offence.
“It is ironical and intriguing that a Counsel for the appellant, who described the act of his client as condemnable and detestable, could in another tone dismiss the same act simply as mere allegation.
“It was stated that the appellant had been warned severally by the husband of the woman both face to face and on phone to stay away from her.“He had refused to heed until he was caught red handed with the woman in a hotel room.
“The appellant according to the evidence before the court had left his place and travelled for up to four hundred kilometres from Zaria to Dutse to pursue his illicit sexual act,’’ she said.
Ogunbiyi said: “it was alleged further that the appellant was arrested by the Police in the hotel room and later charged to court for enticing the married woman.
“This alleged offence is contrary to Section 389 of the Penal Code’’.
The judge said: “ for purpose of recapitulation, a critical analysis of the behaviour pattern exhibited by the appellant will give a reasonable assessment of his character and intention.
“This is well depicted in his persistent refusal to stay away from another man’s wife despite several warnings by her husband.
“In addition to the foregoing, the open confession made by the appellant to the commission of the offence during police investigation is a further reason to discountenance the submission put forward by the appellant.

Europe: Educators to continue fight against CETA

After the European Parliament voted in favour of the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, educators will continue to fight this treaty that threatens to erode public education.

While the European Parliament endorsed the Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) on 15 February, the agreement could face an uneasy road ahead when 38 national or regional Parliaments in the EU member states get to decide on its ratification.

2017 Vice Chancellor Masters Scholarships At Plymouth University, UK

Plymouth University, UK invites applications from International students who wants to pursue a Masters degree program at the Institution.

This scholarship program is worth £5,000 and it is offered annually.

JAMB Announces Date For The Conduct Of 2017 UTME

The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board has given a hint as to when the 2017 UTME will be conducted.

According to the information on the Board's official twitter handle, the 2017 UTME will hold by May, 2017.

However, the actual date the examination is to commence was not specified but the information says it will be disclosed soon.

UNIQUE GROUP OF SCHOOL:REGISTER YOU CHILD TODAY FOR 100% ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE

The board equally warned candidates against falling victims to fraudsters and advised them to only rely on the official information from the board.

Despite the fact that the Board is yet to announce the date for the commencement of 2017 UTME registration, I think With this, candidates can now be rest assured that the 2017 UTME will still hold and be able to prepare adequately. 

So if you are among those already saying that there will be no UTME this year, better go and start reading to avoid stories that touch.

Friday 17 February 2017

PICTURES NEWS: Linda Ikeji Sturm Unique Height School Magodo

Words cannot explain the joy seen all over the face of all students of unique height Magodo as they welcome the blogger queen Linda Ikeji yesterday.


As I promise to be present at the event and as prove of trustworthiness I will share with you videos and pictures from the live event:  













Wednesday 15 February 2017

Todays Cool gist: Linda Ikeji visiting Unique Height School Tomorrow

                                   

the 36 years old top Nigerian blogger will be visiting the Unique Height Secondary School Magodo Phase 1 tomorrow.

the purpose of her visit is part of her train in motivating and encouraging young secondary school girls to be '  SELF MADE'

According to her she said her mission during her tour to secondary school girls is a way of catching our girls young and that she want to let them know that starting young is a good key to success and also believing in themselves, working hard and surrounding themselves with people who are also ambitious and believe in their vision.

Araa edu consult promise to be present life at this event tomorrow as we bring you details, photo clips, videos of our number one Nigerian blogger queen dishing word of courage to young Nigerian girls.

Finland: new oath for teachers introduced by union

The teachers’ union, Opetusalan Ammattijärjestö, has introduced a new oath for teachers to take. The oath outlines principles of the profession and underscores the value of their work.

Sixteen thousand Finnish teachers have taken the Comenius’ Oath, newly introduced by Education International affiliate Opetusalan Ammattijärjestö (OAJ). The Oath outlines “principles we have to respect wherever we work, such as pledging that education belongs to all children, students and adults”, said OAJ President Olli Luukkainen. “There is no place for a commercial mind set [in education],” he said, adding that the Oath aims to underpin the status of teachers and the value of their work.
“In Finland, we have highly educated teachers and they are very deeply committed to their work, and that was why we wanted to be the first country to launch this oath.”
The Comenius’ Oath
All Finnish teachers present at the annual OAJ Educa Fair, held in Helsinki, from January 27-28, took this teachers´ oath:
“As a teacher, I am committed to educating the next generation, which is one of the most important human tasks. My aim in this will be to renew and pass on existing human knowledge, culture and skills.
“I shall act with justice and fairness in everything that I do, and promote my students’ development, so that each individual may grow up as a whole human being according to his or her own aptitudes and talents. I shall also strive to assist parents, guardians and other responsible people working with children and young people in their educational functions.
“I shall not reveal information that is communicated to me confidentially, and shall respect the privacy of children and young people. I shall also protect their physical and psychological integrity.
“I shall endeavour to shield the children and young people under my care from political and economic exploitation, and defend the rights of every individual to develop his or her own religious and political beliefs.
“I shall make continuous efforts to maintain and develop my professional skills, committing myself to my profession’s common goals and support my colleagues in their work. I shall act in the best interests of the community at large and strive to strengthen the respect in which the teaching profession is held.”
An oath for teachers globally
The Comenius’ Oath was designed by an independent ethical panel working with OAJ which comprised top Finnish experts of education and philosophers. Its name comes from the 16th Century international advocate for education who identified education at vital in achieving  sustainable and peaceful societies and demanded education for all.
In the wake of the Educa Fair, all teacher students in Finnish universities, as well as qualified teachers at several OAJ events, will be taking this oath.
“The OAJ´s wish is that this oath goes into the hands of all teachers all over Europe and across the world,” Luukkainen insisted.
Along with the OAJ President, Hanan Al Hroub from Palestine, the recipient of the Global Teacher Prize from the Varkey Foundation, attended the Fair and also took the oath, promising to have the oath implemented in her own country.
Educa Fair
A record 16,000 Finnish teachers attended the 2017 Educa Fair. This annual training event for professionals in the education field, the Educa Fair gathers teachers and school leaders from different educational levels, and offers them inspiration and ideas. It includes various seminars taking stock of the education and schooling situations in the country. This year, this event also offered OAJ an opportunity to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Finland’s independence.
 







source: EI

Iranian teacher union leader once again faces possibility serving full prison sentence

Esmail Abdi, a leader of the Tehran Teacher Trade Association, has seen his judicial appeal rejected by Branch 33 of the Supreme Court on 4 February.

This confirms previous judicial decisions and implies that Abdi may have to serve a full six-year jail sentence enacted on November 2016.
Abdi, along with three other Iranian teacher unionists, had already been unjustly detained in July 2015 to prevent them from attending the 7th Education International (EI) World Congress in Ottawa, Canada. He was eventually released in May 2016 after a 16-day hunger strike and massive international campaigns.
Education International has denounced the charges against Abdi, including one for “assembling and colluding against national security,” as unfair and contravening human right conventions. An online petition has been launched in collaboration with the trade union platform LabourStart.
Neoliberal policies in Iran have created a crisis for the country’s educational system and for teachers’ living conditions. The privatisation and commercialisation of education have damaged the foundations of equitable and free education in the country. Many students, especially girls, from low income families in rural and nomadic areas are virtually banned from accessing education, with reports showing that over 3.5 million youth are unable to attend school.
Combined, these issues further highlight how Iranian teachers are deprived of union and human rights. Teachers’ wages are often below the poverty line. However, even in the face of oppressive conditions, Iranian teachers’ nationwide protests and strikes over the past years demonstrate their strong demands for systematic change.

Dutch government asked to explain backing of for-profit education

Dutch socialist party MPs have asked their Ministry for Foreign Trade and Development to take a stance on its support of Bridge International Academies, one of the world’s biggest and most questioned edubusinesses.

Two members of the Dutch Parliament, Harry Van Bommel and Jasper van Dijk (both representatives of the Socialist Party), have sent written inquiries to the Dutch Minister for Foreign Trade and Development regarding the indirect support of their country’s government to Bridge International Academies.
The questions, sent to Lilianne Ploumen, in office since 2012, relate to investments made through the Dutch development budget, and specific programmes like the Dutch Good Growth Fund (DGGF) and Massif Fund to Bridge International Academies.
Van Bommel and van Dijk also question Ploumen about her stance towards Bridge Academies after the Ugandan government demanded and enforced the closure of its dependencies due to low standards, including unqualified teachers and poor sanitation.
The MPs’ letter also takes a step back and looks more broadly at the Dutch government’s political stance regarding the promotion of quality education: “Do you think it is justified to finance, directly or indirectly, for-profit education with public money?”, it asks.
Finally, it addresses the relationship between the promotion of quality public education (versus the promotion of for-profit private education) and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals – especially Goal Number 4 that aims to ensure free quality education for all by 2030. The MPs ask the Government to explain why it does or does not think that for-profit private education would hinder Goal 4 from becoming a reality. 




source:EI


JAMB 2017 UPDATE: STUDENTS MAY WRITE MOCK EXAM

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) is considering conducting mock exercise ahead of the examination.
Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, the Registrar of the Board disclosed the plan while fielding questions from journalists at the Information and Communication Technology Retreat organised for stakeholders on Tuesday in Abeokuta, Ogun.
Oloyede said although  he could not guarantee a hitch-free examination, the  innovations being put in place “will send some illegal operators, who are defrauding candidates in the past, out of business.’’
He said the board would not be deterred in its mission to serve its candidates better this year.
“Frankly, I cannot promise a hitch-free examination because we are testing certain things.
“We are changing certain things; we want to question the statuesquo  and we expect a fight back by interests that will be trampled upon,’’ the registrar said.
He explained that the board would be as sincere as possible.
“We are going to be as flexible as humanly possible; we are not promising hitch free examination,’’ he said.
Oloyede noted that the board had envisaged that there would be hitches, but that  these  would not be insurmountable.
According to him, rather than promising hitch-free examination, the board promises a direction that all will be pleased with.
He said that the major objective of the retreat was for stakeholders to critique the board’s processes, “because we will not want to continue in the wrong direction’’.
Oloyede said the board was planning to create new ICT facilities and  stakeholders  such as  prospective candidates, scholars, institutions and civil society groups  were brought  together to critique it.

Thursday 9 February 2017

OOU produces first distinction in Medicine



Achieving a distinction in Medicine seemed an impossible task but the jinx has been broken at the Olabisi Onabanjo University.
At the school’s 25/26 combined convocation which ended on Tuesday, Olugbenga Alabi became the first graduand to achieve the feat in the institution’s history. Alabi had seven distinctions in 10 courses.
“I’m glad I achieved the feat of being the first to graduate with MBChB with Honours in the history of this university,” Alabi excitedly told our reporter.
“I first read about the requirements (for making distinction) during my 100-Level days, and I felt it was not possible to get it. But now, that is history because someone has done it. I give Allah all the glory as well as my teachers and mentors,” he said.
And as Alabi stood tall on the podium to address his colleagues, he  said getting to the zenith of a man’s aspiration is substantially determined by God and not by human’s efforts.
“As I stand before all of you today, what has put me on the podium to present this valedictory speech on behalf of my colleagues may be because of my outstanding academic performance. But I do not see it that way; rather, I see it as God’s favour and blessing, for I do not know anything except that which God has taught me. He is the Omniscient,” he said amid rousing ovation.
“Only God grants success,” he continued, “it is important we read in addition to praying. Also important is imparting knowledge unto others. Know when you assimilate the most and make the best use of that time.”
Was he a bookworm or a recluse to have made seven distinctions?
Alabi denied being an introvert. According to him, he maintained a modest social life. Nonetheless, he tried as much as possible to maintain his bounds. He had someone close to his heart, to keep others at bay.
“Concerning girlfriends, I have many. But my fiancĂ© is just one (laughs). She has really tried for me in so many areas,”Alabi confessed.
After his secondary education, Alabi had crisscrossed some tertiary institutions. He once attended Yaba College of Technology where he studied Science Laboratory Technology. He finished his National Diploma with a distinction. Thereafter, he had a stint at the University of Ibadan before fate finally crowned his efforts at OOU.
Now in his late 20s, Alabi said he would not wait to complete his internship before thinking of a postgraduate programme to pursue in clinicals and academics.
He believes not only in prayer but combining one’s spirituality with hard work.
He said to his peers: “Prayer is number one key. But we should also be diligent and hardworking. We must learn to strike the iron when it is hottest. I mean reading when you can best assimilate and teach your colleagues or engage in academic discourse with them. Humility is another key to making it in life; forming the habit of having good mentors and seeking advice from them is another.”
Earlier, the outgoing Vice Chancellor, Prof Saburi Adejimi Adesanya, described the event as remarkable, noting that in line with his promise at inception four years ago, students were now graduating as at when due.
He said the combined convocation produced 5450 graduands, with 4920 and 530 in the undergraduate and post-graduate cadres.
Of the former, 43 had First Class, 831 bagged second class (Upper Division); 2445 were awarded Second Class (Lower Division); 1275 fell in Third Class, while 24 were in a pass category.
“You will recall that I promised during the first convocation in 2012 that students of this university, during my period as vice chancellor, would graduate as at when due. Armed with the support of the (Governing Council, I am happy to report that in the last four-and-a-half years, management has devoted resources, energy and commitment towards fulfilling the promise. Our students are now graduating as at when due and their results have been updated and certificates ready for collection. We have worked tirelessly to correct the error of the past and fashion out a new direction for the university,’’ he said.




source:thenationonlineng