JAMB To Political Elite: Allow Your Children Obtain First Degree In Nigeria

Image result for JAMB, Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede

The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede has advised the nation’s political elite to encourage their children and wards obtain their first degree in Nigeria before travelling abroad for further studies.


He handed this advice in Abuja on Friday while speaking with newsmen on the sidelines of a workshop on intensive Training and Sensitisation Forum on Central Admissions Processing System, CAPS, for the 2017/2018
academic session.
Oloyede stated it is better for the elite in Nigeria to allow their dependants obtain the first degree locally where the public and private institutions are of high quality and standard rather than study abroad at institutions that are of poor quality and low standard.
He continued, “But if they wish to go for Masters, PhD and so on elsewhere, there is nothing bad about that.
“But for the first degree, we have enough universities here – both public and private because when most of them go outside Nigeria to study, they do that at private institutions.
“And I know countries in Africa where Nigerian students constitute 90 per cent of the class in every set as if those institutions were set up for Nigerians.
“What we are saying is that you have better value if you send your children to private universities in Nigeria than sending them to study at private universities of poor quality outside Nigeria.’’
The JAMB registrar charged proprietors of private universities to consider the economic situation in the country and make tuition fees affordable for parents.
He said that the institutions were operating in a competitive world and that failure to check excessive increase in tuition fees could force many of the schools to close shop.
“I believe that private institutions are established for worthy purpose.
“I also believe that private institutions’ charges are high, but they are not as high as traveling outside the country and people still send large number of students to inferior universities.
“If you care I will show you on my telephone, I was in Uganda, I was in a number of African countries about a month ago.
“And if you see the condition; I am disturbed by the fact that not only that the conditions were not conducive, But also because 90 per cent of the students are from Nigeria.
“In some cases you find them under tents taking courses.”

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