Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2015

COBIS 2015 Conference on 16 -17 April 2015

On 16-17 April 2015, Grange School Lagos will be the host school for the first Council of British International Schools (COBIS) Conference in Africa. COBIS is the organisation which serves British International Schools of global quality, representing over 300 prestigious member organisations worldwide.

This Conference entitled  "Students taking ownership of their learning" is the first of its kind in Africa and will be drawing participants from all British International School on the Continent and Overseas.

The event which will run 9am - 4pm on both days (exhibition at 8am), and have a Gala Conference Dinner on 16th April 2015, will provide high-quality CPD through a mix of keynote speeches, seminars and workshop by leading UK educational expert, on arrange of topics including:

British International Schools: The Africa Perspective - Challenges, Threats, Opportunities

British International Schools: Meeting the Challenges of Becoming Outstanding

Education: Current Trends and Issues

New Models of Educational Delivery: Opportunities and Challenges

Using ICT to Enhance, Extend and Support Learning

Special Educational Needs

Differentiation and Personalised Learning

Effective Lesson Observation

And more

Kindly, Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Enlightenmemore

 BBM channel: Enlighten me more C00187C23
www.pin.bbm.com/C00187C23

 Follow us Twitter : @Enlightenmemore

Be a part of history in the making:
COBIS INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FOR SCHOOL LEADERS, TEACHERS AND SUPPORT STAFF, LAGOS, NIGERIA

THEME: "Students taking ownership of their learning"

Date: 16 - 17th of April 2015

Venue: GRANGE SCHOOL Ikeja,Ikeja Lagos

For whom:

Proprietors of British International Schools, Educational Leaders, Parents, Teachers, Assistant Teachers and Support staff are invited to join us for this COBIS Conference

Booking:

Please visit www.cobis.org.uk/lagos2015 for online booking form and registration.

Accommodation:

Hotel information will be circulated with booking confirmation.

Exhibitors are invited to participate in this conference. To download more information and book an exhibition stand

please complete an online exhibitor booking form at: www.cobis.org.uk/lagos2015

For additional information, please contact:
ma.olaosebikan@grangeschool.com

Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Cool facts 2

Do you know that?

Women find men more attractive when they get attention from other women

It used to take a yr to sell 10 million iPhones. Apple did it with iPhone 6 in a weekend

1 woman dies every hour in India b'se of dowry-related crimes

80% of women fake their orgasms

50% of Internet users will quit waiting for a video to load after 10 seconds

Chris Brown lost his virginity at 8 yrs

Insects often like to taste the human before they bite

"The Internet" & "the World Wide Web" ain't the same thing

A parent is only as happy as their least happy child

Russell told Katy Perry he was divorcing her via SMS, then never talked to her again

Pope Francis once washed & kissed the feet of 12 patients with AIDS

There is an island called "Dildo Island" in Canada

Over ½ of sloth deaths occur on their once a week trip to poop

Clouds fly higher during the day

Egyptians used to wear hair extensions

There's an Android app from *ZA* it calculates how much livestock to give as a dowry for a wife

It's possible for men to orgasm before ejaculating

22% of people skip lunch daily.

Mike Tyson had been arrested 38 times by the time he turned 13

Astronauts come from America
..Space explorers from Russia are called "cosmonauts"

A brownout refers to when u get drunk & don't remember portions of yo night until someone refreshes u

Hitler collected Jewish artifacts & took photos of Jews to be preserved in what he called, "The Museum of an Extinct Race."

Gephyrophobia, the fear of bridges

Neither of George W. Bush's daughters are Republican

The older a father is when he has a child, the uglier the child will be

Over 10% of marriages in the world are between 1st / 2nd cousins

Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated by Hindu extremists

23,000 people in India & Burma speak a language called "Anal"

Kendrick Lamar attended the same school as Dr. Dre

More music has been released by Tupac since his death than when he was alive

Lady Gaga wrote Born This Way in 10 minutes

Swimming pools r more dangerous than guns

The founder of Adidas went by the nickname Adi, because his real name - Adolf - was rather unpopular

The highest paid female CEO in the US, Martine Rothblatt, was born a male

Don't use a song u like as an alarm to wake up
..U will end up hating it

Asian hair grows 30% faster than Caucasian hair, while people from Africa tend to have hair that grows slower

Dell computers was started in 1984 by a 19-yr-old w/ only $1000

57% of single people prefer a wingman of the opposite sex

More facts here

Biggest Education Show in Africa - TOSSE 2015


The TOSSE "T’esperience" is the Total Experience we create for our visitors and exhibitors. For six years, it’s been one filled with satisfaction, cheers and plenty more.

 “You ran a great show. I even overheard a man raving about what an incredible experience this was for him; very proud it was all put together here in Nigeria! You made him proud…and made me proud too. Thank you.
Congratulations to you and your (well-oiled) team.”
2013 Exhibitor

A very big thank you to Edumark, the organizers of TOSSE 2014. Well done. The exhibition was wonderfully organized. More grease to your elbow for giving the education sector such a powerful lift.
2014 Exhibitor

With over 7000 educators expected at this year’s event, TOSSE is the right platform to navigate your way in the education world.


We are quite excited about the numerous benefits we have for our Exhibitors at the 7th Edition of the Total School Support Seminar/Exhibition scheduled to hold as follows:
 
Date: 11th / 12th of June, 2015
Venue: Ten Degrees Event Centre, Billings Way, Oregun, Lagos, Nigeria.
Time: 10:00 am daily 

The theme for this edition is "Inspiring the Future" and we expect a 50% rise in our attendance. We recorded over 4,000 visitors from about 19 states at the last Edition.

For the Education community, TOSSE is the place to learn, to see, and to get the most innovative products/services.

We invite you to join us at TOSSE 2015 and reach out to the Education market. Vast Networking opportunities, viable business leads, presentations... all in a fully airconditioned and safe environment.

We would certainly be delighted to welcome your organisation to TOSSE 2015.

Simply e-mail or phone us our executives would provide all the information you need.

For Exhibition Space, Product Presentation, Brochure Advert, Venue Branding, Handbill Distribution, Ushers Branding
 
Yinka Ogunde
CEO, EDUMARK CONSULT

For Exhibition space, advert in Event brochure and presentation.

Contact:
0709 317 5270  |  0812 758 6122  |  0802 839 9138 
 
Email:
info@tosse.com.ng
info@edumarkng.com 

Call: 0709 317 5270 | 0812 758 6122.
EDUMARK CONSULT
18, Oyetola Idowu Street, Off Sura Mogaji
Coker Road, Ilupeju
Lagos 100211
Nigeria

Email: info@tosse.com.ng

Monday, February 2, 2015

'30 per cent budget on education’

Since the Coordinating Minister of the Economy,
Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, presented the 2015
budget estimates of about N4.358trillion to the
National Assembly out of which N492, 034billion
was proposed for education, some observers
have contended that the vote still fell short of
UNESCO’s 26 per cent recommendation and
was not likely to effect change in the troubled
sector. However, former Executive Secretary,
National Universities Commission (NUC), Prof
Peter Okebukola in this interview with UJUNWA
ATUEYI clarified the true stance of the budget.
Okebukola who is also the President of UNESCO
Global University Network for Innovation (GUNI)
Africa and Chairman of Council of University of
West Africa, advised that the budget proposal
be raised to 30 per cent, among other issues.
Excerpts:
THE 2015 budget as revealed by the Federal
Government showed a proposal of N492,
034billion for education out of N4.3trillion
national budget. In the 2011 budget,
N306.3bn was allocated to education; in
2012(N400.15bn); in 2013(N426.53bn); and (N
493b) in 2014 representing 10.7 per cent of the
N4.6tn national budget in that year. Looking at
this analysis, what is your perception about this
trend?
The trend of course is far from encouraging
considering the deplorable state of our
education system. We need to at least triple the
current allocation to shake off the ignoble state
of the system by applying the funds largely to
significantly improve facilities for teaching and
learning, teacher quality and welfare and
curriculum delivery. We need the funds to break
down obstacles to access of over 10 million
out-of-school children. We need the funds to
improve school safety. We need the funds to
improve reading culture among our youths and
for overall improvement in the quality of delivery
of education.
I should stress that the 10.7 per cent you
quoted only gives a narrow view of the
anticipated picture of funding education in
Nigeria in 2015. My research group estimates
the proportion, nationally, to be above 20 per
cent, when we factor in budgets from state
governments and from budgets of intervention
agencies notably the Universal Basic Education
Commission (UBEC) and Tertiary Education
Trust Fund (TETFund).
In 2015, UBEC and TETFund alone will inject
not less than N100 billion into basic and higher
education respectively which are not captured in
the regular national budget which you are
referring to. This is aside from funds which
SURE-P will provide to support education.
We also need to realise that the budget
proposal of N492,034 bn for education going to
the national assembly for appropriation is only
for funding education at the federal level. This
will service only federal tertiary institutions
(about a third of the total number in Nigeria),
104 Unity Colleges (less than 0.002 per cent of
the national total), 25 parastatals of the Federal
Ministry of Education and the Federal Ministry of
Education itself. Each of the 36 states and the
FCT will also present their education budgets to
their respective State Assemblies. When
aggregated together alongside the contribution
of the intervention agencies, we will have a
proportion in the neighbourhood of 23 per cent.
Does it mean that the 26 per cent United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organisation (UNESCO) recommendation is not
realisable?
The 26 per cent figure often ascribed to
UNESCO is mythical. It only exists in the
Nigerian literature on education. I suspect that
it is a figure that arose out of a
recommendation of a localised UNESCO
meeting, which probably held in Nigeria
sometime in the past and does not bind the
entire organisation. I have had to ask two
Directors-General of UNESCO about this figure
and they claim not to be aware of it. For
Nigeria, I believe we should strive for a minimum
of 30 per cent for the next 20 years to clear the
mess in the sector.
Clearly, 30 per cent is realisable for if there is
a will, there is a way. Lip service in funding is
what education generously gets in Nigeria. I am
aware that other sectors such as health,
agriculture and security are important and will
also desire generous funding. What our leaders
fail to realise and appreciate is that education is
the antidote to challenges in all other sectors. It
is often said that education cannot solve all of
society’s problems but without education no
solution is possible.
What we should do in my view is to elevate
funding to education at the federal, state and
local government levels for the next 20 years
with the collateral effect of lowering funding in
other sectors. After 20 years when quality
education is on solid ground for all citizens, the
allocation to education can then slide
downwards for other sectors to enjoy a hike in
their budgetary allocation. It is a matter of
careful planning and continuity in the
implementation of government policies on
education at all levels.
One important point to note as I conclude my
answer to this question is the judicious use of
the funds, albeit meagre, which is allocated and
released for education. There is a lot of leakage
and corruption in the system that the more we
throw money into the sector, the more money
becomes available to be “chopped”. There is the
need, therefore, to install a robust accountability
and probity mechanism into the financial
operations in the sector (and of course, other
sectors) so that as much as possible, all
financial leakages are plugged.
With these allocations, what is the place of
Nigeria (being the Giant of Africa) when
compared to other African countries?
Let me answer this question with some
empirical data. As leader of an African Union-
European Union project, which studied the
quality of university education in 2014, my team
found a generally poor quality of higher
education systems in all 54 African countries
that we studied in comparison with Europe and
North America. Within this gloomy picture, it is
bittersweet to note that the Nigerian university
system rated among the best in Africa. It is
proverbially said that if you have not visited the
farm of others, you will believe that your
father’s farm is either the best or the worst.
Aside from South Africa and Egypt, our data
showed that no other national university system
in Africa matched the quality of curriculum, staff
and students of the Nigerian university system.
At international conferences, Nigerian scholars
are rated among the best in terms of quality of
participation. Students trained in Nigerian
universities are highly sought after for
postgraduate studies in European and North
American universities and during postgraduate
training, they perform among the best.
On the not-so-pleasing side, our data revealed
that relative to many other countries in Africa,
Europe and North America, Nigerian universities
are poor in infrastructure, reading culture is poor
among students and research culture among
staff is weak. If we elevate the performance of
our universities on the variables of quality of
infrastructure, quality of research and improve
reading culture among our students, no nation
in Africa will come anywhere near the tall
standing of the Nigerian university system in
terms of the quality of process and quality of
products.
This is the task for those who will be steering
governance in Nigeria after the February 2015
elections. We need to balance quality with
quantity in delivering university education. The
rate of expansion in enrolment should match the
rate of provision of facilities and human
resources. We need to reduce financial leakages
and profligate spending by political and other
office holders so as to free funds for better
funding of our universities.
If the Nigerian university system is rated among
the best in Africa as you said, despite the
shortfall in funding, what kind of system do you
think we will have if education in general is
adequately funded?
If education in general in Nigeria were better
funded, we will have a country that will parade
the best statistics in the world in health,
education, security, economy, environment,
agriculture, science and technology and in other
sectors. We will have a country, which the
Chairman of the NUC Board while I was
Executive Secretary, Alhaji Maitama Sule,
envisions to be paradise on earth. We will have
a country that will lead Africa to claim the 21st
century. As Executive Secretary of NUC between
2001 and 2006, I confirm that the Obasanjo
administration ensured a huge jump in funding
of our universities which translated to
significant improvement in the global ranking of
our universities in 2007. Since we did this
before, we can do it again across the education
sector.
I should stress that the condition of adequate
funding is only just necessary to make us get to
that dreamland. It is not sufficient. It will
become sufficient when we have truly
nationalistic, corruption-intolerant and God-
fearing leaders at all levels of governance and in
both the public and private sectors. I am not
talking about the president or state governors or
managing directors of private companies. I am
talking about these and all those who are in
leadership including vice-chancellors, principals
of secondary schools, head teachers of primary
schools, heads of academic departments in
universities, polytechnics and colleges of
education. May God give us such worthy
leaders.
Would you say that the present administration
has shown serious attention to educational
development?
No doubt, the present administration has done
well in many areas on education development.
Several areas notably access and quality are
still struggling to be served. You know I am not
a politician but an academic, so I will provide an
unbiased assessment.
Let us take 2014 as example. There were at
least 12 defining events in the education sector
in Nigeria in 2014. It is possible to cluster these
as the good, the bad and the ugly. On the good
and positive entries in the report card are the
improved performance of candidates in the May/
June Senior School Certificate examination
conducted by WAEC; increase in access as
additional 982,000 were enrolled nationwide in
the basic education system and the carrying
capacity of the 129 universities leapt to about
1,000,000. Recall that the present
administration established 12 new federal
universities and the Presidential Special
Scholarship Scheme for Innovation and
Development.
We also had the establishment of more Almajiri
schools to depress the number of out-of-school
children, which was put at about 10 million. The
curriculum at all levels enjoyed some positive
tweaking by NERDC, NCCE, NBTE, and NUC.
NUC’s action was particularly striking in
entrenching an improved entrepreneurship
studies programme in Nigerian universities
whose positive impact showed during the
national entrepreneurship fair in December 2014.
Funding for physical development and research
by TETFund was above the N80 billion mark
during the year. These six events were blue
marks on the report card.
On the “bad” and negative (red) entries in the
education report card in 2014 are four notable
events. The woeful performance of candidates in
the November/December senior school
certificate examination with more than 50 per
cent failing to earn five credits in English,
Mathematics and three other subjects is one.
Also, teacher quality across all levels of the
education system remained generally shameful
and unacceptably low. Quality of buildings and
other teaching-learning infrastructure did not
significantly improve and so is the poor reading
culture among students.
The “ugly” entry on the report card on school
safety has put Nigeria on the dark side of the
world map. This entry includes the alleged
slaughter by Boko Haram of 43 secondary
school students in Federal Government College,
Buni Yadi in February and the abduction in April
of about 200 girls from Government Secondary
School in Chibok. Taken together, the overall
score shown in the education report card at the
state and federal levels is far from the pass
grade. If I were the class teacher of this student
known as Nigeria, I will make the following
closing comments on the 2014 performance in
education: “You need to buckle up next session.
You were rather too laid back with severe
consequences for your future. Work harder in
the area of access, teacher quality and
facilities.”
The 2015 general elections will commence in
less than one month, what advice do you have
for Nigerians as regards electing credible
leaders.
I will advise Nigerians including myself to “shine
our eyes” and not be fooled or hoodwinked by
sweet talks of the politicians who are interested
only in their pockets. We should vote according
to our conscience and in line with what we
believe the politician can deliver by way of
dividends of democracy. This is why education
is important. With a current illiterate population
of about 30 per cent, more will be hoodwinked.
With more money to education, illiteracy rate
will depress and the electorate will be wiser
when casting votes and selecting their leaders.

Written by UJUNWA ATUEYI

http://m.ngrguardiannews.com

Translate