Tampilkan postingan dengan label student. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label student. Tampilkan semua postingan

School Student commits suicide after being strip-searched before others

Posted by Unknown Jumat, 15 November 2013 0 komentar

Four female teachers at a city college, who were accused of strip-searching a student and thereby driving her to commit suicide, have to face trial, as a special court on Friday refused to discharge them from the case.
On January 29, 2011, a student of MGR Janaki College complained to her teachers that Rs 4,000 she had kept with her had gone missing.


Teachers checked every student, but Divya, a third year BCom student, was apparently the only one strip-searched in front of others, said the CB-CID probing the case.
Shamed, Divya committed suicide on returning home.

A case of abatement to commit suicide, punishable under Section 306 of IPC, was registered against four lecturers – Jayalakshmi, Sudha, Selvi and Vijayalakshmi – for allegedly strip-searching the student.
On a complaint from the girl’s mother, police registered the case, and it was later transferred to the CB-CID.


After the agency filed its chargesheet before the mahila court here, the lecturers filed petitions seeking discharge from the case, saying the investigating agency had deliberately suppressed letters written by other students stating that no such strip-search incident occurred on the campus.

CB-CID, however, said their case was supported by witness depositions, documentary evidence and medical records.
Special judge Meena Sathish, concluding there was prima facie case to proceed against the lecturers, said they could raise such arguments at the time of trial.
She then dismissed their petitions, paving the way for commencement of trial in the case.
SORCE: TOI

Baca Selengkapnya ....

Dairy of a Nigerian Student

Posted by Unknown Rabu, 13 November 2013 0 komentar
Dairy of a Nigerian Student was written by one of our readers; Nworgu Uchenna.


Lazily rising from my sleep with strained eyes and a big sigh, numbness rapidly disappearing from my fingers and toes, I roll over and curl up more tightly, hugging my knees between my arms. Its yet another new day. I am a young lad but my fears and worries are that of a Christmas goat awaiting slaughter.
Continue


My school identity card says 2009-2013 but I know that with the way things are going I may not graduate till well into 2015. That is if I am not dead by then, blown away by a bomb, shot down by the police or even beaten to death by a violent legislator. I sound very pessimistic and gloomy, it's not my fault. The situation at hand has killed my enthusiasm and that of millions of students of government-owned tertiary institutions.


News of an impending strike started trickling into our ears around late June and we shrugged it off as one of those things, 'normal ASUU wahala' which would be resolved in no time. Alas, our joy was shortlived in the first week of July when a communiqué was issued confirming the strike action. Students living in far places were confronted with the sad fact that they may yet again have to risk their lives to return home as this strike was actually happening. 


Thank God for my Industrial Training, Facebook, and of course Twitter, I won't have to end up idle or exposed to extrajudicial killing. As ironic as this may sound, the combination of some of these 3 facilities, if not more has being responsible for maintaining the sanity of millions of Nigerian students sitting down at home idle and frustrated. So many students are spending virtually this period of strike "facebooking" and tweeting, chatting, visiting friends and just doing anything to kill the boredom.


When two elephants fight, what shall become of the grass? Question for the gods, maybe. No one knows when ASUU will be calling off the strike. How I wish the government and ASUU sheath their swords and pity our plights. How I wish the government pays more attention to funding of universities and investment in human resources.


How I wish ASUU compromises a bit and comes down to reasonable agrrement. All we here everyday is meeting upon meeting, negotiations. To make matters worse, ASUU seems to have pulled out of negotiations and the government itself is concentrating fully on political brouhaha, domestic violence, and Boko Haram issue in no particular order. Well I will not digress into the details of it all, after all what do I know?


All I know is that when I resume back to school (only God knows whenever that is) *sad face*, austerity measures might have to take its place in favour of my usual philanthropic nature. Economic meltdown has taken a rather harsh toll on my dad's finance consequently affecting my own meagre share; it means no more generosity with my belongings.

We are been told ubiquitously to pray.


"Pray for your family. Pray for your country. Pray for the whole world." So we are praying or at least I have being praying. Even with my deep pessimism and sarcasm, there's still one tiny voice in my head telling me that things will work out fine. I have survived worse. But for now its back to tweeting, chatting and hustling, at least these ones have not decided to strike yet.

Baca Selengkapnya ....

Lagos Stops Admitting Unintelligent Students Into Public Schools

Posted by Unknown Senin, 11 November 2013 0 komentar
Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye who disclosed this over the weekend at an interactive meeting with Parents Forum of public secondary schools in Lagos State explained that the placement tests are necessary in order to ensure that lofty standards are not only maintained but set in public secondary schools in the state.

Oladunjoye who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Mrs. Omolara Erogbogbo urged parents to desist from approaching teachers and other people for the placement of their wards into model colleges and upgraded schools.
She affirmed that students who failed to meet the promotion criteria set out in the state would not be promoted.
Continue.................
The commissioner urged teachers and principals of public secondary schools in the state to adhere strictly to the promotion criteria and guideline in the state.   She said for a JSS I student to be promoted to JSS II, such a student must obtain an average pass of 50% including English and Mathematics in the examination.

According to her, "for a JSS II student to be promoted to JSS III, he or she must also obtain a 50% average pass including English and Mathematics in his or her examination while a JSS III student must obtain credits pass in six subjects including English and Mathematics at the Basic Education Certificate Examinations in order to be promoted to SS I".

"An SS I student must also averaged 50% in six subjects including English and Mathematics in order to be promoted into SS II class and a SS II student must similarly obtain 50% in 5 subjects including English and Mathematics in addition to a 50% cumulative pass in the screening tests undertaken in schools".

Source

Baca Selengkapnya ....

Vigilante Officer allegedly Rapes Female Student, Friends Take to the street.

Posted by Unknown Kamis, 31 Oktober 2013 0 komentar
An operative of the Ogun State Vigilance Service, Liasu Oyedele, has been arrested by the police for allegedly raping a female student of the Moshood Abiola Polytechnic (MAPOLY), Abeokuta.

The 30-year-old vigilante officer was said to have committed the crime on Monday night at Alewenu village, adjacent the Traffic Compliance and Enforcement Agency (TRACE) headquarters.
Continue

It had been alleged that the suspect accosted the victim, an ND1 banking and finance student of MAPOLY, who had been on her way her way to a group reading session in preparation for the institution's second semester examination around Onikolobo, Abeokuta.

It had been gathered that the suspect was nabbed by passers-by and taken fully to the Ibara divisional police station, Abeokuta. The victim (name withheld) was said to have been taken to an undisclosed hospital for medical attention.

Following incident, students of the polytechnic staged a protest to office of the state Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Development at Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta. The aggrieved students described the alleged ra*pe as “barbaric” and called on the state government to urgently bring the suspected vigilance officer to justice.

The coordinator of Child Protection Network, Mrs Peju Osoba, who addressed the students, appealed to them to stay calm, saying,
“It is an offense against the state and the Child Protection Network will ensure that justice is achieved,” she said.

The acting police public relations officer in the state, Mr Abimbola Oyeyemi, confirmed the arrest of the vigilante officer and said he could be used in the state police command headquarters, Eleweran, Abeokuta for further investigation


Baca Selengkapnya ....

First Time in History: Student Breaks Unilorin Record, Bags First Class In Law

Posted by Unknown Selasa, 29 Oktober 2013 0 komentar

Abiodun Kazeem is the first graduate to bag the first class grade in the Faculty of Law, University of Ilorin,

If you call him a jinx breaker, you are not far from the truth. The reason is that many students had tried to graduate from the University of Ilorin with a first class degree in Law for many years, but they failed for one reason or the other. Finally, on Tuesday, however, Abiodun Kazeem achieved the feat, drawing accolades from many people.
Continue after the break.
Kazeem studied Common and Islamic Law at the institution, which became a full fledged university in 1976. Achieving this feat, according to him, is something he will always cherish. But he never forgets to note that his march through the system was a tough one.

For instance, he recalls that he did not get admission into the university on a platter of gold. He sat for the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board’s examination twice, in the course of which some of his friends tried to convince him to forget about applying again.

“The first time I sat for JAMB was in 2007,” Kazeem says. “I did not get the cut-off point. But I was bent on studying law. So, in 2008, I obtained the JAMB form and sat for the examination the second time. I was successful this time around.”

Between 2007 and 2008, he worked with one of his uncles, Mr. Tahiru Adeosun, who has a law firm in Ilorin. While the experience might have influenced his academic strides on campus, from his first day in the institution, he had his mind set on obtaining first class degree. Yet, some of his colleagues tried again to discourage him. They reminded him that no one had ever achieved that feat in the institution as far as the faculty was concerned. But he remained resolute.

He says, “From the day I entered the university, I wanted to make a first class. I thought that my experience in my uncle’s law firm could be used to optimise my ability. But some of the challenges I had have to do with the issue that nobody had made it. Some of my colleagues who noted that I was so focused on my studies discouraged me. Many of them said, ‘You can never have it. You do not need to disturb yourself.’’’

Twenty-six-year-old Kazeem, who hails from Iganna in Oyo State, says he is from a polygamous home. His father, Muideen, has 12 children. His mother, Mulika, gave birth to six of them. He states that settling for Law in the higher institution was largely due to the influence of his uncle.

Perhaps, he could have read Mass Communication and not Law. According to him, his nickname in secondary school was Mr. Mass Communication, due to his writing skills and gift of oration.

He recounts his days at Community Grammar School, Iganna. “I decided to read Law because my uncle, a lawyer, inspired me. I wanted to study Mass Communication. I was very eloquent and I was in the Press Club in the secondary school. But when I got to my uncle’s chamber, he influenced and inspired me to read Law. I never dreamt of becoming a lawyer,” he says.

Beaming with excitement and a sense of accomplishment, Kazeem adds that this feat is an honour for his generation and his people in Oyo State.

For now, he is preparing for the Law School, after which he will choose between three directions he has envisioned for himself. He hopes to become a lecturer, to inspire young people, practise Law or participate in politics, either actively or passively.

Kazeem is one of the 41 graduands from various faculties in the university who bagged first class degrees at the ceremony, with 1,088 making second class upper; 2,435 had second class lower. In the third class degree category are 1,082 students and 214 had ordinary Pass.

A further breakdown shows that a total of 5,063 of the 6,713 students that graduated obtained first degrees, 756 got Master’s degrees; 95 bagged Ph.Ds; while 84 got postgraduate diplomas.

Speaking during the grand finale of the convocation on Wednesday, President Goodluck Jonathan, who was represented by the Supervising Minister of Education, Mr. Nyesom Wike, frowned on a situation whereby university graduates lack relevant skills due to poor training that makes them unemployable. He said this was intolerable.

He added, “Given this unwholesome development, tertiary institutions ought to make themselves more relevant to solving societal problems and their researches should be more impactful and result-oriented.”

The President said the Federal Government alone could not effectively fund universities in the country. He added that all stakeholders must be involved in cost-sharing to adequately run the institutions.

Noting that university teachers must re-orientate themselves and avoid unnecessary strikes, Jonathan called on striking members of the Academic Staff Union of Universities to call off their lingering strike.

He said the FG would systematically continue to address the challenges in the university system.

According to him, apart from establishing 12 new federal universities, government has also increased the carrying capacities of existing universities to boost access to higher education.

Besides, Jonathan said, the FG had increased the budgetary allocation to education from N234.8bn in 2010 to N426.5bn in 2013.

He added that the government was seriously considering the best ways to ensure the implementation of the ‘Report of the Needs Assessment Committee for Universities’.

The Vice-Chancellor, UNILORIN, Prof. AbdulGaniyu Ambali, said part of the problems facing Nigeria was brain drain and capital flight.

He stated that it would take the doggedness of Nigerians to develop the country to a nation that they would be proud of.

He noted that there were still untapped opportunities in the country, adding that the thinking that Nigerians could only survive abroad was erroneous.

He urged the graduands to be good ambassadors of their parents and their alma mater.

The VC said the institution was making efforts to start new undergradaute programmes in 2014.

He noted that part of the challenges facing Africa and Nigeria was the failure of its brilliant young people not returning to Nigeria after their studies abroad.

He said, “If you travel abroad for more education, be determined that you will assist your country to make a brain gain out of your skills and insights, rather than being part of the brain drain.”

Baca Selengkapnya ....
Trik SEO Terbaru support Online Shop Baju Wanita - Original design by Bamz | Copyright of samsung galaxy mini.