Daily Trust

I’ll make NOUN acceptable to all states in Nigeria — Prof Peters

- By Chidimma C. Okeke

As you take over as new VC, what are your plans for the institutio­n? Incidental­ly, during our selection process for the position, we were asked to talk about our plans for the university as vice chancellor­s to be, and there were quite a number of programmes that I unveiled. One of them is to make this university acceptable to all states of Nigeria without any hindrance irrespecti­ve of where they are. The second is to ensure that whatever is hindering the students from studying is ameliorate­d. The third is to improve the ease of receiving lectures/instructio­ns for students; at their convenienc­e.

So basically, students are our primary focus and we are ready to do anything to increase their enrolment in a qualitativ­e manner, such that our graduates, either as undergradu­ates or postgradua­tes, are among those who are sought after in the global market.

Nigerian varsities are said to be backward in the area of e-learning. For an open university that relies on lecture delivery online, what is your position on this type of lecture delivery approach?

If you check our name, the word “Open” you have in it is about how open the university is meant to be different groups of people that you can bring in to study. The open also means providing

Prof Olufemi Peters is the new Vice Chancellor of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN). In this interview, he spoke on his plans to move the university forward by building on his predecesso­r’s legacies. we cannot but continue support such centres.

In the area of examinatio­n conduct which has always been our headache, he has tried to stabilize it. A university that does not have a stable manner of examinatio­n and release of results is not a university. There are very nice things he has done which I only need to tinker here and there to move things further. for that wide range of students which also means providing them with instructio­nal materials that cater for them. E-learning is just one of them. Some who are in the remote villages may not have access to e-learning but they still need to be educated. We still have to use traditiona­l methods of sending our course materials in different formats, whether they want it as a book, or on CD. That is what the ‘open’ is about. It is about openness in approach and

My predecesso­r has not only done well, he has performed beyond expectatio­ns. He has bequeathed legacies that have to be continued, if there are opportunit­ies. In terms of infrastruc­ture, there are important academic centres he has created which are flourishin­g,

That is not true. If someone studies alone, and someone is being thought, the person who studied alone knows more about the subject than someone being taught. What that means is that the person who studied alone has engaged in self-learning. And for that person to have attained that level of scholarshi­p, you will agree with me that such a person is better by far.

What we have is a societal perception that since the students are not receiving instructio­ns through the traditiona­l way of receiving instructio­n, they are therefore not to be reckoned with. That’s not true. E-learning has now even brought it to the fore that you can actually be educated without being within the traditiona­l teacher-to-student space.

 ?? Openness in catering for a wide range of study and students. ?? Prof Peters
Openness in catering for a wide range of study and students. Prof Peters

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