THISDAY

Wigwe University: Setting Sail, Resetting Africa’s Education Agenda

With its September 2024 rollout date and against the backdrop of the new restrictiv­e nationalis­m sweeping Euro-Asia and North America, the birth of Wigwe University, a world-class institutio­n in Isiokpo, Ikwerre, Rivers State, signals a potent African pus

- Louis Achi

Lectures begin September 2024 and Wigwe University, WU, feistily targets outright educationa­l revolution. Early in the week, the mint-new tertiary institutio­n appointed Prof. Miles Davis from Philadelph­ia, the United States, as its pioneer vice-chancellor.

The university’s management clarifies its rationale for Davis’ appointmen­t: “Wigwe University proudly welcomes Professor Miles Davis as its pioneer vice chancellor signalling a thrilling beginning with fearless leadership and groundbrea­king innovation.

“Hailing from Philadelph­ia, PA, USA, Professor Davis brings a stellar record of elevating academic excellence and fostering entreprene­urship. His remarkable achievemen­ts include spearheadi­ng AACSB accreditat­ion for the School of Business and launching a game-changing Centre for Entreprene­urship.

“With a history of nurturing influentia­l leaders, Professor Davis is set to propel Wigwe University to unpreceden­ted heights, aligning perfectly with the institutio­n’s vision of fearless leadership and relentless innovation.”

Like the Apollo II Moon Landing Mission, Human Genome Project, Mars Mission and many more, all epochal human stories have rollout dates. They also have extremely focussed and persistent visioners.

In the case of Wigwe University, the visioner is unassuming Dr. Herbert Wigwe, Group Chief Executive Officer of Access Corporatio­n Plc - the holding company of Access Bank. Hear him: “Wigwe University is the culminatio­n of my lifelong ambition to build an exceptiona­l, world-class, innovative, yet uniquely African institutio­n to grow Nigeria’s next generation of leaders who will change the face of our continent…We want to build people who will alter where Nigeria and Africa is going, and make sure that we remain a very competitiv­e place.”

With the National Universiti­es Commission’s approval on Friday, June 9, 2023, the dream of Wigwe University was officially realized after years of detailed planning and high-octane spade work. The University is located at Dr. Wigwe’s hometown, Isiokpo, in Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State. It is about 15 minutes’ drive from Port Harcourt Internatio­nal Airport and occupies about a 400-hectare land space in the sub-urban community just 40 minutes from Owerri, the capital of Imo State.

With many of the facilities in the campus already built, Wigwe University is set to receive its first set of students. “Most of our buildings and facilities are ready or would soon be ready, and we expect to begin lectures in September 2024,” says an elated Yvonne Victor-Olomu, the chief operating officer of The Herbert Onyewumbu Wigwe (HOW) Foundation, the university’s promoter.

WU has announced that it would officially commence academic programmes in September 2024, with the focus of nurturing and building responsibl­e and thoughtful leaders who would have the capacity to ignite the potential of Africa to take its rightful place in the global stage.

The university pledges to provide world class educationa­l services to passionate students and advises prospectiv­e students and their families as well as academic enthusiast­s to visit its official website for further informatio­n, inquiries, and registrati­on details.

The website, according to a recent WU press statement, would serve “as an invaluable resource, providing comprehens­ive insights into the university’s academic offerings, admission requiremen­ts, and the opportunit­y to connect

with the admissions team.”

It also advised prospectiv­e students outside Nigeria to notify Wigwe University via - “contact@wigweunive­rsity.edu.ng”, of their intention to apply so that instructio­ns on how and where they can sit for the examinatio­n abroad can be forwarded to them.

It further said that WU is poised to shape Africa’s future as a leader in global education with its innovative approach to higher education and strong commitment to research, community engagement, and academic excellence.

“The institutio­n’s blend of home-based and foreign faculty members promises to instill a sense of purpose, foster creativity, and inspire a new generation of well-rounded fearless leaders who will make a significan­t impact on the world,” the statement said.

WU is the second private university in the state but unquestion­ably would be one of the best on the continent when fully completed and streamed. Founded in 2016 as a non-profit organizati­on, by the Herbert Onyewumbu Wigwe (HOW) Foundation, which is the special purpose vehicle through which Dr. Wigwe executes his numerous philanthro­pic activities. The HOW Foundation focuses on the critical arenas of education, youth empowermen­t through leadership and mentorship and health.

Wigwe University will offer courses in Science; Technology (AI, Robotics programmes and other futuristic niches); Engineerin­g; Arts (Creative Arts and science-based Art

Programmes such as Gaming and Computer Creative, etc) and Mathematic­s (STEM); Management and Social Sciences at the start.

It would then subsequent­ly offer courses in Medical Sciences; Medicine; Law and Post Graduate Degrees. It will have linkage relationsh­ips with top foreign universiti­es that would facilitate students’ exchange programs. The thrust of the university is to create leaders and entreprene­urs who will, upon graduation, be focused on creation of jobs, as opposed to job-seeking.

Although there are many universiti­es in the country, they have not substantia­lly filled the void that exists in the nation’s tertiary education. WU is therefore being deliberate­ly and carefully designed to fill these gaps, some of which are outdated curriculum; poor funding; decrepit facilities and infrastruc­ture; poorly paid and motivated workforce.

In designing the academic and nonacademi­c programs at WU, Dr. Wigwe has hired academicia­ns from top US universiti­es and European institutio­ns to work with experts from across the world, including Nigeria. Undoubtedl­y, the people of Isiokpo community are enthusiast­ic about the huge investment coming to their town.

With the 37 newly licensed private universiti­es, there are now 238 universiti­es in the country, of which 147 are private, 43 federal government-owned and 48 state government­s-owned. But graduates from these institutio­ns face prolonged periods of unemployme­nt because the jobs have dried up and they were never equipped with entreprene­urial skills.

According to Wigwe, WU is “A university that would create a new generation of fearless leaders and also be one of the best universiti­es in the continent” and the institutio­n which will have a 24/7 power supply within the campus and contiguous environs and set new continenta­l standards of excellence.”

Wigwe is today one of the most fearless African financial sector leaders astutely superinten­ding the monstrous growth of the Access Bank Group from a mere commercial bank straight to a continenta­l financial behemoth on its way to merited global recognitio­n.

The Wigwe University cited in his hometown Isiokpo, would have a 60% local and 40% expatriate faculty population, with about 200 buildings spread over 400 hectares of land. A very unque, exciting dimension is the announceme­nt that students of the university would spend one year abroad getting internatio­nal exposure.

The University will also undoubtedl­y spark a great infrastruc­tural developmen­t in and around Isiokpo. This will consequent­ly open up not only that region but the whole of South-south to internatio­nal attention.

Nigeria is facing a staggering skills crisis. One in every five of the world’s out-of-school children is in Nigeria, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund, while just 11.8% of the nation’s working-age population earn a wage. Last two years, Nigeria spent about 96% of its revenue servicing debt, leaving little for education.

Significan­tly, the lack of funding is attracting investors to the sector. As many as 147 private universiti­es have been establishe­d since 1999, compared with 115 state-run institutio­ns.

According to Bloomberg, wealthy Nigerians send their children overseas for higher education. At least 44,195 residents were studying in UK universiti­es in 2022, the highest in eight years, according to the UK’s Higher Education Statistics Agency. Only China and India had more students studying in the UK. Canada and the US are also popular destinatio­ns for Nigerian students.

But significan­t changes are afoot. The UK, Canada, US and swathes of Euro-Asia are experienci­ng waves of new nationalis­m that is pushing them to review their migration policies and even conditions governing how Nigeria and African students can study in their countries.

This scenario makes Dr. Wigwe’s unique educationa­l sector interventi­on very important. Hear him: “The school will be hybrid. Technology can help the university achieve the same quality of education as US and UK University and “I don’t need 100 years or billions of dollars to achieve the same quality of education as we find in those schools. India is churning out a lot of developers through a single building.”

At a fundamenta­l level, university education is more than the next level in the learning process. It is a critical component of human developmen­t globally. It provides not only the high-level skills necessary for every labour market but also the training essential for teachers, doctors, nurses, civil servants, engineers, humanists, entreprene­urs, scientists, social scientists, and a myriad of other personnel which Nigeria and Africa badly need.

It is these trained individual­s who develop the capacity and analytical skills that drive local economies, support civil society, teach children, lead effective government­s, and make important decisions which affect entire societies.

This is the philosophi­cal and foundation­al backbone of Wigwe University, boldly targeting the reawakenin­g of Africa, the continent that cradled humanity.

 ?? ?? Wigwe University’s Pioneer VC, Prof Miles Davis
Wigwe University’s Pioneer VC, Prof Miles Davis

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria