Business Day (Nigeria)

OOU now has 96.4% accreditat­ion status – Pro- Chancellor

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The Pro- Chancellor and Cha i rman , Governing-council of the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago Iwoye, Mosun Belo-olusoga has disclosed that the institutio­n now has 96.4 percent accreditat­ion status for courses being run by the varsity.

Olusoga, who said the National University Commission (NUC) granted full accreditat­ion for seventy courses out of seventy-two presented before the Commission, added that OOU under the watch of the present Council has been able to increase the accreditat­ion from the 76percent it met when it came on board in 2017.

Belo- Olusoga made the disclosure when she led members of the Council on a courtesy visit to Governor Dapo Abiodun, in his Oke Mosan Office, Friday.

She said that the school has enforced discipline and also ensured strict adherence to work ethics, through the review of the Code of Conduct for staff and students.

She noted that the work ethics that was introduced has ensured that disciplina­ry actions were enforced without fear or favour.

She informed the governor that erring staff and students, through the university management and senate had been discipline­d after following the establishe­d procedures.

The Pro-chancellor also said that the institutio­n has put in place mechanisms that would continue to ensure the timely release of examinatio­n results of students, the prompt processing of transcript­s and certificat­es.

She equally said that the Council has also approved the establishm­ent of a Students Welfare and Hostel Management Committee that would interface with the owners of hostels and students residing in the properties.

While noting that the objective of the Committee was to ensure that mutually beneficial relationsh­ips continue to exist between both parties, added that regular consultati­ve forum is being held with all stakeholde­rs in the university so as to ensure that problems and challenges are resolved before they snowball into preventabl­e crisis.

Belo-olusoga, who further disclosed that the university under her watch has transited from its non-residentia­l policy to a residentia­l policy, said that the students’ population residing in the hostel has increased from initial four hundred to over three thousand students.

In his remarks, Governor Abiodun commended the Governing Council for bringing down the rate of cultism and all manners of indiscipli­ne in the university, pointing out that the feat has resulted to high level of interest displayed by the number of students seeking admission.

“I think that one thing that stands out is the level of security or the reduction of the level of insecurity; we all know what characteri­sed that university in the past where there were cultism and all manner of indiscipli­ne. We see that has greatly subsided and students are more focused on their academic activities and I think that is very impressive,” he said.

The governor further said: “That is what will explain for the higher level of interest that is displayed by the number of students that are seeking admission, because nobody will want his or her children in a university where there is a high rate of cultism and bad behaviour.

 ??  ?? L-R: Mosun Belo-olusoga, pro-chancellor and chairman of the 10th Governing Council of Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago Iwoye; Dapo Abiodun, Ogun State governor, and Ganiyu Olatunde, University’s vice chancellor, after the Council submitted a report of their 4-year stewardshi­p at the Governor’s Office, Oke Mosan, Abeokuta, recently.
L-R: Mosun Belo-olusoga, pro-chancellor and chairman of the 10th Governing Council of Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago Iwoye; Dapo Abiodun, Ogun State governor, and Ganiyu Olatunde, University’s vice chancellor, after the Council submitted a report of their 4-year stewardshi­p at the Governor’s Office, Oke Mosan, Abeokuta, recently.

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