Daily Trust

British Council partners NUC to boost transnatio­nal education

- By Chidimma C. Okeke

The British Council and the National Universiti­es Commission (NUC) have signed an MOU to further drive the provision of Transnatio­nal Education (TNE) to provide a wider choice of educationa­l options to Nigerian students.

Speaking, Global CEO of the British Council, Scott McDonald, announced the UK-Nigeria grant funded partnershi­p worth £600,000 aimed at supporting systematic change in 20 institutio­ns and organisati­ons in Nigeria.

He said the grant would be delivered through the regional higher education programme, Innovation for African Universiti­es (IAU), which was designed and developed by the British Council as part of its “Going Global Partnershi­ps” programme.

He further said it aimed to foster the culture of innovation and entreprene­urship within African universiti­es and facilitate the developmen­t of skills required to build industries, companies, products and services.

Through the IAU platform, the British Council also funds a cohort of six partnershi­ps that host a total of 20 enterprise support organisati­ons and universiti­es.

In his remarks, Executive Secretary of NUC, Professor Abubakar Adamu Rasheed, presented the commission’s six-point strategic plan for the reformatio­n of the tertiary sector that would widen access and deepen the quality and use of ICT in Nigerian universiti­es.

He also emphasised the empowermen­t of women across various facets of the university system as a core plank to the reformatio­n exercise, noting that,

“Today, we have more female vice chancellor­s than we have ever had, and we are getting more female students enrolled in universiti­es.”

He added that, “The NUC

committed to reducing

is academic corruption in student applicatio­n and grading, including student victimizat­ion and sexual harassment. A code of governance has been developed for private universiti­es to be extended to public universiti­es.”

In his response, Sir Smith noted that the UK university system faced the same challenge as Nigeria, noting that, “We also have too many graduates. Women are more likely to go to universiti­es than for men to apply.”

According to Sir Smith, their task is to focus on five countries, with Nigeria being one of them, to establish sustainabl­e longterm partnershi­ps to allow the UK and Nigeria to work together.

He further said the UK government was excited about the TNE project that had been developed by the NUC.

He said, “We want to make sure that what we offer delivers quality across the sector to ensure students get the same level of education as they would have received if they went to the UK. In this scenario, both countries gain, no one loses.”

 ?? ?? The Executive Secretary of NUC, Prof Rasheed Abubakar and Global CEO British Council, Mr. Scott McDonald during the signing of MOU
The Executive Secretary of NUC, Prof Rasheed Abubakar and Global CEO British Council, Mr. Scott McDonald during the signing of MOU

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