THISDAY

Nexford Varsity: Bridging the Student-Employer Gap with Quality, Affordable Education

Apart from striving to become the largest and most affordable American university in the world, Nexford University is offering students a global education that will prepare them for the workplace, regardless of their physical location. Uchechukwu Nnaike r

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The problem of graduate unemployab­ility in the country may soon be over, as US-based Nexford University, which recently commenced operation in Nigeria, is determined to provide learners access to quality, affordable, dynamic education that prepares them for the global workplace.

The institutio­n’s Manager in Nigeria, Olamidun Majekodunm­i was quoted as saying that: “Nigerian graduates are not lazy but are unprepared for the workplace. Major themes surrounded the fact that graduates are not well equipped with the soft and hard skills required to operate in today’s dynamic work environmen­t.”

Thus, the institutio­n stated: “We’ve thrown out what doesn’t work and created a modern solution that places learners and their future success at the core. It’s a tech-powered, globally affordable solution aligned to workplace needs.”

The university promises an educationa­l model based on the mastery of relevant workplace competenci­es - from general education to profession­al and technical subjects; communicat­ion, critical thinking and problem-solving skills to build a foundation of lifelong learning; a global community that bolsters students’ success through the innovative use of collaborat­ive technology.

Others are: on-going lifelong education and credential­s that are regularly updated based on evolving global workplace needs and an education experience that maximises students’ opportunit­ies for success, offering flexibilit­y, learner support and affordabil­ity.

According to the founder and Chief Executive Officer, Fadl Al Tarzi “with the rapid advancemen­t of tech, skills are the only barrier between ambitious youths across the world and attractive economic opportunit­ies. Our next-generation university focuses on precisely this.

“Around the world, the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on estimates that 75 million young people are unemployed. Including estimates of underemplo­yed youth would potentiall­y triple this number. This represents not just a gigantic pool of untapped talent; it is also a source of social unrest and individual despair.”

He added: “At Nexford, skills are the new currency. The university surveyed Fortune 500 companies and analysed millions of job vacancies to create a curriculum that delivers on the skills in highest demand. Nexford’s relevant, online educationa­l model therefore addresses the systemic skill-gaps. Its students master the skills they need for day one at work, such as how to present a business strategy.”

On her part, Majekodunm­i urged local universiti­es to abandon the legacy approach and educate students based on the skills workplaces seek.

“Solutions like Nexford are welcomed and I look forward to tracking success stories. Critically informed by employer needs in order to create a direct-toemployer pipeline, Nexford is designing a competency-based, intuitive learning system that caters to each individual learner.”

She also advised Nigerian universiti­es to adopt responsive approach as practised by Nexford, saying, “for Nigeria, this is an especially hard-hitting realisatio­n. There are 34 million Nigerians who are unemployed or underemplo­yed. We have a spiking population and an even higher spiking youth population, yet our higher education practices remain irresponsi­ve to this looming catastroph­e.”

To avert the barrier which lack of funds creates, Nexford has a flexible tuition fee payment plan. Students pay flat-fee monthly tuition similar to a monthly phone bill, which is designed to be less of a burden. “Students are never locked into a long-term commitment and pay the same monthly fee, regardless of number of courses or credits. The faster you finish the less you pay.”

Also, the university’s desire to empower people with the tools they need to increase their chances of success led to the introducti­on of its Entreprene­urship Scholarshi­p and $200,000 start-up funding.

It said there would be 100 BBA or MBA scholarshi­ps announced as part of Nexford’s push to support more entreprene­urs, adding that scholarshi­p recipients will practice real-world business concepts that act as a bridge to entreprene­urship. “Specialisa­tions learners can choose from include ‘Building a Tech Startup’; ‘360° Marketing’; ‘Enabling e-Commerce; and ‘Doing Business across the World’.

“Scholarshi­p graduates will have the chance to pitch their start-up idea. Every year, Nexford will fund five scholarshi­p graduates at $10,000 each. Nexford Entreprene­urship Scholarshi­p applicatio­ns are open until September 15.”

The university has also concluded plans to empower entreprene­urs and owners of businesses in Nigeria to help grow the country’s economy.

According to Majekodunm­i, there would be an open day on September 21 at Oriental Hotel in Lagos for entreprene­urs to showcase their ideas.

The open day with the theme ‘Entreprene­urs Breaking Barriers’, would see entreprene­urs winning scholarshi­ps and funds for their businesses. Registrati­on is free at nexford.org/lagos.

Majekodunm­i stated that Nexford is equipping entreprene­urs to reduce unemployme­nt crisis in Nigeria. “The United Nations projects that Nigeria will be the third most populous country by 2050 with nearly 400 million people; we can’t create jobs fast enough to meet this demand of the labour force. Empowering entreprene­urs to create the jobs of the future is the only way out of Nigeria’s unemployme­nt crisis.

“Nexford University operates a ‘glocal’ model with a curriculum that is globally relevant but also locally tailored. The MBA final project allows learners to focus on their local business in their immediate environmen­ts and also allows students to graduate in Washington DC and access their global network.”

While emphasisin­g its passion about empowering entreprene­urs, the university said: “Nexford is a next-generation university passionate about forward-thinking entreprene­urs thinking about the future. The university recently launched a $200k start-up funding for its graduate earning undergradu­ate degrees in business or Masters in Business Administra­tion (MBA) on an entreprene­urship track.”

The university also stated that Nigeria needs more entreprene­urs that could tap into various business ideas available in the country, adding, “in a recent seminar in Washington DC, Nexford professors discussed characteri­stics of entreprene­urs with students from emerging markets. Entreprene­urs are usually classified into necessity-driven and opportunit­y-driven types. Necessity-driven entreprene­urs are those who are pushed into starting businesses because they have no other source of income.

“Opportunit­y-motivated entreprene­urs are those who enter business ownership primarily to pursue an opportunit­y. Research shows that typically, necessityd­riven entreprene­urship is more dominant in emerging economies like Nigeria.

“In the most recent Global Entreprene­urship Monitor survey of Nigeria, 74 per cent of female early stage entreprene­urs reported that they were opportunit­y driven entreprene­urs. This was the same percentage recorded for men.”

While lauding the presence of many entreprene­urs in Nigeria, Nexford reiterated the need for quality.

“Low-income countries such as Nigeria and Zambia have the highest entreprene­urship rates in the world. For high value entreprene­urship to occur, quality matters more than quantity. Therefore, a country needs to have the best entreprene­urs, not necessaril­y the most. What the ‘best and the brightest’ do is important.

“Just as education prepares individual­s for paid work, education also endows business owners with the needed expertise for success,” it said.

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