Tag: higher education

  • Over 860,000 Students Benefit as NELFUND Disbursed Loans Reach ₦161 Billion

    Over 860,000 Students Benefit as NELFUND Disbursed Loans Reach ₦161 Billion

    Reporting by The Punch indicates that the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) has surpassed a major milestone, with total disbursements reaching ₦161.97 billion. This funding has directly benefited 864,798 students across various public tertiary institutions in the country. The program, a flagship initiative of the Tinubu administration, aims to reduce the dropout rate by providing interest-free loans for tuition and monthly upkeep.

    NELFUND officials stated that the application process has been further streamlined to ensure that students from underserved backgrounds are prioritized. The fund is currently working with the National Universities Commission (NUC) to integrate more vocational and technical colleges into the scheme, recognizing the need for skilled labor in the non-oil sector.

    Further reporting from Channels TV and Leadership validates the expansion of the scheme. Channels TV noted that ‘the fund has become a lifeline for families struggling with inflation,’ while Leadership quoted a student union leader who said, ‘NELFUND is the only reason many of us are still in school this semester.’

    Echotitbits take: NELFUND is perhaps the administration’s most successful ‘social contract’ project. However, the long-term sustainability depends on the repayment model, which is tied to post-graduation employment. If the economy doesn’t produce jobs for these 860,000 students, the government may eventually face a massive ‘student debt’ crisis of its own.
    Source: ChannelsTv – https://www.channelstv.com/2025/08/15/%E2%82%A686bn-disbursed-449000-students-beneficiaries-recorded-nelfund/ January 5, 2026

    Photo Credit: ChannelsTv

  • The Gambia’s national university renames its agriculture school after Akinwumi Adesina

    The Gambia’s national university renames its agriculture school after Akinwumi Adesina

    The Gambia’s national university renames its agriculture school after Akinwumi Adesina

    According to Africa Newsroom (via APO Group), the University of The Gambia has renamed its School of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences in honour of Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, citing his long-standing impact on agriculture and development across Africa.

    The move positions the faculty as a symbolic rallying point for food-security research, climate-smart agriculture, and youth-focused agripreneurship—areas that continue to dominate policy conversations across West Africa.

    It also signals a reputational bet: when institutions attach a global development figure’s name to a school, stakeholders expect the standard to rise—through partnerships, research output, and funding.

    Punch also reported the renaming and quoted Adesina’s reaction, including the phrase “deep sense of gratitude.” The Guardian Nigeria similarly confirmed the development, noting the university “renamed its School” in his honour.

    Echotitbits take:
    This is soft power turning into institutional opportunity. Watch for what follows the ceremony—new grants, exchange programmes, and targeted research labs that can turn the name into measurable outcomes.

    Source: The Punch — January 2, 2026 — https://punchng.com/the-gambia-varsity-renames-faculty-after-ex-afdb-president-adesina/
    The Punch 2026-01-02

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • AAUA Hires 32 First-Class Graduates as Graduate Assistants

    Adekunle Ajasin University has offered graduate assistant appointments to 32 first-class graduates, subject to post-NYSC return and institutional conditions. The university framed the move as recognition of excellence and a talent-retention strategy.

    The development highlights an emerging trend of fast-tracking outstanding alumni into early academic-career roles.

    2025-12-09

    Punch

    2025-12-09