Thu. Nov 7th, 2024

Private polytechnics’ proprietors disagree with ASUU, ASUP

Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu

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Proprietors of Private Polytechnics in Nigeria on Thursday disagreed
with lecturers that tertiary institutions should remain closed to
activities due to COVID-19 pandemic, saying that they were not
sincere.

Lecturers under the aegis of Academic Staff Union of Universities and
Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics had declared that schools in the
country should not be reopened.

According to them, the population of students in public tertiary
institutions was too large to be allowed for social distancing in line
with COVID-19 management protocols.

But the Association of Proprietors of Private Polytechnics in Nigeria
appealed to the Federal Government to, as a matter of urgency, reopen
polytechnics shut down in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

They called on the Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, to
announce a date within the current phase of COVID-19 lockdown for the
resumption of polytechnics.

The appeal came a few weeks after the Pro-Chancellor of Afe Babalola
University, Ado-Ekiti, Afe Babalola (SAN), made similar demand to the
Federal Government that private universities should be reopened if
public Universities were not ready.

While maintaining that it had put measures in place for the safe
return of students to campus, the proprietors said the return of
students to campus would help polytechnics contribute towards
combating the COVID-19 pandemic.

But the National President of APPPN, Dr. Moses Adeyemi, disagreed
saying he doubted their sincerity.

“APPPN doubts the sincerity of ASUU and ASUP in this regard,” he said,
adding that COVID-19 has exposed admission fraud in public tertiary
institutions.

Adeyemi said, “The regulatory bodies, National University Commission
and National Board for Technical Education access facilities before
granting approval to offer a program and do not also authorise
admission above the carrying capacity of the institutions based on its
facilities.

“Admissions into Nigerian tertiary institutions are also regulated by
Joint Admission and Matriculation Board which do not allow admission
above carrying capacity approved by NUC or NBTE. The question now is:
how did these institutions come about the extra-large classes?

“We don’t believe that there are different standards for private
institutions. Private Polytechnic admits within its capacity and most
of us don’t have enough students because the public institutions hoard
the students during JAMB admission. The number of students in private
polytechnics allows for social distancing.”

He said it was because of profit that public schools “over-admit”
students and do so outside the laws, outside the approval of NUC and
NBTE, and without the clear knowledge of JAMB.

“If not for profit why should public schools be having students in
regular programs, evening programs, weekend programs, consultancy
programs, etc. Are these programmes not profit-oriented?” APPPN asked.

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