This order was conveyed in a circular, marked TEB/PRO/E/12/Vol.11/132 dated December 1, 2022, by the National Board for Technical Education, directed to heads of the affected institutions.
A copy of the document signed by the board’s Director, Polytechnic Programmes Department, Ogoh Ngbede, was obtained by dailypost on Tuesday.
The circular read in part, “Polytechnics and other technical institutions in the country should immediately stop admitting students into degree programmes.
“Similarly, polytechnics and allied institutions awarding Nigerian Certificate in Education should restrict themselves to technical courses.
“However, already admitted undergraduates for these programmes should be allowed to round up the programmes into which they are already admitted.
“Institutions have been given a period of four years (up to 2026) to graduate their last set of students for such programmes.**
A copy of the document signed by the board’s Director, Polytechnic Programmes Department, Ogoh Ngbede, was obtained by dailypost on Tuesday.
The circular read in part, “Polytechnics and other technical institutions in the country should immediately stop admitting students into degree programmes.
“Similarly, polytechnics and allied institutions awarding Nigerian Certificate in Education should restrict themselves to technical courses.
“However, already admitted undergraduates for these programmes should be allowed to round up the programmes into which they are already admitted.
“Institutions have been given a period of four years (up to 2026) to graduate their last set of students for such programmes.**
I did not understand anything here
ReplyDeleteMschew! 🙄na una get time to dey bother go school. Radarada! Handwork now even pays more than the yeye collar jobs wey na inside daily traffic plus heightened cost of livelihood!
ReplyDeleteAre we here again ?
ReplyDeleteSo were they not properly vetted for accreditation? Interesting
ReplyDeleteso they can truly face the reason they were set up in the first place...
ReplyDelete