The Lagos State University has refuted the allegation that it has yet to graduate students converting from Higher National Diploma to Bachelor’s Degree since 2020 in spite of the huge sums they paid.
The Coordinator, Centre for Information and Public
Relations, LASU, Oluwayemisi Thomas-Onashile, stated that the report published
by an online platform and entitled, “Despite paying more than half a million
Naira, LASU HND conversion students have not graduated since 2020”, was fraught
with lies and half-truth.
Thomas-Onashile disclosed this in a statement she issued on
Sunday in Lagos.
The coordinator described the report as a calculated attempt
to smear the image of the university.
She stated further that the university like other academic
institutions, had a time frame for opening and closing of its portal (be it for
payment, registration, examination or other academic purposes).
“As a responsible institution, we consider it necessary,
therefore, to provide the true position so that falsehood may not prevail over
truth.
“The HND/B.Sc conversion programme, which is a programme
designed for two academic sessions, commenced at the university in 2020.
“Therefore, it could not have been possible for the
university to graduate the newly-admitted students in the same year of entry –
2020, as reflected in the headline.
“Students who have met the graduation requirements have all
been presented and cleared by the university senate for graduation, an
assertion that can be confirmed in the 26th convocation brochure of the
university.
“A total of 48 duly-registered students graduated at the
26th convocation of the university, 12 students’ results are awaiting approval
of the senate while others have pending issues.
“Any student who does not utilise this time frame as
expected will automatically be shut out.
“This might have accounted for some of them not being able
to register.
“However, students who registered within the given time
frame and sat for their examinations are able to access their results on the
portal once it is released by the directorate of ICT,” she said.
She added that some of the students did not go through the
right channel for registration of courses.
“They might have engaged the services of surrogates to do
the registration on their behalf which is always to their disadvantage.
“Some of the students who did not comply with the rules and
regulations guiding the process wanted the university to waive courses that
they did not pass.
“Those concerned are requested to take all their failed
courses as carry-over, but, they are not willing,” she said.
Thomas-Onashile said that the university would continue to
work in line with the best global practices.
“Students with pending issues are, therefore, requested to
visit the Director, Directorate of School of Part-Time Studies (DSPTS) for
legitimate guides towards resolving their issues,” she said.
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