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In 2012, four high school teenage students – Adebola, Abiola, Toyin and Eniola showcased a thoughtful and practical innovation that warmed the heart of Africans and the international community. This invention was a urine power generator which could provide safer, affordable and more access to electricity. The invention which was first showcased at the Maker Faire Africa annual pan-African conference was born out of the girls’ school chemistry lab and could create 6 hours of electricity with 1 Liter of urine. Furthermore this girls said The system separates urine into nitrogen, water and hydrogen. Urine is put into an electrolytic cell, which separates out the hydrogen. The hydrogen goes into a water filter for purification, which then gets pushed into the gas cylinder. The gas cylinder pushes hydrogen into a cylinder of liquid borax, which is used to remove the moisture from the hydrogen gas. This purified hydrogen gas is pushed into the generator. The girls say that one litre of urine gives six hours of electricity. Quoted from:www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/24/see-pictures-16years-old-girls-invented-urine-powered-generator/
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Wale Adebanwi a Nigerian scholar and poet has been appointed to the prestigious Rhodes Professorship in Race Relations in the School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies at the University of Oxford, United Kingdom. The 47-year-old is therefore the first black African scholar to be appointed to the prestigious position since it was created more than 60 years ago. Before Adebanwi, there had been professors like: Professor Kenneth Kirkwood, who occupied the chair for 32 years, Professor Terence Ranger, and Professor William Beinart, who retired from the position in 2015. Before his appointment he was a professor at the University of California, Davis, United States, and he is also set to be a Fellow of St Anthony’s College, Oxford, from July 1, 2017. The Rhodes Professorship in race relations is named for Cecil Rhodes a British businessman, mining tycoon and politician in South Africa who served as Prime Minister of Cape Colony from 1890-1896.When he received the appointment, the body said of him: “He is a scholar of international distinction with an outstanding record of research publications. Read news In full: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/11/nigerian-scholar-made-history-first-black-african-rhodes-professor-oxford-university/
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The release of this form (Jamb 2017 CBT registration form) is now able to give an answer to questions that many aspirants has been asking which include Is Jamb 2017/2018 form Out? Has Jamb 2017/2018 CBT registration Started? Can i Register For Jamb 2017 Now? When will Jamb 2017 form be released? When is Jamb 2017 Registration Going To Start? Where To Obtain Jamb 2017 Registration. Read News In Full: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/08/jamb-20172018-form-see-information/
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Eesha Khare, an 18-year-old student has invented a super- fast charger for mobile phones. (www.naijaschooling.com.ng) Eesha Khare, a high-school pupil from San Jose, California, has created a gadget which fully charges a mobile within 20-30 seconds. The device, called a supercapacitor, small enough to fit into a phone, could mean an end to ever running low on battery power. The invention was presented at one of the world’s most prestigious science fairs this week, where Khare won a prize of £33,000. The 18-year-old said the money would go toward funding her studies. See More Pictures Of Her Invention: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/07/teenage-girl-invents-worlds-fastest-mobile-phone-battery/
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Esha Khare, an 18-year-old student has invented a super- fast charger for mobile phones.(www.naijaschooling.com.ng) .Esha Khare, a high-school pupil from San Jose, California, has created a gadget which fully charges a mobile within 20-30 seconds. The device, called a supercapacitor, small enough to fit into a phone, could mean an end to ever running low on battery power. The invention was presented at one of the world’s most prestigious science fairs this week, where Khare won a prize of £33,000. The 18-year-old said the money would go toward funding her studies. See more pics: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/07/teenage-girl-invents-worlds-fastest-mobile-phone-battery/ 1 Like
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In an interview with campusclique, the 22-year-old who. would be graduating on Tuesday, January 24, speaks on how she achieved her grades. Read from the interview below: Was 5.00 GPA your target from the day you got into Unilag? Not at all. When I finished my first year, my fellowship- The Redeemed Christian Fellowship had overcomers award and encouraged us to do well academically even spiritually so I was challenged by it. Were you this exceptional when you were in secondary school? Like you had straight A’s in your WAEC? I had 1st position from Jss1-Sss3. I also finished as the best graduating student in my set. Though I did not have straight As in WAEC but they were all distinctions. How easy was it to graduate with a 5.0? Well, I must say it’s been God all through. He provided wisdom at every point. Also, He brought my coursemates and friends who helped me immensely. The likes of Laurina, Rotimi, Gbemi, Yemisi, Tofunmi, The 5, Squad45, Samah, Fesobi, Bidemi, Queenette, TLP etc. I worked a lot with people. It’s good to include that there were challenges but the beautiful thing is that they were for a short while. It was not easy but considering the fact that God provided strength all the way, I would say it was easy with God his would be the second student from the institution that would be graduating with a perfect cgpa. Last academic session, Ayodele Daniel Dada from the department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences finished with a cgpa of 5.00 Read More:www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/06/oyindamola-omotuyi-department-systems-engineering-university-lagos-unilag-akoka-emerged-best-graduating-student-20152016-session-cumulative-gpa-5-00/
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A secondary school student, Mukthar Jawad has invented a prototype in AbujaJawad, an SS3 art student of Community Staff Schools Asokoro told the News Agency of Nigeria today, December 1 that he invented the motorcycle to ease the mode of transportation in Nigeria and Africa at large. He stated that he has been riding the prototype as a mode of transportation from his house to the school for more than three months without any problems.His words: “I like things that involve mechanical, assemble and dissemble. This made me perceived I can do something different to better the means for transportation. “My motor-bike has features that are partly bicycle and partly motorcycle,’’ he said. On his part, the principal of the school, Sa’idu Ahmed said that it was a thing of joy for such one of the art students to use his talent for such a discovery. “I have gone to his house to encourage him and he later told me that he had finished the project. “This is genuine knowledge from him; it should be cheaper and easier to manage compared with bicycle or motorcycle,’’ he said. Read More Interesting Stories: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/05/see-pics-secondary-student-invented-motorcycle-abuja/
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In Ghana, a Nigerian lady identified as Fathia Kareem bagged the overall best medical student from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. Kareem did not only top all other medical students in her class but carted away with 12 of the 15 awards given out. The intelligence of Nigerian students cannot be quantified all over the world, as they keep topping all other persons in their class. See more pics of Kareem Fathia: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/04/nigerian-medicine-student-won-12-awards-15/ 1 Like 1 Share
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See Pics Of Olabisi Who Graduated From The University Of ILORIN With A First Class And Won a Masters Scholarship to Study in The United Kingdom. Olabisi was the best graduating student in Construction and Project Management at Loughborough University UK. www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/04/see-pics-olabisi-graduated-university-ilorin-first-class-won-masters-scholarship-study-united-kingdom/ 17 Likes
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1. The adoption of CCTV cameras for all the CBT centres. 2. The adoption of a single hall containing 250 functional desktop or laptop computer systems with extra 25 as backups. The computers must be minimum 15 inch screens and must be connected to robust computer server with capacity to carry a minimum of 250 systems concurrently. 3. The adoption of cabled Local Area Network (LAN) and not wireless connectivity. 4. The adoption of cubicles with minimum length of 26 by 18 inches. 5. There will be adequate security with minimum of five technical personnel and a network engineer on site. 6. Availability of back-up power supply (power generating set of minimum of 40KVA for a centre with 250 systems) and UPS/inverters that can carry all systems for a minimum of two hours. 7. All the centres should have minimum of 250-capacity reception facility such as canopy with chairs. 8. All the centres’ premises must be enclosed and must have adequate and functional air-conditioners. The centres must also have lighting, up-to-date antivirus and minimum of Windows 7, among other's. Read more Interesting news: www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2017/01/04/no-cheating-jamb-introduces-8-new-guidelines-2017-utme/ |
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Harvard University … [1st in U.S.] (Cambridge, MA, USA) Harvard University is the standard by which all other research universities are measured. No school has ever challenged its position as the world’s premier academic institution in the history of the Shanghai rankings. Founded in 1636 (only 16 years after the Mayflower touched down at Plymouth Rock), Harvard is the oldest school in the world’s richest nation, and it has capitalized on the benefits this grants. Under manager Jack Meyer’s leadership, the school’s endowment fund grew from $4.6 billion to $25.8 billion in 15 years. Today, the university possesses over $36 billion, and its fortune is still growing. But there is much more to Harvard than massive wealth. The school has produced 47 Nobel Laureates, 32 heads of state, and 48 Pulitzer Prize winners. It boasts the largest academic library in the world (Widener Library, home to some 6 million volumes), as well as leading medical, law, and business schools. It has an integrated alumni network that stretches around the globe. It would be invidious to single out any of Harvard’s many academic departments for its excellence, for the school’s principal claim on the #1 position lies in the fact that it is at or very near the top in nearly every field across the entire spectrum of the sciences and the humanities! Not only is Harvard dominant across a multitude of academic fields, it is also ideally situated to work alongside a variety of other schools. The most obvious example is MIT, but the greater Boston metropolitan area is also home to Boston College, Boston University, Northeastern, Tufts, Brandeis, and several other research universities. This fact equips both students and faculty with endless opportunities for collaborative research. See where Harvard ranks amongst The Richest University in the World See Harvard’s ranking among the Best Mathematics Programs in the World Return to List 2 Stanford University … [2nd in U.S.] (Stanford, CA, USA) With an $18.7 billion endowment Stanford has access to numerous world-class research resources. The school’s 1,189 acre Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve lets scientists study ecosystems first hand. Its 150-foot radio telescope, nicknamed “The Dish,” studies the ionosphere. Stanford also boasts a 315-acre habitat reserve which is actively trying to bring back the endangered California tiger salamander. And the SLAC Accelerator Laboratory actively advances the U.S. Department of Energy’s research. Stanford is also affiliated with the prestigious Hoover Institution, which is one of the nation’s leading social, political, and economic think tanks. But it takes more than just great laboratories and facilities to build a great research center. Stanford also has some of the finest minds in the world working for it. The school’s faculty currently include 22 Nobel Laureates, 51 members of the American Philosophical Society, three Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients, 158 National Academy of Science members, five Pulitzer Prize winners, and 27 MacArthur Fellows. See where Stanford ranks amongst The Richest University in the World See Stanford’s ranking among the Best Mathematics Programs in the World Return to List 3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) … [3rd in U.S.] (Cambridge, MA, USA) In the century and a half since its founding in 1861, MIT has become the world’s preeminent science research center. The university is known for a focused approach that uses first- class methodologies to tackle world-class problems. This pragmatic creativity has produced legions of scientists and engineers, as well as 80 Nobel Laureates, 56 National Medal of Science winners, 43 MacArthur Fellows, and 28 National Medal of Technology and Innovation winners. Nevertheless, the school’s more than $10 billion endowment still leaves plenty of room for the arts and humanities. This is why MIT Press can publish 30 prestigious journals and 220 state-of-the-art books every year. Since 1899, MIT Technology Review has continuously researched developing trends in the industrial sciences and other related fields, making their publications essential for anyone trying to understand where future innovation is headed. Notable people affiliated with MIT include Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, father of linguistics Noam Chomsky, former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, and former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. See where MIT ranks amongst The Richest University in the World Return to List Read morewww.naijaschooling.com.ng/2016/12/25/top-ten-best-universities-to-study-in-the-world/
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JAMB SUBJECT COMBINATIONS FOR SOCIAL SCIENCE COURSES: Business Administration: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any other Social Science subject Public Administration: Use of English, Government, Economics and any other subject Banking and Finance: Use of English, Mathematics, one Social Science subject and any other subject Economics: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any of Government, History, Geography, Literature in English, French and CRK/IRK. Demography and Social Statistics: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics/ Geography and any other subject. Geography: Use of English, Geography and two other Arts or Social Science subjects Library Science: Use of English and Any three Arts or Social Science subjects Mass Communication: Use of English and any three from Arts or Social Science subjects. Sociology: Use of English, Three Social Science or Arts subjects. Political Science: Use of English, Government or History plus two other Social Science/Arts subjects. Philosophy: Use of English, Government and any other two subjects Psychology: Use of English, Any three subjects from Arts or Social Science Religious Studies: Use of English Language, CRK/IRS and any two other subjects. Social Works: Use of English Language, Mathematics, Economics/Geography and any other subject Accountancy: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any other Social Science subject Sociology and Anthropology: Use of English, Three Social Science or Arts Subjects Industrial Relations: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other relevant subject Human Resources Management: Use of English, Economics, Government and any other relevant subjects. International Relations: Use of English, Economics, Literature- inEnglish and Geography/Govern ment/History. Business Management: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and one other subject. Cooperative and Rural Development: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other subject. Tourism: English, Mathematics, Economics and any other subject. Marketing: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other relevant Subject. Insurance: English, Mathematics, Economics and one other subject. JAMB SUBJECT COMBINATIONS FOR SCIENCE COURSES Food, Science and Technology: Use of English, Chemistry, Mathematics / Physics and Agric Science Pharmacy: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Industrial Chemistry: Use of English, Chemistry, Mathematics and any of Physics/Biology/Agricultural Science. Fisheries: Use of English, Chemistry, Biology/Agricultural Science and any other Science subject. Geology: Use of English and any three Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, Biology and Geography. Geography: Use of English, Geography and any two of Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Agricultural Science. Medicine and Surgery: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Agricultural Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Computer Science: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and one of Biology, Chemistry, Agric Science, Economics and Geography Biochemistry: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Biological Sciences: Use of English, Biology, Chemistry and Physics or Mathematics. Physics: Use of English, Physics, Mathematics and Chemistry or Biology. Mathematics: Use of English, Mathematics and any two of Physics, Chemistry, Economics, Biology and Agricultural Science. Chemistry: Use of English, Chemistry and two of Physics, Biology and Mathematics. Nursing: Use of English, Physics, Biology and Chemistry Surveying and Geoinformatics: Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics. Statistics: Use of English, Mathematics and any two of Physics, Building: Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics. Microbiology: Use of English, Biology, Chemistry and either Physics or Mathematics. Veterinary Science: English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology Forestry: Use of English, Chemistry, Biology or Agriculture and Physics or Mathematics. Civil Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Chemical Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Computer Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Electrical Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Estate Management: Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and one other subject Anatomy: English, Mathematics, Biology and Chemistry or Physics. Dentistry: Use of English, Chemistry, Biology and one Science subject. Medical Laboratory Science: English Language, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. Medical Rehabilitation: Use of English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology Physiology: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Electronic Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Marine Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Mechanical Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Metallurgical and Materials Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Petroleum and Gas Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Systems Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Structural Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Production and Industrial Engineering: Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry. Architecture: English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics. Quantity Surveying: Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics. Urban and Regional Planning: English, Mathematics, Geography and one of Economics, Physics, Chemistry. Physiotherapy: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Radiography: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry Veterinary Medicine: Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry JAMB SUBJECT COMBINATIONS FOR ART COURSES: French: English, French and any other two subjects from Arts and Social Sciences. English Language: Use of English, Lit.-in-English, one other Arts subject and another Arts or Social Science subject. Hausa: English, Hausa, Lit in English and any of Economics, Government, History and Arabic. History and International Studies: Use of English, History/Government and any other two subjects from Arts & Social Science. Islamic Studies: English, Islamic Religious Studies plus two other Arts subjects. Igbo: English, Igbo and two subjects from Arts and social Sciences. Mass Communication: Use of English, Any three Arts and Social Science subjects. Music: Use of English, Music, one other Arts subject plus any other subject. Philosophy: Use of English, Any three subjects. Arabic and Islamic Studies: Use of English, Arabic and Two subjects from Arts and/or Social Sciences. Christian Religious Studies: Use of English, Two Arts subjects including Christian Religious Knowledge and any other subject. Fine and Applied Arts: Use of English Language, Fine Art and two other Arts subjects or Social Science subject Theatre Arts: Use of English, Lit. in English and two other relevant subjects. Linguistics: Use of English, Two relevant Arts subjects and any other subject. English and International Studies: Use of English, Literature in English, Government or History or any other Arts subjects. Religious Studies: English, CRK/IRS and any two other subjects. Yoruba: Use of English, Yoruba and two other subjects in Arts or Social Sciences. Anthropology: Use of English, Any three of History, CRK/IRK, Geography, Economics, Literature in English and French. Criminology and Security Studies: English, Economics, Government, and any one of the following: History, Geography, Literature in English, French, IRK, Hausa. Law: English, Literature, Economics and any other Art Subject. Civil Law: English Language and Any three Arts or Social Science subjects. Islamic / Sharia Law: Use of English Language and Any three Arts or Social Science subjects including Arabic or Islamic Studies Note: Just like I said above, English Language is a compulsory subject for every course in Nigeria Universities. Important: To have me confirm your 2016 Jamb UTME Subject Combination. Drop a question below. credits: SchoolNews Ng | Damilola Olisa | DailySchoolNews
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The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) on Wednesday said tertiary institutions in the country have not been able to successfully fill 70 per cent of their admission quotas by candidates in the last five years due to uniform cutoff marks adopted by the federal government. JAMB Rgistrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede stated this when Senate Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFund led by its chairman, Senator, Jibrin Barau, visited the headquarters of JAMB on an oversight function in Abuja. He explained that the adoption of 180 cutoff mark as a benchmark for admission into tertiary institutions had consistently kept candidates who are qualified but with less cut -off points on the street. Oloyede said: “Every year, we do not meet 70% of the quota contrary to what people think that there are more people than the existing places. We have in the last five years, not filled 70% of the quota. We need to ask a question, why? The simple answer is a mismatch. “I can say it without any doubt that it has never been obeyed. It is only obeyed in the papers. When you talk about the practice of it, there are hundreds of people in our universities, polytechnics and colleges of education that have not gone through JAMB. “The reason is that we are setting standards that cannot be obeyed. They (universities, polytechnics and colleges of education) will now go through the back door and recruit people with 160, 150, 140 and some who did not take JAMB at all because you have made 180 the minimum,” he stated. Oloyede informed the committee that he “went to colleges of education in Kano and Jigawa, all the institutions there I toured the place to have first hand information and they told me; ‘look we know you. You will say obey the rules. This is the rule, the rule cannot be obeyed.’ “Why? If you obey 180, 70 % of our colleges of education will be out of duty because they will have no student. What they do is that they recruit with 140, 130 and they just say let JAMB be doing what JAMB is doing. What we have done is that we should not www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2016/12/23/jamb-70-per-cent-admission-quota-not-filled-for-five-years/ saying one thing and be doing another
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Although you can study in Germany for free at public institutions as an undergraduate, there is a charge per semester for enrolment, confirmationand administration – usually between €150 and €250 (US$170-280)depending on the university. There may be an additional charge of around €100 for a “Semesterticket”, which covers public transport expenses for six months. If you exceed the standard period of study by more than four semesters, you may also face a long-term fee charge,which could be as much as €800 (US$920) per semester.Most universities in Germany are public. Private institutions are usually primarily dependent on tuition fees for their funding (though some also receive support from foundations), and can charge up to €20,000 (US$22,850) per year. The University of Witten- www.naijaschooling.com.ng/2016/12/23/undergraduate-costs-to-study-ingermany/
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I am 5 letter word,
If all the 5 letters are available I am a talent in you,
If you remove my first letter I will die,
if you remove my first 2 letters I will be sick.
Who am I
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