EDUCATION

WHY EMPLOYERS SAYS GRADUATE ARE NOT JOB READY

AN OPINION Graduate employability has become a major concern in Nigeria’s higher education discourse. Despite rising numbers of university graduates each year, employers across sectors continue to express dissatisfaction with the level of job readiness among young job seekers. This mismatch raises important questions about what universities are producing and what the labour market actually

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CULTURAL TRADITIONS VS MODERN CAMPUS LIFE

AN INTERVIEW The clash between cultural traditions and modern campus life is no longer just a theoretical discussion. It is a lived reality for many Nigerian university students, often creating confusion, conflict, and identity struggles. Across campuses, students report increasing pressure to abandon traditional values in order to “fit in” with evolving social norms. A

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THE HIDDEN COST OF BEING A UNIVERSITY STUDENT IN NIGERIA

AN EXPLAINER University education in Nigeria is often presented as a pathway to upward mobility. However, for many students, the reality extends far beyond tuition fees, revealing a network of hidden financial and psychological burdens that shape their academic experience. Across federal and state universities, students face rising costs in accommodation, transportation, feeding, and academic

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Gender Representation in Student Leadership: Why Women Remain Underrepresented in Nigerian Universities in 2026

An Explainer While female enrolment has improved significantly in many Nigerian universities, sometimes reaching near parity or even majorities in certain faculties, women’s representation in Student Union Government (SUG) leadership positions remains strikingly low. Top roles like President, Treasurer, or Secretary-General continue to be male-dominated, with women often confined to “supporting” portfolios. Current Situation and

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The Digital Divide: How Internet Access Inequality Continues to Undermine Nigerian Students in 2026

An Explainer As Nigerian universities accelerate their shift toward digital learning platforms, e-assignments, online research databases, hybrid lectures, and AI-integrated tools in 2026, a persistent digital divide continues to create two classes of students: those who can fully engage and those perpetually struggling on the margins. Understanding the Digital Divide: This inequality spans access to

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Student Unionism in Nigerian Universities: A Dying Voice or a Much-Needed Force in 2026?

An opinion In the bustling lecture halls, hostels, and faculty corridors of universities like UI, OAU, UNILAG, UNIBEN, and AAU Ekpoma, the historic chant “Aluta Continua, Victoria Ascerta” once ignited passion and collective action. In 2026, however, many students quietly ask: Does student unionism still matter, or has it become an expensive distraction from academics

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How Media Ownership Shapes News Bias in Nigeria

AN EXPLAINER Nigeria’s information ecosystem remains highly polarised, with news content frequently influenced by the political, economic, or personal interests of media owners. Whether state-controlled or privately owned by influential politicians and business figures, ownership continues to shape story selection, framing, tone, and public discourse in 2026. Mechanisms of Bias: Government-owned broadcasters often promote official

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