Sunday, 8 December 2013

ASUU Strike: AAUA Finally Recruits new Lecturers to Replace Striking Ones

The crisis between the embattled members of the Academic
Staff Union of Universities [ASUU], Adekunle Ajasin
University [AAUA], Ondo state and their management is now
deepened as new lecturers have been employment to replace the striking lecturers.
Recall that when DailyPost visited the campus last Monday,
some old lecturers were seen in various lecture rooms
teaching , thinking the AAUA authorities and the striking
workers have agreed to end the five months old strike.
However, with a statement later issued by the AAUA
ASUU's Chairman, Dr. Meruyi Mekusi, insisting that they
will not call off the strike until their national body orders
them to do so might have forced the management to recruit new lecturers.
Relatively, the Vice Chancellor of the institution, Prof. Femi
Mimiko, has charged the newly recruited lecturers to key into
the work ethics of the Institution and always observe the
values of the teaching profession.
Prof. Mimiko, who also enjoined the academics to be loyal to
the University at all times, gave the charge on Monday last
week at the Opening Ceremony of a two-day orientation
programme organized by the Institution for the new
academics.
The VC said, "Our expectations from you on the job are to be
in constant search for knowledge and devise the innovative
way of dissemination.
There must not be mention of you in anything that is not
worthy. Be role models to students and enhance their moral
standard. You must be like counselors to them at all times. Be shapers of opinions.
Engage in constructive criticism of society. Be solution generators. Be focused and play a big role in national development.
"AAUA is a public trust that is dedicated to building leaders.
You must, therefore, be loyal to the system. We expect you to
give to this University an undiluted loyalty. We just launched
AAUA ALWAYS as a new campaign. The message is that
you must think about this University at all times."
While the VC commended them for being found worthy of
employment after rigorous interviews, he said that the
orientation became necessary to expose them to AAUA
culture.
He said, "This induction is to expose you to our own peculiar
form of pedagogy that we want you to imbibe and to continue
to sustain."
The VC was one of the four resource persons at the
orientation programme and he spoke on "Who is an
Academic?" He said the new intakes were supposed to teach,
engage in research and community service.
Prof. Mimiko urged those among them who were yet to earn
Ph. D. to pursue it vigorously, saying, "For us, Ph. D. is a
must have. Those who are yet to possess the Ph. D. should
know that the most important thing that we will ask when you get here is, 'How far you are going in the pursuit of knowledge, leading to the award of the Ph. D?" He promised that the University would give them support to undertake Ph.D. Programme in any University of their choice.
Other speakers were the Deputy Vice Chancellor, Prof.
Rotimi Ajayi, who spoke on "Academic Profession in the
21st Century"; Prof. Francis Oyebade, who examined "AAUA
Academic Culture"; and Prof. Niyi Akinnaso, who spoke on
"21st Century Teaching".

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