|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 17:34:37 GMT
Application into Nigerian Universities by State of Origin. (2013, 2014 and 2015)
South East Imo: 134,718 - 120,006 - 104,382 = 359,106 Anambra: 91,959 - 84,520 - 77,692 = 254,171 Enugu: 80,321 - 77,519 - 69,378 = 227,218 Abia: 66,189 - 60,059 - 51,620 = 177,868 Ebonyi: 36,105 - 36,512 - 32,809 = 105,426 TOTALS: 409,292 - 378,616 - 335,881 = 1,123,789
South South Delta: 101,610 - 88,008 - 78,856 = 268,474 Edo: 82,099 - 73,571 - 66,106 = 221,776 Akwa Ibom: 77,361 - 67,784 - 62,369 = 207,514 Rivers: 52,909 - 50,768 - 41,329 = 145,006 Cross River: 41,660 - 36,526 - 29,764 = 107,950 Bayelsa: 24,868 - 23,139 - 21,207 = 69,214 TOTALS: 380,507 - 339,796 - 299,631 = 1,019,934
South West Osun: 84,108 - 81,057 - 72,757 = 237,922 Oyo: 83,933 - 80,883 - 72,303 = 237,119 Ogun: 79,902 - 70,112 - 62,974 = 212,988 Ondo: 64,355 - 59,385 - 54,113 = 177,853 Ekiti: 40,436 - 37,223 - 34,398 = 112,057 Lagos: 29,575 - 24,075 - 24,162 = 77,812 TOTAL: 382,309 - 352,735 - 320,707 = 1,055,751
North Central Kwara: 60,439 - 59,248 - 54,597 = 174,284 Kogi: 73,604 - 69,384 - 57,695 = 200,683
Guys.... Abeg, make una come let's discuss ooooooo.
|
|
|
Post by Short_Biscuit on Dec 24, 2016 17:51:49 GMT
Application into Nigerian Universities by State of Origin. (2013, 2014 and 2015) South EastImo: 134,718 - 120,006 - 104,382 = 359,106 Anambra: 91,959 - 84,520 - 77,692 = 254,171 Enugu: 80,321 - 77,519 - 69,378 = 227,218 Abia: 66,189 - 60,059 - 51,620 = 177,868 Ebonyi: 36,105 - 36,512 - 32,809 = 105,426 TOTALS: 409,292 - 378,616 - 335,881 = 1,123,789 South SouthDelta: 101,610 - 88,008 - 78,856 = 268,474 Edo: 82,099 - 73,571 - 66,106 = 221,776 Akwa Ibom: 77,361 - 67,784 - 62,369 = 207,514 Rivers: 52,909 - 50,768 - 41,329 = 145,006 Cross River: 41,660 - 36,526 - 29,764 = 107,950 Bayelsa: 24,868 - 23,139 - 21,207 = 69,214 TOTALS: 380,507 - 339,796 - 299,631 = 1,019,934South WestOsun: 84,108 - 81,057 - 72,757 = 237,922 Oyo: 83,933 - 80,883 - 72,303 = 237,119 Ogun: 79,902 - 70,112 - 62,974 = 212,988 Ondo: 64,355 - 59,385 - 54,113 = 177,853 Ekiti: 40,436 - 37,223 - 34,398 = 112,057 Lagos: 29,575 - 24,075 - 24,162 = 77,812 TOTAL: 382,309 - 352,735 - 320,707 = 1,055,751 North CentralKwara: 60,439 - 59,248 - 54,597 = 174,284 Kogi: 73,604 - 69,384 - 57,695 = 200,683 Guys.... Abeg, make una come let's discuss ooooooo. Those are some unimpressive numbers from the SW.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 17:59:04 GMT
Application into Nigerian Universities by State of Origin. (2013, 2014 and 2015) South EastImo: 134,718 - 120,006 - 104,382 = 359,106 Anambra: 91,959 - 84,520 - 77,692 = 254,171 Enugu: 80,321 - 77,519 - 69,378 = 227,218 Abia: 66,189 - 60,059 - 51,620 = 177,868 Ebonyi: 36,105 - 36,512 - 32,809 = 105,426 TOTALS: 409,292 - 378,616 - 335,881 = 1,123,789 South SouthDelta: 101,610 - 88,008 - 78,856 = 268,474 Edo: 82,099 - 73,571 - 66,106 = 221,776 Akwa Ibom: 77,361 - 67,784 - 62,369 = 207,514 Rivers: 52,909 - 50,768 - 41,329 = 145,006 Cross River: 41,660 - 36,526 - 29,764 = 107,950 Bayelsa: 24,868 - 23,139 - 21,207 = 69,214 TOTALS: 380,507 - 339,796 - 299,631 = 1,019,934South WestOsun: 84,108 - 81,057 - 72,757 = 237,922 Oyo: 83,933 - 80,883 - 72,303 = 237,119 Ogun: 79,902 - 70,112 - 62,974 = 212,988 Ondo: 64,355 - 59,385 - 54,113 = 177,853 Ekiti: 40,436 - 37,223 - 34,398 = 112,057 Lagos: 29,575 - 24,075 - 24,162 = 77,812 TOTAL: 382,309 - 352,735 - 320,707 = 1,055,751 North CentralKwara: 60,439 - 59,248 - 54,597 = 174,284 Kogi: 73,604 - 69,384 - 57,695 = 200,683 Guys.... Abeg, make una come let's discuss ooooooo. Those are some unimpressive numbers from the SW. VERY VERY Unimpressive... Imagine Kogi has more university applicants than Ondo, even with the former having a lesser population, and being in the North Central? See Oyo shoulder to shoulder with far less populated states like Edo! Or am I missing something?
|
|
|
Post by Short_Biscuit on Dec 24, 2016 18:09:25 GMT
Those are some unimpressive numbers from the SW. VERY VERY Unimpressive... Imagine Kogi has more university applicants than Ondo, even with the former having a lesser population, and being in the North Central? See Oyo shoulder to shoulder with far less populated states like Edo! Or am I missing something? It represents an unsettling trend bro. Our loud-mouthed SE neighbours don already latch on these numbers, and project that in a generation or so from now, their uni graduates would displace ours in our region. While I think that's a wild and unrealistic prognosis, nevertheless we should be worried about these numbers. But I feel that this can be corrected with 5-years or even less with concerted effort on the part of the SW governments. Imo state didn't always have that many WAEC and Uni applicants/enrollment, somehow the state was able to dramatically increase their numbers within 5 years or so. So, yeah.. definitely it can be improved upon. Obviously our state governments have neglected the all-important education sector.
|
|
|
Post by Short_Biscuit on Dec 24, 2016 18:14:04 GMT
Ogbeni Ogunnaike : Check out these raw WAEC registration figures from just 2 years ago. The SW was clearly tops here, at least regisration wise -- the results weren't impressive here either.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 18:18:10 GMT
VERY VERY Unimpressive... Imagine Kogi has more university applicants than Ondo, even with the former having a lesser population, and being in the North Central? See Oyo shoulder to shoulder with far less populated states like Edo! Or am I missing something? It represents an unsettling trend bro. Our loud-mouthed SE neighbours don already latch on these numbers, and project that in a generation or so from now, their uni graduates would displace ours in our region. While I think that's a wild and unrealistic prognosis, nevertheless we should be worried about these numbers. But I feel that this can be corrected with 5-years or even less with concerted effort on the part of the SW governments. Imo state didn't always have that many WAEC and Uni applicants/enrollment, somehow the state was able to dramatically increase their numbers within 5 years or so. So, yeah.. definitely it can be improved upon. Obviously our state governments have neglected the all-important education sector. I have been seeing figures from 2010 on NL and Imo has been that high since way back then. What happens to all those of us who don't make it into uni? Polytechnics or what? I am trying to understand the full picture here. All the SW states are massively underperforming except Ekiti and Osun who are underperforming only slightly. Oyo should be an educationally disadvantaged state with these figures I am seeing here. Time for sugarcoating of facts in the SW should just stop. The future is scary bro.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 18:20:37 GMT
Ogbeni Ogunnaike : Check out these raw WAEC registration figures from just 2 years ago. The SW was clearly tops here, at least regisration wise -- the results weren't impressive here either. Are those their states of origin or states where they wrote the exams...
|
|
|
Post by Short_Biscuit on Dec 24, 2016 18:25:22 GMT
Ogbeni Ogunnaike : Check out these raw WAEC registration figures from just 2 years ago. The SW was clearly tops here, at least regisration wise -- the results weren't impressive here either. Are those their states of origin or states where they wrote the exams... Now that I don't know. But I'm wondering how come a state like Imo can have that many Uni enrollments that don't correlate with these sort of WAEC registration numbers? Pardon me if I sound ignorant here. Perhaps there are other criterias for Uni enrollment besides WAEC. I'm sure there's a logical explanation to that.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 18:31:41 GMT
In 2013 the SW accounted for 20.28% of National applicants
In 2014 the SW accounted for 21.61% of National applicants
In 2015 the SW accounted for 21.73% of National applicants
This is just tagging along our population ratio in Nigeria, and not really performing. Given the North's underperformance... an ideal scenario should be closer to 32% of national applicants.
|
|
|
Post by Short_Biscuit on Dec 24, 2016 18:39:13 GMT
In 2013 the SW accounted forĀ 20.28% of National applicants In 2014 the SW accounted for 21.61% of National applicants In 2015 the SW accounted for 21.73% of National applicants This is just tagging along our population ratio in Nigeria, and not really performing. Given the North's underperformance... an ideal scenario should be closer to 32% of national applicants. Truth be told, SW performance is serious cause for concern.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 18:39:56 GMT
In 2013 the SW accounted for 20.28% of National applicants In 2014 the SW accounted for 21.61% of National applicants In 2015 the SW accounted for 21.73% of National applicants This is just tagging along our population ratio in Nigeria, and not really performing. Given the North's underperformance... an ideal scenario should be closer to 32% of national applicants. for the SE 2013 = Accounted for 23.53%2014 = Accounted for 23.19%2015 = Accounted for 22.76
Short_Biscuit , They seem to be losing steam though, while we seem to be gaining momentum. At the rate in difference projections, 2016 or 2017 should be the year we surpass them.
|
|
|
Post by Her Highness on Dec 24, 2016 20:07:52 GMT
VERY VERY Unimpressive... Imagine Kogi has more university applicants than Ondo, even with the former having a lesser population, and being in the North Central? See Oyo shoulder to shoulder with far less populated states like Edo! Or am I missing something? It represents an unsettling trend bro. Our loud-mouthed SE neighbours don already latch on these numbers, and project that in a generation or so from now, their uni graduates would displace ours in our region. While I think that's a wild and unrealistic prognosis, nevertheless we should be worried about these numbers. But I feel that this can be corrected with 5-years or even less with concerted effort on the part of the SW governments. Imo state didn't always have that many WAEC and Uni applicants/enrollment, somehow the state was able to dramatically increase their numbers within 5 years or so. So, yeah.. definitely it can be improved upon. Obviously our state governments have neglected the all-important education sector. Also keep in mind that many of those SW numbers are also non Yorubas. I think if we stop assuming that the worst won't happen, we'll see results. As of now, we have a lot to worry about.
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 20:26:35 GMT
It represents an unsettling trend bro. Our loud-mouthed SE neighbours don already latch on these numbers, and project that in a generation or so from now, their uni graduates would displace ours in our region. While I think that's a wild and unrealistic prognosis, nevertheless we should be worried about these numbers. But I feel that this can be corrected with 5-years or even less with concerted effort on the part of the SW governments. Imo state didn't always have that many WAEC and Uni applicants/enrollment, somehow the state was able to dramatically increase their numbers within 5 years or so. So, yeah.. definitely it can be improved upon. Obviously our state governments have neglected the all-important education sector. Also keep in mind that many of those SW numbers are also non Yorubas. I think if we stop assuming that the worst won't happen, we'll see results. As of now, we have a lot to worry about. the figures are by state origin. abi whuch one were you referring to?
|
|
|
Post by Ogbeni Ogunnaike on Dec 24, 2016 20:37:33 GMT
I am seeing another list now, which is number of applicants and admissions into all Nigerian degree awarding institutions .e (Navy academy, Nigerian defence academy, etc) and the SW seems to have made up the deficits there. Might not be about just universities after all sha.
|
|
|
Post by Honorebu on Dec 24, 2016 20:39:30 GMT
Or could it be that they're just slightly more populated?
Oops I take that back. They have 5 states, we have 6
|
|