Boy 16 denied University Education to Study Medicine due to age limitations

A 16 year old Nigerian boy, Okorogheye Orisheneye David has been denied admission into the University of Lagos (UNILAG) to study Medicine due to age limitations.

The 16-year-old  passed the  West African Secondary School Certificate Examination WASSCE in the 2018 academic year,  A1 in all nine core and elective subjects at age 15.

According to an old law in the Africa’s most populated country, persons below the age of seventeen (17) cannot be admitted in to a University.

At 16, David is a year short of the minimum required University going age of 17 and as such would have to wait and apply after his seventeenth birthday.

When David Okorogheye of Starfield College, Fagba, Iju, Lagos was preparing for the May/June 2018 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) and the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), there were high hopes that by October he would be in the university.

With the 2018 results of the May/June WASSCE and UTME out and his stellar performance, his classmates and school, parents as well as relations concluded he will secure automatic admission or be among the first on the merit list of the University of Lagos.

They were wrong. Despite his sterling performance in both examinations, the Delta State born lad was denied admission on account of his age. He is 15 years old and a candidate must be 16 years before he/she can be offered admission into UNILAG and some other universities in the country.

His classmates, teachers and family members have resigned to fate that in the 2018/2019 admission exercise, David will not participate due to age barrier. In fact, he was not part of applicants that wrote UNILAG post UTME test recently.

WASSCE AND UTME RESULTS

In the May/June 2018 WASSCE, Okorogheye with examination number 4251025056 obtained 9As: Civic Education A1, English Language A1, Further Mathematics A1, Mathematics A1, Biology A1, Chemistry A1, Physics A1, Computer Studies A1 and Catering Craft Practice A1.
In the 2018 UTME he scored 332: English Language, 67, Chemistry 91, Physics 89 and Biology 85.

[b]STAR AT SCHOOL GRADUATION[/
b]
He was the star attraction at his school valedictory service/graduation as he received standing ovation several times for his academic achievements. He emerged the best student for the 2017/2018 session and was bestowed with five awards.

When the Director of Studies, Mr. Chris Eigbe informed the gathering that David lost his dad at the age of eight and his education was sponsored by his aunties and uncles, guests could not but applaud his academic feat. His Mum was close to tears.

Sounding confident of his accomplishment, Director of Studies, Starfield College, Fagba, Iju, Mr. Eigbe said every year, the school has a project tagged Director’s Project, meant to produce students with 9As in the May/June WASSCE and also ensure they score above 300 in the UTME.

He said the academic project has yielded results, stating that in 2017 WASSCE, the college produced a student with 9A1s and for 2019 it has placed five students on academic diet to make 9As in the May/June WASSCE.

“Every year, we identify students and give them special attention and David was one of them. David belongs to the high-flying class. Students we put on special academic diet made 8As, 7As and 6As and Bs in the 2018 WASSCE. Our plan was to make ten 9As.

“When David was in SS2, we knew he will make 9A1s and we subjected him to high dose of studies. I have already known students that will make 9As in the May/June 2019 WASSCE. When school resumes, we shall focus on them.
“Four years ago, Amechi made 8A1s and I told my teachers to work towards 9As. If the environment is right and with good teachers, the students will make 9As.

“My target for 2019 is 5As. I have already identified the students. To achieve the target, the focus will be on teachers’ motivation. The college does not encourage exam malpractice. The school is trying to prove to the nation that if we invest in human resources, the sky will be our limit,’’ Mr. Eigbe noted.

Eigbe also showered encomium on Teniola Faith who made 8As and B3 as well as the head girl, Oruh Abigail who obtained 7As and 2Bs. She went home with best prefect, best in sports, lead choir singer and high academic performance awards.

The director of studies recalled that in May/June WASSCE 2011, 2012 and 2013, the college recorded 79 percent, 79 percent and 100 percent respectively.

Principal of the college, Mrs. S. Oyinloye, said it was team work that produced the excellent results.

AGE BARRIER AND ADMISSION

Mr. Eigbe who was not happy that David will miss out of the 2018/2019 admission exercise, pleaded that any 15-year-old secondary school graduate with outstanding result in the May/June 2018 WASSCE and the UTME should be considered for special admission.

“That is what is obtainable in the UK, USA, Germany, Israel, France and other developed countries. Nigeria universities should not be seen as the stumbling block to youths progress. I don’t like students being delayed for years. We must tap their potentials at a young age.

“I want government, individuals, lawmakers and even corporate bodies to award scholarship to David. Children who are brilliant should be given scholarship. Abigail should also be bestowed with scholarship.’’

REACTION OF STAKEHOLDERS TO DAVID’S PLIGHT

Vice Chancellor of First Technical University, Ibadan, Prof Ayobami Salami said the National Universities Commission (NUC) did not impose age requirement for admission, but that each university through the Senate makes such policies.

Contributing to the issue, former VC of UNILAG, Prof Oye Ibidapo-Obe, noted: “There is a regulation on minimum age for UNILAG admission. Ordinarily, there could be exceptions granted by the Senate of the university. The real issue is the ability of the student to cope with off-classroom/academic life.”
The Proprietor of Focus International School, Abeokuta, Chief Lanre Ogunjobi, pleaded with the Senate of UNILAG to grant David a waiver to enable him take up the admission but when reminded that the school had conducted its post UTME, he felt sad describing it as a missed opportunity.

Chief Ogunjobi, however, urged government to take interest in David’s case and monitor his progress and also appealed to Delta State governor, Ifeanyi Okowa to award the young lad a scholarship like Governor Kashima Shettima of Borno State did to Israel Zakari who made 9A1s and topped the 2018 UTME with 364.

DAVID MUM’S CONTRIBUTION

Mrs. Okorogheye described his son’s academic feat as God’s doing and lauded David’s uncles and aunties who helped fund his education after the death of his father. She said she noticed his academic prowess in primary school.

“I was happy when the school called to inform me that David made 9A1s in WASSCE. I thanked God for his performance. He was also outstanding during his primary school,” Mrs. Okorogheye pointed out.

She explained that despite his performance in WASSCE and UTME, his son cannot go to the university this academic session because of his age. The mother further revealed that she will enroll David for two years A level class.

DAVID SPEAKS ON HIS ACADEMIC FEAT

He said he studied hard and with help of his teachers and the director of studies, he made the marks in the May/June 2018 WASSCE and UTME.

On Medicine as choice of course of study, David said the decision was informed when at eight years, he watched how doctors battled to save the life of his dad.

“I was eight years old when my father died in the hospital. I was there and I saw how the doctors and nurses tried their best. From that moment I made a vow that I will read medicine to save peoples life.

“I chose UNILAG because it was closer home and also for my mum, aunties and uncles to monitor me. I want to specialize in Neurosurgery.”

David did not betray any emotion about his missing out in the 2018/2019 admission exercise on account of age but stressed that he has taken it in good faith. He insisted that he will put in Medicine after the advance level.

“I am a triangular student and a bookworm. My mum is a teacher and she instilled the reading habit in me. I appreciate my aunties and uncles who took over my education after the death of my dad. Abioye Okeoluwa from Osun State who made 9A1s in WASSCE motivated me,” he said.

The Director of Communications of the National Universities Commission (NUC), Ibrahim Yakassi did not pick calls but a senior staff of the regulatory body told The Education Report that it is responsibility of each university Senate to fix age limit and other criteria for admission.

“We don’t dabble into this issue. It is the university senate that decides age limit for admission. NUC is mainly concern with accreditation of courses, regulation of academic standard and monitoring of the universities,” she added.

Check This Out:WAEC to introduce CCTV cameras, e-marking software to check exam malpractice

13-YEAR-Old gained admission into KNUST in Ghana

Meanwhile,all over the world,smarter children are given the opportunity to excelled in all their academic endeavours without age limitations.
2017:In Ghana ,a 13-year-old girl has been admitted into Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) in the Ashanti Regional capital Kumasi where she is the youngest student ever accepted.

 

Ruth Ama Gyan-Darkwa, who will be studying for a BSc degree in Mathematics, was born on May 29, 2004. She lives in Kumasi with her family at a bungalow in the high school where her father teaches science.

She studied General Science at St. Louis Senior High School in Kumasi where she gained admission at the age of 10 after writing the Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) in the first year of junior high school, her father Kwadwo Gyan-Darkwa told local media.

Despite being four years younger than her mates, Ruth Ama Gyan-Darkwa completed her senior high school education with passes that gained her admission into one of Ghana’s prestigious universities.

It is reported that her sister, who also attended the same university at a tender age, will graduate next year at the age of 18.

In Ghana, children are mandated to start the six-year primary education at the age of six. This is followed by the three-year junior high school education and then the three-year senior high school education.

The average age for a child to enroll in university is 18.

A number of young students like Ruth Ama Gyan-Darkwa have been accepted into universities worldwide including 13-year-old Kimora Hudson who is also the youngest student to be accepted at the University of West Georgia (UWG) in the United States.

In 2016, 12-year-old Jeremy Shuler, who was home-schooled, was accepted into the Cornell University in New York as its youngest ever student.

In 2015, Maths prodigy and another home-schooled girl Esther Okade became one of the United Kingdom’s youngest university students at the age of 10. She is studying a Maths degree with the Open University.

14-year-old university graduate and Maths prodigy Yasha Asley became Britain’s youngest employee this year at the University of Leicester where he was admitted in 2014 straight from primary school at the age of 12 to study for a BSc degree in Mathematics.

Source:EducationGhana.net


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