2014/15 UNILAG POSTGRADUATE FORM IS OUT

The much awaited University of Lagos postgraduate application forms for the 2014/15 academic session is finally on sale. The postgraduate forms went on sale today 9th August 2014. Prospective postgraduate applicants can begin the application process by visiting at www.spgs.unilag.edu.ng.
The School of postgraduate studies, University of Lagos, hereby invites suitably qualified candidates from recognized institutions for admission into postgraduate programmes of the UNILAG in the 2014/15 academic session, namely
– Postgraduate diploma programmes (PGD)
– Masters Degree Programmes (MSc, MEd, MA, LLM e.t.c).
– Professional Masters Degree Programme
-Master of Philosophy (MPhil) and Doctor of philosophy (PhD).
Take Note of the Following

  1. These programmes are offered in full-time, part-time, executive and sand-wish study options. 
  2. Applicants are advised to check the available programmes online and confirm your eligibility before applying.
  3. The postgraduate form closes on Tuesday, 30th September, 2014, and completed forms must be submitted online latest 3rd October, 2014.
  4. Application form fee is N22,500, and should be available from any bank on the e-transact platform. (GTB, Access, First Bank e.t.c)
  5. Print application and photo card after completing the online form. Laminate the photo card.

 Drop your questions in the comments box about postgraduate study af UNILAG.

24 YEAR OLD BAGS PhD AT UNIVERSITY OF LAGOS.

“The saying that if you can conceive it and believe it, you will definitely achieve it” was brought to the fore as a young and intelligent scholar Olaoluwa Oluwadara bagged a Doctorate degree at the just concluded convocation ceremony of the University of Lagos. He was just 24.
Olaoluwa received his PhD in mathematics and was the best graduating postgraduate student with a CGPA of 5.0. With this record, Dr. Olaoluwa is now arguably Africa’s youngest PhD holder, beating other previous young scholars like 26 year old Olabisi Adeyemi, who received her PhD in the same University of Lagos and 25 year old Opeyemi Shodipe, from Babcock University.
Dr. Olaoluwa has held an impressive record of academic achievement through his education, he has been a top student since his elementary education, till he entered the Universite de Bangui in Central African Republic, where he graduated with a Cummulative
Gross Point Average (CGPA) of 5.0 in mathematics for his first degree. He received his Masters degree in Physics from the same university with an impressive record. He came to the university of Lagos in 2010 for his PhD studies under sponsorship by the G.S of the Deeper Life Christian Ministry. Postgraduate Nigeria says a hearty  congrats to our young ‘DOC’

THE EXPERIENCE OF A UNILAG POSTGRADUATE STUDENT 2

……. continuation
I came to Lagos to start my degree. I didnt have a job, i always planned to do it full time, with none of the distractions of a job. I went to unilag website and downloaded my “debit note” , it said that i was to pay 131,500 total for tuition and “mandatory fees”. however when i got to the bank, i was told to go back and reprint my debit note because the fees had been increased just that morning. i went back and lo and behold it was now 151,500. I went to the bank and made my payments. it was now time to begin registration/screening. At the point of submitting my credentials, i was asked to pay another 10,000 for “prospectus” and book of abstracts. After I paid,i was told that they didnt have copies of the prospectus. Till today , i didn’t get a copy of the so called prospectus. I was done with registration now time for lectures.
Lectures/Lecturers
Only a few of the lectures were worth my time. They kept threatening us with how attending lectures were “mandatory”, but didn’t deem it fit to prepare lectures that would make us want to attend. My first degree comprised of more interesting lectures as my lecturers often prepared and came to class with interesting strategies but only one lecturer actually made me want to sit in class. Some of the lecturers didn’t bother to do research and prepare their class notes, none of them made their lectures very interactive either, but only came to class to dictate lecture notes (obviously obtained verbatim from textbooks).
The syllabus was pretty basic to me, nothing particularly new ( it was like repeating the same stuff i did in my undergraduate year), one lecturer didn’t even try to disguise this as he told us to borrow notes from third year students! I kept questioning, is this what a Master’s degree should be, i expected to further expand my knowledge and not rehash what i already learned…but then maybe I’m wrong.
I must say kudos to one borrowed course, medical statistics, they made almost every lecture worth my while, maybe the people in pharmacology need to borrow a leaf from them…just saying.
Exams: This was like playing guessing games…the lecturer had given lecture notes in class, so most times they asked how i would handle a certain real life situation(it seemed like they wanted us to guess what part of the notes they were thinking about and then write it out). It was fun, and thank goodness, i passed(i think ).
Seminar Presentations :- The lecturers seemed to get a kick out of dressing down the students for all the wrong reasons. The essence of a seminar is to make the student do some research work, write it up and present right? wrong! Apparently in unilag, what you have researched is not as important as how you present it. And if it is not pleasing enough to the eyes of the lecturer,then it doesnt matter if you have researched and found the cure to HIV/AIDs. I may be wrong about this though, so feel free to correct me. Anyway, luckily for me i adhered strictly to their guidelines and presented all my seminars without any mishaps ( although i would have enjoyed it more if they had allowed me to be a bit more creative)
Dissertation : This was the part that almost broke me!Pharmacology Dept., CMUL, Unilag has a serious problem, a lack of equipments ,reagents,etc.I had to pay (sometimes through my nose) for every single thing i used in working on my project down to distilled water!!! I paid rent for my rats (no joke) in the school’s animal house, i had to buy my own beakers and cylinders and stuff (Coming from a school where my undergraduate project cost me only the price of printing, and one or two reagents because most of the reagents and equipment i needed were in the lab and i was free to use them, this was very shocking) I paid the lab technicians to assist me with my projects (they did a wonderful job and i would have paid them anyway because they actually offered me more knowledge than my actual project supervisor Dr. Unavailable.)After everything, I calculated and realised i had spent close to 300k on my project/dissertation. Awesome huh?
Defence: This was probably the highlight of my entire school year. The external examiner did not try to dress me down or anything but was very interested in what i had to say. He gave me the floor and let me talk ; only asking for clarification when/where needed. It made me feel good about all that i had gone through.
All in all, it was a very smooth experience.
Expenses: (minus accomodation, feeding and transport) N458,000 (my school fees and the cost of my project)
The major advantage is the speed with which you attain your masters. If not for the strike, I’m sure it would have taken me exactly 12 calendar months, with the strike, it took 16 months (Nov. 2012 – Feb.2014).
Would I do it all over again? I’m not sure about it…..Ph.D here I come

THE EXPERIENCE OF A UNILAG POSTGRADUATE STUDENT 1

This is the first hand experience of a Graduate student of Masters in Pharmacology about his postgraduate experience at the University of Lagos. This is to introduce prospective posrgraduate student to what graduate studies really look like. There should be a few nuggets for you to pick. If you are a postgraduate student here and wish to share your experience too, drop a comment with your email and you will be contacted.

It was culled from http://www.nairaland.com/1646156/getting-msc-pharmacology-unilag-experience

GETTING AN MSC. PHARMACOLOGY FROM UNILAG-MY EXPERIENCE.

 I’m almost done with my MSc. Coursework in Unilag and I decided to share my experience. The story will come in bits and pieces as I intend to write a little everyday till my entire story is told. Starting from the aptitude test. I intend to be as objective as possible. Happy reading!!!
After my service year, I always knew I wanted to further my education, I already chose lecturing as a career ,and it was only natural to take the next step, an MSc. Degree. I applied to two schools, University of Ibadan and University of Lagos. When I found out I was to write an aptitude test in lagos I was disappointed, I mean where in theworld do you write an aptitude test for a masters degree, just another excuse to extort people I thought. ( I almost forgot, buying the ” form” cost me 20 thousand naira). So I travelled down to Lagos on the designated date, for the aptitude test.

I think the test was unfair because :

1. It was a pharmacology exam, and not an aptitude test like they made us believe.

2. It gave undue advantage to people who majored in pharmacology.

If indeed anybody from biochemistry, microbiology, etc was welcome to an MSc. In pharmacology like they claimed, then they should have considered that those people don’t know much about pharmacology. There was theory (4 questions to answer all) and objectives ( can’t remember howmany but I think it was 50 and oral interview)
After I wrote the exams, I returned to my base not expecting to hear from them again ( over 100 people applied, and I didn’t ” know” anybody) . To my surprise, I was offered admission. It made me say kudos because it proved that they chose based on merit ( I can’t say the same for other departments though because I have two friends who applied with the same credentials in clinical pharmacy and they rejected one because she didn’t have enough experience while the other was accepted no questions asked. I happen to know that the accepted person ” knew” somebody).

2013/14 UNILAG POSTGRADUATE FORMS FINALLY CLOSES.

The sale of the 2013/14 postgraduate forms by the University of Lagos, Akoka has finally closed. It closed yesterday July 3rd, 2013, by this date, all candidates were expected to have submitted their online application. The much awaited form which many postgraduate applicants had been expecting, started selling on wednessday, 22nd June, 2013. The University of Lagos postgraduate forms is sort after by many, especially those who live in the commercial city of Lagos. The sale of postgraduate forms which should have closed earlier was extended till July 3rd, when it finally closed. Despite the high price of UNILAG postgraduate forms at about 22,000 naira, it did not deter too many applicants. It should be noted that final registration closes on July 17th, 2013. For the final registration, applicants credentials should be submitted at the department they are applying to. Documents that should submitted include photcopies of O’level result, birth certificate, Nysc certificate. Original application form, photo card and photocopy of bank teller used to purchase the form. The Original receiptshould be taken along as it may be request for sighting by the receiving official.
Next is for you to go on with your preparation for the entrance exams. God Bless