HOW TO STUDY MATHS FOR A GOOD GRADE BY KAYODE ODUMOSU AND MORENIKE GBAGI

HOW TO STUDY MATHS FOR A GOOD GRADE BY KAYODE ODUMOSU AND MORENIKE GBAGI

HOW TO STUDY MATHS FOR A GOOD GRADE

FOR SALE:HOW TO STUDY MATHS FOR A GOOD GRADE

1. INTRODUCTION

2. PREFACE

3. CONTENTS

A.HOW TO STUDY MATHS FOR A GOOD GRADE

M21.Maths in the School/Classroom
M22.Maths Homework and Assignments
M23.Maths Private Study and Solving of Problems
M24.Maths School Tests and External Examinations

B. MATHS QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS TECHNIQUE

M1.Maths syllabuses and examination schemes (WAEC/NECO/UTME)
M2.How WAEC/NECO set exam questions
M3.Getting ready for WAEC/NECO exams
M4.Mapping out a revision strategy
M5.Interacting with revision materials
M6.Pointers and words of wisdom directly from WAEC
M7.180 WAEC Maths theory questions, answers and guidelines for revision
M8.Dos and Don’ts on the day of exam and in the exam hall
M9.Getting ready for theory/objective questions, emergencies and dealing with panic
M10.How WAEC/NECO mark examination scripts

4. EDUGUIDE BOOKS & REFERENCES

5. ABOUT THE EDITORS (BACK PAGE)

WHY EXAMINATION MALPRACTICES MAY CONTINUE TO BE ATTRACTIVE TO NIGERIAN STUDENTS (VALEDICTORY SPEECH 3)

WHY EXAMINATION MALPRACTICES MAY CONTINUE TO BE ATTRACTIVE TO NIGERIAN STUDENTS (VALEDICTORY SPEECH 3)

AT A SPEECH/AWARDS CEREMONY FOR  GRADUATING STUDENTS OF MASON COLLEGE,FESTAC

DIRECTOR’S ADDRESS

Our Honorable Guests, Parents, Press, Graduating Students, Staff Members , other students and invitees. You are welcome.

Today we give a thousand thanks to the good Lord for making it possible to gather here for what may turn out to be a period of testimonies on and about our students, honored guests, staff and parents.

In a way it is also a moment to pat different people on their backs and offer congratulatory words to our students and their parents for staying the course and for providing financial, moral and technical back-up for the school and students.

It is a day to tell our ex-SS3 students that their SPRING HAS SPRUNG and that its time to move on.

However we shall do this while sharing some experiences about them and our honored guests too. Let me start with honored guests who are made up essentially of our parents and ex-staff members (Experiences with each person are at this stage recounted with emphasis on their contributions to the school).

 

In congratulating our students we must also think about the future of our university graduates. The future of an average Nigerian citizen will usually be linked to the conditions that will be present in our country then. So the next question is what is going to be the future or the fate of our motherland this year or next year or in 2007 or thereafter? Are they questions we must leave hanging in the air while we express our various opinions strongly in private? How can such attitude help the future of those graduating today?

A few years ago at an August occasion like this we recounted the dilemma the Nigerian students continue to face not only when they are out of school but even when they are in school. Many educators fail to recognize these factors and therefore find it impossible to know what exactly should be their roles in the overall scenario.

Firstly, students find it difficult to link what they learn in school/classrooms with genuine productive activities in our society. None of our students have real heroes except perhaps in people like Wole Soyinka and Chinua Achebe whose books they read. The next sets of heroes for them are those to be found in Nigerian and foreign movies and music world. There is no real avenue in our country for a child to develop into Bill Gates or Isaac Newton or to become a REAL Nuclear Physicist. Put them in the most private schools and spend a lot of money to massage your ego that your child is at a really special school. But which Nigerian University can develop him or her into becoming a space scientist? Where do we have the REAL research laboratories to help in carrying out findings and putting a stop to Malaria, Sickle Cell Anemia, Aids, Hypertension or Diabetes? There is really no challenging environment for our students to dream in for becoming Nobel Prize Winner in Physics or Chemistry. It is my opinion that students do not think highly about academic work, school or tutors not because tutors do not wear the latest Gucci shoes but because the end point of all efforts to them is hazy and do not go beyond the passing of Examination and obtaining certificates. The need to really dig deep for facts which might be useful to them later in life is not of great importance to them.

Secondly, many secondary school students see their older brothers and sisters coming out with fantastic university degrees but without jobs after NYSC. They know about their brothers and sisters attending GMAT exams with 20,000 other graduates for 20 managements trainee places at Cadbury. Unilever or Zenith Bank.

Thirdly, they also see some jobs that are successful in Nigeria do not necessarily need great education. The most prominent job in this group is that of being a politician. What about fast food joints or some so – called places of worship where magic is performed and the pastors go about in different Hummer Jeeps? Again many of them know how hard their parents struggle to keep the family together with hard work but with almost nothing to show for their efforts at the end of the day.

My suggestion therefore is that in planning for the future of our children, we educators must continually plan to equip them with relevant skill acquisition methods that can make them more fulfilled whatever happens. I must say with pride that we do this at Mason College and we have products to back up this statements. One of our students finished school cert, in June and by August was already the manager of a cybercafé in Festac with over 20 systems. Today he is a student of Covenant University but he was really radiant the day he came back to school to inform us with some pride.

Apart from skill acquisition our students must understand that they face a lot of unfair weather in this country because of relatively meager resources which are released or doled in small pieces to the majority by a few fat cats. Therefore they must not fail to criticize these cats.In fact they should be prepared to fight against this very obvious injustice in the system. They must look forward to joining other groups of people who are interested in a complete overhaul of the system. Otherwise the suffering will go on for generations. To do this they must have their education continuously related by their schools to clear purposes in the classroom. They must perfect their compositions, improve their spoken English and practice public speaking as an art. They must learn more about Local and International etiquette. They may also need to identify those to push into the lagoon. At Mason College we attempt a great deal to teach our students the use of cutleries though corrections where many times only grudgingly accepted. But when you are out of the country as students, visitors or businessmen, you will understand that the average white man is a curious human being who may decide to do business with you by observing the way you combine the use of forks knives and spoons. Unfortunately the black man historically is discretely observed by them to know whether we are civilized or not through such norms. Remember we also gave you ideas about music from other lands. Without turning you into ballet dancers, we showed you at closed quarters what is meant by Samba, Rumba, Tango, Cha-Cha, Waltz, Foxtrot and Jive. We showed you that apart from the usual games there are also what we call unusual games. We took you to the National Stadium not only to participate in sports but to give you a database for reference in case you become future sports administrators in the country for all these your parents bore the expenses sometimes with pain. We did not stop there. We also made you to practice and compete with the so-called famous and big schools in the Shell Choral group. Thanks to the work of our late Mr. Enang the great musicologist and musician. May I respectfully at this juncture ask all those present to please rise up to observe a minute silence in honor of this great man who led our school to victory in the SHELL mUSIC competition but who passed away last year. He used to call me “Patrol” in a special way but I never really asked him why he did and never asked him what he meant by it. But both of us had a great understanding for beautiful music. Now I wish I had asked him.

Talking about your future, you must already know that this future might find you at LASU, UNILAG, Covenant, Ahmadu Bello, and UNN or in USA, Canada, Britain, Dubai,India or Hong Kong. You must remember that you have been given all round education with purpose at Mason College. Everything might not become obvious to you now but we know each of you will bloom in God’s own time. Ours is to plant the seed but God will add water and manure for its germination and bloom. Today our old students for your information have started some form of Mason College Festac Alumni. Just type Mason College Festac and you will see some of the old pictures they have already posted on the site. The school will in future decide how to be participatory in the alumni project.Just type Mason College Festac(now http://lagosbooksclub.wordpress.com) and you will see some of the old pictures posted on the site. You therefore have the means for being in contact with your seniors, classmates, juniors as well as the school. For this future the best we can wish you is that you find SUCCESS with HAPPINESS to live fulfilling lives.

It is a future that might challenge how deep your faith in our loving God is. It is a future that might ask you to prove that you are responsible family men and women. Or whether you are a boss that could be tough and yet be understanding with your subordinates.

The only certainty about this future is that it will eventually come. That future after Mason College has already begun for many of you. Some of you have traveled out of the country while many are already in higher institutions of learning. Many of you will still get your admissions into higher institutions by the Grace of God. Amen.

As you leave us please allow me to add the following part of which had been stated at similar gatherings:

1. That each of you should think more about becoming an employer of labor or becoming self-employed as quickly as possible instead of being a perpetual applicant. To do this search inside for the talent God has endowed yo with. If God says you will succeed through selling fried plantain, then let your fried plantain be the biggest and the best.

2.That you must remember that life will call on you in future to be different. Life can play you JAZZ while the others are experiencing Rhythm & Blues or Funk. Bur remember what A great French man once said. He said when you hear a different set of drums do not be afraid to step up to the beats of those drums no matter how far they may seem.

3.That you have to show the signs of your education at all times. Keep a library of books at home. Master the internet which is now the biggest library in the world. Decide when you will stop conversing in Pidgin English, which was a source of constant correction here. When you write formally or off the net do not disgrace your school or your teachers or yourself. Use past tense, apostrophes and plurals where you must. Note that the use of English by many University graduates today is very uncomplimentary.

Now the time has come for me to send you forth. Many times it is usually a very difficult moment for me but I will try to pull through. All ex ss3 students and or their representatives should please stand up. We are of course aware that only a representative group can be here today thanks to almighty WAEC. Please arrange yourselves in a circular mode within the space in front of you, while holding hands repeat the following after me 3 times.

“ALL ARE NEEDED BY EACH OTHER”

Now look at each other or hold each other in twos or threes and remember in future what I am about to tell you now.

“THE FRIENDSHIP THAT YOU HAVE BONDED TOGETHER IN MASON COLLEGE IS A LIFE LONG FRIENDSHIP WHICH CANNOT BE ERODED OR ERASED BY TIME, MARRIAGE, POSITION IN LIFE, RICHES, POVERTY, SICKNESS OR DEATH, I URGE YOU TODAY TO SEE YOURSELVES AS SIBLINGS OR COMRADES ACTING IN UNITY IN ALL GOOD THINGS ESPECIALLY IN THE NAME AND GLORY OF OUR LOVING GOD IN THE REMEMBRANCE OF REVEREND LESLIE DONALD MASON WHICH NAME WE BEAR” AMEN.

YOU ARE THEREFORE HEREBY SENT FORTH IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER, THE SON, AND THE HOLY GHOST – AMEN.

THE LORD WILL DEVELOP YOU TO BE GOOD AMBASSADORS OF YOUR SCHOOL, EXCELLENT CHILDREN OF YOUR PARENTS AND FIREBRAND BUT HUMBLE-CITIZENS OF OUR DEAR COUNTRY….AMEN

Let me seize the opportunity to thank the school management past and present who have contributed in developing you. We again thank our parents for their care and for the fees they paid sometimes under difficult conditions. We pray that God will continue to replenish their purses IJN…..Amen

We also congratulate our students most of whom achieved excellent results in their WAEC, NECO exams. We look forward to hearing about your progress in future.

On behalf of the school I thank our Honored Guests, our Parents, Staff Members and others who are present today to witness the “pulling out” ceremony for our students.

Thank you,

O.O.ODUMOSU

DIRECTOR

NIS RECRUITMENT…SO,WHO IS THE BIGGER 419?…GOVERNMENT OR YAHOO-YAHOO BOYS?…WHY CAN’T EFCC ARREST THOSE INVOLVED?

 NIS RECRUITMENT OF SORROW,TEARS AND DEATH…NOW,WHO IS THE BIGGER 419?...GOVERNMENT OR YAHOO-YAHOO BOYS?

Candidates-for-the-Nigeria-Immigration-Service-recruitment-test-at-the-National-Stadium-Surulere-Lagos-…-

NIS recruitment fiasco: Sorrow, tears and death
Just about a year ago, Rose Uzoma, then Nigeria Immigration Service Comptroller General was retired from service owing to a recruitment scandal. One year on, the NIS does not just remain an organisation widely known for its sham recruitment process, it has added a dangerous element to it; having applicants die at its test centres. As of the last count, almost 20 people were reportedly killed because the NIS saw an opportunity to raise N1,000 each from jobless, hapless Nigerians. Where else in the world would you find an organisation try to do job tests for 700,000 people? If you are desperate enough to raise hundreds of millions of naira just to have Nigerian citizens apply for a job, you should at least be fair enough to organise the tests without fatal costs. It used to be that the only risk available when applying to take a job is that of not getting the job. This is no longer the case, especially with the Nigeria Immigration Service. The Minister of Internal Affairs, Abba Moro, suggested that those who died were responsible for their own death because they were not patient. The minister stated, “The applicants lost their lives due to impatience; they did not follow the laid down procedures spelt out to them before the exercise. Many of them jumped through the fences of affected centres and did not conduct themselves in an orderly manner to make the exercise a smooth one. This caused stampede and made the environment unsecure.” This is not only insensitive; it also shows that Moro is incompetent and irresponsible. The least he could have down would have been to take responsibility.

But for Nigeria’s rising Gross Domestic Poverty, you’d not see some 600,000 people apply for just about 4,000 jobs. What we saw on Saturday, March 15, happened to be the biggest answer yet, to the question: Is Nigeria’s unemployment rate increasing or decreasing? The pictures tell the story better as the stadia were filled across the geopolitical zones while tests also took place in state capitals. If anyone had a doubt about whether there are jobs for Nigerians out there, the NIS test showed us we are far from where we ought to be in terms of job creation. Something has to give. The NIS cannot shirk its responsibility on this matter. Those who lost their lives did because the NIS failed to provide a conducive environment for them to take the test.

If this were a sane country, Moro would have resigned. He would have taken the top echelons of the NIS with him. Let us take it that due to Nigerian “bigmanism”, Moro couldn’t take personal responsibility, shouldn’t the leadership of the NIS have owned up? Over and again, we see people woefully fail at their postings yet remain at such postings as long as they remain loyal to whoever the president or governor is. If there are no consequences for failure, failure becomes the norm. This is why we are where we are today as a country; continually failing to create and enforce disincentives against vices, failures and criminality. We appear to only offer incentives; if these incentives covered the activities that help grow our country, one could understand, but our incentives only find those who do their bit and contribute their quota towards the continued destruction of our political and socio-economic fabric. The list is endless but the point in recent times would be the fact that, while some credible Nigerians were ignored, some politically exposed individuals were the ones called upon by the government to help join the National Conference to fashion out the way forward for our country. For instance, a former Governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye Alamiyeseigha, is not only an ex-convict, he remains a law fugitive. Chief Bode George would want the world to believe that because his conviction was somehow overturned by the courts, he never should have gone to jail. A former Governor of Rivers State, Dr. Peter Odili, on his part, simply got an injunction that prevents the state from trying him on several corruption charges. In the midst of it all, Nigeria charges on with the likes of these ones still pulling the strings.

The average Nigerian continues to be treated like a slave in their own country. Very few Nigerians would be shocked to find out half of the jobs the victims of the ill-fated NIS test went out to jostle for have already been apportioned to cronies who would have their own take up the jobs. Again, very few Nigerians will be shocked to find out those who took or would take these jobs never moved a muscle on that day while those other Nigerians went trooping out of their homes.

This system cannot be sustained. Every new day that passes in this country without the establishment of socio-economic justice is a day that takes us closer to the brink of our collective destruction. The anger is there, all the elements of danger and trouble are there, all it takes is a trigger. The trigger could easily have been the NIS fiasco exams but we wait another day. Nigeria risks its very own future as long as the masses continue to be fed hunger for food, hopelessness for hope and pain and penury for the promise of prosperity. One day, something will give.

The Federal Government must stop pretending it can provide all Nigerians with jobs. The business of government ought to be to create an enabling environment and no one would stop Nigerians from creating and providing jobs for fellow citizens. Our people are naturally enterprising and driven. But for government’s continued stance on getting in the way of entrepreneurs through ill thought-out policies and the near absence of infrastructure, few would doubt Nigerians will thrive if the system worked. That the bulk of production in our country goes to fuelling generators says all that needs to be said about the uphill task of running one’s business in this country.

The tragedy of the NIS test is avoidable; government’s continued effort at providing the enabling environment for entrepreneurs to thrive cannot be overemphasised. Given the same resources as their government prefers to waste mostly through corruption and mismanagement, Nigerians will make this country work. Our people are not without ideas; our people are not lazy, only our government is so big it won’t get out of the way for entrepreneurs to thrive.

While we wait for a system that works for the entrepreneur, those who continue to set Nigerians up for death must not go unpunished. The organisers of the NIS test caused the death of pregnant women and other Nigerians that fateful day. As long as they get away with it, it will happen again under the same ministry or another one. Those behind that fiasco must be made to answer questions starting from the rationale behind making people pay to apply for Federal Government jobs, to setting up examination centres that were nothing but death traps. Someone has to pay for these things but as long as no one pays, the system will pay because whatever evil goes unpunished in a society will only thrive. Corruption has reached unprecedented levels for obvious reasons; our government is its biggest catalyst. Like corruption, like incompetence, step by step, day by day and man by man, we will continue to build a country that does not work as long as those who help to not make it work continue to go unpunished. We can do better than this.

•Omojuwa, Editor, AfricanLiberty.org, wrote in via mromojuwa@gmail.com

Copyright PUNCH.