An Open letter to NOUN

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE NATIONAL OPEN UNIVERSITY OF 
NIGERIA MANAGEMENT: REASONS WHY TMAs SHOULD BE RE-OPENED.

Dear Vice Chancellor,
First and foremost, I want to use this medium to appreciate what you and your 
management team are doing in repositioning, restructuring and rebuilding the 
image of our great institution. Your effort and strive for excellence are already 
yielding positive results, especially in the recent assent by the President of the 
Federal Republic, His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, to the NOUN 
Amendment Bill. Congratulations one more time, sir, even as we pray that God
continue to give you and your management team the wisdom and strength to take 
this institution to greater heights.
However sir, it is pertinent to let you know that even with all the successes and 
achievements within this short period of your administration, if the students who 
are the major stakeholders are not well taken care of, your efforts will amount to 
nothing
It is possible you might not be aware of some of the points I wish to raise in this 
letter, but I think it will be wise if I bring to your knowledge these issues before 
things get out of hand. They are as follows:
1.    Last semester, the Tutor-marked assignments (TMAs) were released in 
batches, and each of the TMA lasted for at least three weeks, making it nine 
weeks in total. But this semester has been the shortest semester in the history 
of the school. The school resumed in September and the three TMAs were 
released together in mid-October and POP exams started on the 2nd of 
November. Even when the TMAs were released, students were already 
preparing for examinations and there was massive apprehension since there 
was not enough time for the majority of the students to prepare for the
examinations. The POP lasted for three weeks and the TMA portal was closed 
immediately after POP exams. That means the TMAs only lasted for five 
weeks compared to last semester’s, which were a total of nine weeks.
2. In some courses, TMAs were not well programmed. For example, in FMS304 
TMA1 as well as in POL316 TMA1. During examinations, the errors were 
corrected and the students felt that they can take them after the main 
examinations. However, the portal was closed immediately after the exams 
and the affected students were not able to sort out the issues.
3. Final year accounting students also had two of their courses, ACC418 and 
ACC419, not well programed as well. All the indicated options were wrong. 
They couldn’t submit the TMAs, either. To make matters worse, this is their 
last semester, and if the TMA portal is not re-opened, it means they will have 
to come back to register those courses again as carryovers. They will also 
have to pay compulsory fees and examination fees again. This is a clear case 
of injustice, one that needs to be urgently redressed by your administration.
4. Some of the TMAs were not released on time, while some were released on 
Sunday before the portal was closed on Monday the next day. I implore you, 
sir, to give directives for the reopening of the portal, so that these affected 
students can do their TMAs.
5. The freshmen were the most affected by the closed portal. There was neither 
an orientation nor any medium for them to get to know about the school and 
understand how things are done within the institution. Due to lack of proper 
information, some of them registered very late, and before they could realize 
what was going on, the portal was already closed.
6. Sir, even if the school wanted to close the portal on the date it was closed, I 
think there should have been adequate information concerning that on the 
school website. However, there was nothing like that at all. This is wrong.
The school management must make conscious effort to ensure it satisfies the 
yearnings and aspirations of the student at all times. 
Sir, I know you are a good man with a good heart, a seasoned public administrator 
with a flair for doing the right thing at all times. I also know you will not stand by 
and watch your students fail their examinations for reasons that are way beyond 
their control, especially after going through a lot to register for the courses within 
that short frame of time. I hope you will treat this issue with the seriousness and 
urgency it deserves, and ensure the dissatisfaction of the affected students are
addressed.
Finally sir, I implore you to use your good offices to consider all these pressing 
points listed above and make verifications to ascertain if they are true, before 
taking the needed action.
I will be looking forward to your favourable response on this pressing issue.
Thank you. 
Yours faithfully,
Lordson Evans 
(MSC, 2018)

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