Michael Eromhonsele
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| credits:
Michael
 Eromhonsele sacrificed romance for excellence and emerged the best 
graduating student of Covenant University in Ota, Ogun State at 20, SAMUEL AWOYINFA reports
Twenty-year-old Eromhonsele Michael was 
the cynosure of all eyes at the eighth graduation ceremony of the 
Covenant University, Ota, Ogun State, on Friday. He was the best 
graduating student of the institution. To achieve this feat, he obtained
 a Cumulative Grade Point Average of 4.92, out of a possible 5.0, to 
beat 1,465 other undergraduates.
He says his first few days in the 
university campus were uneventful. According to him, he was a bit 
confused because he was not used to the prayer regime that he had to be 
part of at the faith-based institution. Spirituality is one of the core 
values of CU.  But as soon as he found his rhythm, there was no looking 
back for him.
He says he did not allow himself to be distracted by his friends or the opposite sex as he concentrated on his studies.
Listing some of the factors that helped 
him to achieve that feat, he says, “First, I must acknowledge God’s 
favour and his assistance. Second, I did not entertain any form of 
distractions. I did not attend parties, and I did not have any 
girlfriend or what you may refer to as a lover. I concentrated on my 
studies.”
What about his study style? Eromhonsele 
reveals that apart from the serene environment in the school, which is 
conducive for learning, he loves to read late into the night.
According to him, he started reading from 10.00pm and he won’t stop until 1.00am.
“Those are the hours I found most 
convenient to read. As soon as I closed my book, I went to bed. I woke 
up at 7.00am, and got ready for my classes. Lectures start at 8.00am,” 
he adds.
Apart from being the best overall 
student, he was also the best in the College of Science and Technology 
where he studied Civil Engineering.
Eromhonsele, who is his parents’ second 
child, explains that they contributed in no small measure to whatever 
success he recorded in the university. He stresses that they constantly 
reminded him of his background and they advised him not to lose focus.
Eromhonsele had his primary school at 
the University of Benin Staff School, while he attended both University 
of Benin Demonstration Secondary School and Greater Tomorrow Secondary 
School for his junior and senior secondary school education.
“My parents were very supportive. They 
always reminded me of the home I’m from, and they also urged me to take 
my studies seriously,” he notes.
He explains that his mother, Charity 
Eromhonsele, is a business woman, while the father, Gabriel Eromhonsele,
 a civil engineer runs a consulting firm in Benin, Edo State. He says 
his father is a native of Igueben.
Apart from his parents, Eromhonsele did 
not lose sight of the contributions of his lecturers, who, he says, 
impacted him throughout his stay in the institution. Their pieces of 
advice, he adds, went a long way in shaping his outlook on life.
Talking about the lesson he’s taking 
away from the CU, Eromhonsele says he’s learnt that “the people one 
surrounds himself with in life will determine how far one will go.”
Again, he advises that there is no future without God, and that he has learnt to put Him first in everything he does.
After obtaining a first degree, what 
next for Michael?  Beaming with smiles, he says, “I have already got 
admission to University of Surrey in the United kingdom to read 
Structural Engineering for my Master’s degree. I chose this particular 
course because I feel the need to improve on the structural aspects of 
construction works.”
Eromhonsele is already missing his 
teachers and friends as he confesses, “Definitely, I miss my friends and
 the lecturers, most especially my course supervisors. But I am happy, 
it is for good.”
The eighth convocation event was not all about Michael alone. A total of 1,466 students graduated during the event tagged Release of Eagles 2013.
 The breakdown showed that 114 made first class, 720 made second class 
upper, 565 obtained second class lower division, while 67 were in the 
third class category.
The Chancellor of the CU, Bishop David 
Oyedepo, while delivering his address, identified leadership as the 
greatest challenge facing the 21st Century Africa.
While he said that leadership was not an
 endowment but a commitment to the future, he noted that leadership “is 
an art that must be continuously and intelligibly developed.”
Oyedepo, who spoke under the theme, 
‘Living the Covenant Dream – Our Leadership Development Mandate,’ 
explained that the mandate of the university was a commitment to 
promoting the man-child model of education aimed at making men out of 
children, provoking accelerated maturity intellectually and emotionally.
 He stressed, “The thrust of our vision 
is to create leadership imbued with strong character. We want to build 
people of depth, a revolutionary army of intellectual giants, a people 
to be envied, young men and women in pursuit of vision, driving with 
unquenchable passion, countless exploits in every direction, a people of
 honour set to take the world by storm.”
Oyedepo, who advised the graduating 
students to soar in their respective fields, said they were taught that 
leadership was taking the lead, setting the pace and blazing the trail 
in one’s field.
He added, “Leadership is not occupying a
 seat; it is accomplishing a feat. It is not occupying a position; it is
 making outstanding contributions. It is not occupying a place; it is 
setting a pace.”
 He observed that the country was “full 
of  ‘expert analysts’ of our multi-faceted problems, but we lack expert 
solution providers.”
Oyedepo, therefore, said the country 
needed the right kind of education that could raise the right kind of 
leaders, and promote the right kind of values.
In his keynote address, the Minister of 
Power, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, advised the graduands to make the right 
choices, as the choices they make could make or mar their future.
He pointed out that the people they 
surround themselves with, the place they choose to start their career 
and where they live, among others, matter.
 “Success is about choices. My message 
to you is to be careful, diligent and strategic in those choices, as 
they will set the trajectory for your life,” Nebo added.
He told them to be transformational leaders who would take the country to the next level of development.
Speaking earlier on the convocation lecture titled Repositioning African universities for excellence: Theory and practical perspectives,
 a former Executive Secretary, National Council for Tertiary Education, 
Ghana, Dr. Paul Effah, identified lack of commitment to a functional 
differentiated system or institutional segmentation as a major 
difficulty facing higher education in Africa.
He noted that emphasis had been placed 
on grammar type of education to the detriment of technical, vocational 
education and training.
Besides, Effah said, another problem was the near neglect of science and technology.
He said, “This is not unexpected, as 
most of the educational systems in anglophone Africa were modelled after
 the British tradition which frowned on TVET and career-focused 
training. It is common to find many senior high school graduates 
trooping to the universities for admission, while student-places high in
 TVET institutions remained unoccupied.”
Effah stressed that the development was 
due largely to the social status and image associated with university 
education. Quoting Lord Bowden, he said, “Universities were seen as 
centres of privilege with very little to do with industry, commerce and 
society.”
He advised African universities not to 
be just relevant to the community in which they exist, but also focus on
 their mandate and seek excellence in what they have been enjoined to do
 and translate this into raising the standard of living and general 
conditions of the people.
Describing research as a core function 
of a university, Effah said many universities in Africa had failed to 
meet their standard requirement on publications.
He said a recent study by the Centre for
 Higher Education Transformation in South Africa, undertaken in eight 
flagship universities in Africa, revealed that in terms of publications,
 only University of Cape Town achieved a ratio of one article per 
lecturer per year.
He added, “At the Nelson Mandela 
Metropolitan University, the ratio was one article per academic every 
three years. At Makerere in Uganda, the ratio was one article per 
academic in five years. At the other universities, including those in 
Ghana, each academic was likely to publish, on average, only one article
 every 10 or more years.”
The Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Charles Ayo, 
who said spirituality was the arrowhead of the institution’s seven core 
values, added that last year, after the 10th anniversary of the 
university, it got a mandate from the Board of Regents to get CU listed 
among the top 10 universities in the world within the next 10 years.
This, he stressed, they had christened “1 of 10 in 10.”
He said, “To make CU one of the best 
universities in the world, we have toured some renowned universities in 
the US and the UK to adopt some best practices in our operations. We are
 collaborating with them in terms of faculty and student exchange, joint
 research collaboration and joint degrees at both graduate and 
postgraduate levels.”
He said to achieve this feat, the 
institution’s concerted efforts within the next five years would include
 improving infrastructural facilities and quality teaching, exhaustively
 reviewing its curricula, pursuing further collaborations and linkages 
with renowned universities and improving the university’s Webometric 
ranking, among others.
 
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