Nnamdike Nwachukwu

7.6K posts

Nnamdike Nwachukwu banner
Nnamdike Nwachukwu

Nnamdike Nwachukwu

@3LAARR

Blessed to be a blessing

Katılım Şubat 2014
135 Takip Edilen213 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Nnamdike Nwachukwu
Nnamdike Nwachukwu@3LAARR·
Give us 10 years. The food system in Nigeria would be dominated by EYiA graduates. They will either own the companies or lead the leading companies. We boast different. I am a proud EYiA graduate and I’m grateful to @Samsonprolific for the opportunity.
Nnamdike Nwachukwu tweet mediaNnamdike Nwachukwu tweet mediaNnamdike Nwachukwu tweet mediaNnamdike Nwachukwu tweet media
English
3
13
61
2.2K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Agọziem-Art
Agọziem-Art@nneamaka_orji·
Egwu obi umuoji by Theresa Ofojie
9
39
165
4.1K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
I’m optimistic that we can achieve 99.6% literacy level in the South East within 10 years. ISEE will do everything humanly possible to achieve this. However, our current and future governors should join and radicalize education. Let’s separate education from politics, because that is the only way we can achieve greatness and lead the future of Africa.
English
57
529
1.6K
12.2K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
Our current education system is not designed for global competitiveness, rather for exams. From primary school to university, Nigerian students spend years mastering how to pass Common entrance, BECE, WAEC, JAMB, Post-UTME, Semester exams etc. But the world outside Nigeria is not asking: “Can you pass an exam?” The world is asking: • Can you build things? • Can you solve complex problems? • Can you innovate? • Can you compete globally? Look at the countries dominating the modern economy: Germany – engineering and manufacturing South Korea – electronics and industrial technology China – global manufacturing powerhouse United States – innovation and research Their education systems are deeply connected to industry, skills, and innovation. Nigeria’s system is connected to syllabus completion and exam performance. That’s why we produce millions of graduates every year that struggle to find a job. Why are we educating young Nigerians for the world that actually does not exist? Until we redesign our education system around problem-solving, technical mastery, and industry relevance, we will keep producing certificates instead of competitiveness.
English
90
789
2K
33K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
Germany didn’t become an industrial powerhouse by sending everyone to university. They built something smarter. It’s called Ausbildung, a structured apprenticeship system where young people earn while they learn inside real companies. A 17-year-old in Germany can train to become: • a mechatronics engineer • an industrial technician • an automotive systems expert • a precision machinist • a medical equipment technician They are paid during training. They graduate with globally respected skills. And many of them end up earning more than university graduates. Over 50% of German youth pass through this system. Now look at Nigeria. We push everyone into universities. Millions graduate every year. But the country is still importing basic technical expertise. We have degrees but we don’t have enough skills. This is why we are studying the German Ausbildung model closely to implement in the South East. Because the South East must lead Africa’s skills revolution. Imagine a structured apprenticeship system across Aba, Nnewi, Onitsha, Enugu and beyond where young people can train to become: • industrial fabricators • automotive engineers • robotics technicians • electronics specialists • renewable energy installers • precision manufacturing experts Training will happen inside real companies. With structured certification, modern tools and clear career paths. Not the informal “Igba Boy” system, but a world-class apprenticeship ecosystem. The South East already has the largest concentration of indigenous manufacturers and traders in Africa. What we need now is structure, technology, and certification. If Germany can power Europe’s manufacturing through apprenticeships, there is no reason the South East cannot power Africa’s industrial future. The next generation of millionaires in Africa will not only be software founders. Many will be master craftsmen, engineers, and industrial builders. And when Africa finally fixes its skills crisis, history may remember that the revolution started in the South East.
English
428
3.6K
9.2K
261.8K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
We need to bring back Who Wants to be a Millionaire weekly Game Show or something more exciting. This can inspire the new generation to learn. We need to give more attention to worthy things that moves our society forward.
English
194
1.8K
6.2K
57.2K
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
What do you think about this new logo?
Alex Onyia tweet media
English
720
1.4K
6.7K
209K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Chelsea FC
Chelsea FC@ChelseaFC·
😍
QME
186
1.1K
13.7K
189.7K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
Anthony is one of the maths teachers from Diamond Special College, Owerri Imo State. His students won N8 million cash today and he won N2 million as well. I’m happy that we are finally rewarding our teachers by making them millionaires.
Alex Onyia tweet media
English
345
4.5K
14.4K
129K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
DON-ANELE MARVELOUS MUNACHIMSO From Diamond Special College Owerri, IMO State Won the Senior Category for South East Maths Olympiad. He won N5 million and also won N1 million for his teacher. He recently won $100k scholarship In Canada. A star is born today!
Alex Onyia tweet media
English
672
5.5K
17.2K
170K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
This is the maths teacher from Evergreen schools Enugu. His name is Master Chisom Unachukwu. His students took 1st, 2nd and 3rd positions for Junior Category for South East Maths Olympiad Grand Finale. These boys are hooot!!!!
Alex Onyia tweet media
English
689
8.2K
27.8K
1.1M
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
We are set for the South East Maths Olympiad Grand Finale. Stars will be born today.
English
105
1.3K
3.5K
140K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
I’m thinking of an internship structure that will enable our students do a year internship before going to the university. Let’s say a potential medical student does a year internship in the hospital, same as a potential nurse, software engineer etc. This will help them a lot
English
274
824
3K
117.9K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Chuka Nduneseokwu
Chuka Nduneseokwu@Chuka_ndu·
Anyanwụ (The Sun) - The Portal Through Which The CHI Enters Uwa Mmadu In Odinala Ìgbò, Anyanwu (The Sun) takes center stage in our interaction with Chiukwu Okike, the Universal Supreme Spirit. 🧵
Chuka Nduneseokwu tweet media
English
10
82
270
4.7K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Chuka Nduneseokwu
Chuka Nduneseokwu@Chuka_ndu·
While the youths are waking up and returning to Odinana, biko teach them Nsọ ana and the path to holiness, justice and uprightness. Returning to Odinana na Omenana is not an invitation to freedom, carelessness and wanton sexual desires and indulgence. 🧵
Chuka Nduneseokwu tweet media
English
23
79
275
7K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu
Nnamdike Nwachukwu@3LAARR·
@winexviv If we can break it down to what they can easily wrap their head around.. practical things… even introducing local language while teaching… make them see that there’s no difference… it’s all in the order of operation.. once that wall is broken… it’ll be easier to understand.
English
0
0
0
4
Nnamdike Nwachukwu
Nnamdike Nwachukwu@3LAARR·
@winexviv Ndigbo si “ Oke aha n’egbu nwa nkita “… back then in primary and secondary school, those topics were exaggerated.. there’s even a quadratic formula that’s called Almighty formula. Imagine how a child wld see it. As 4 algebra, the name isn’t as easy to decode as plus & minus.
English
1
0
0
57
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
From the insights gotten from South East Maths Olympiad Mock data, primary school students generally are struggling in Algebra, Measurements and Percentages, while Secondary School students are generally struggling with Quadratic equations and Navigations & Bearing. What could be the issue?
English
179
506
1.6K
33.8K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Onyia
Alex Onyia@winexviv·
Within the next 10 years, the South East will be so prosperous in a scale never have seen before. We will churn out lots of unicorns, attract global companies like Microsoft, Google, Apple etc. We will be a knowledge driven economy. Education is our strategy. We will win!
English
252
1.2K
4.8K
46.2K
Nnamdike Nwachukwu retweetledi
Alex Otti
Alex Otti@alexottiofr·
It was indeed a great pleasure and honour to receive the former Vice President of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, GCON, in my residence yesterday. His kind words of encouragement and commendation for our modest efforts in Abia mean a lot, especially as his visit coincided with my birthday. His reflections on purposeful, people-centred leadership remind us of the true essence of public service. I truly appreciate Prof. Osinbajo’s prayers, friendship, and mentorship. His recognition of our reforms in welfare, infrastructure, and security strengthens our resolve to keep governance focused on the welfare and peace of our people. I also appreciate other guests, friends and partners who joined in extending warm wishes. With God’s grace and the support of Abians, we will keep working to build a stronger, safer, and more prosperous Abia for everyone.
Alex Otti tweet mediaAlex Otti tweet mediaAlex Otti tweet mediaAlex Otti tweet media
English
150
421
2.8K
45.3K