NOUN News

NOUN VC’s Address at 30th Matriculation Ceremony 2026

Read the full address by NOUN Vice-Chancellor Prof. Uduma Oji Uduma at the 30th Matriculation Ceremony on April 8, 2026. 25,517 students matriculated across nine faculties.

The Vice-Chancellor of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), Professor Uduma Oji Uduma, delivered a powerful address at the university’s 30th Matriculation Ceremony on Wednesday, 8th April 2026. The ceremony, held virtually across NOUN study centres nationwide, saw 25,517 new students formally admitted into various undergraduate and postgraduate programmes.

In his maiden matriculation address since assuming office, Professor Uduma charged the new students to embrace excellence, reject mediocrity, and take full ownership of their learning. He described open and distance learning as the future of education globally and urged the matriculants to wear their NOUN identity with confidence, calling them pioneers of the evolution of education rather than secondary participants.

The address touched on themes of access, resilience, integrity, and the transformative power of education. The Vice-Chancellor also presented the full profile of the 2026 matriculation cohort, highlighting the distribution of students across faculties and programme levels. Below is the full text of the address as delivered.

DetailInformation
Event30th Matriculation Ceremony
DateWednesday, 8th April 2026
SpeakerProf. Uduma Oji Uduma (Vice-Chancellor)
FormatVirtual (across NOUN Study Centres nationwide)
Total Students Matriculated25,517
Undergraduate Students19,149
PGD Students2,194
Master’s Students4,107
MPhil Students20
Doctoral Students47
RegistrarMr. Oladipo Ajayi
University Websitehttps://www.nou.edu.ng

Full Text of the Vice-Chancellor’s Address

Distinguished members of the University Governing Council,
Principal Officers of the University,
Deans, Directors, and Members of Senate,
Esteemed Faculty and Staff,
Proud Parents and Guardians,
And my dear Matriculating Students:

Today is not merely a ceremony; it is a moment of awakening. It is the quiet but powerful affirmation that no condition is permanent, no limitation is final, and no human aspiration is beyond reach when knowledge becomes the guiding light.

It is with profound honour, deep humility, and a strong sense of historical responsibility that I welcome you to this matriculation ceremony –my first as Vice-Chancellor of this great University. Yet, more than a personal milestone, this gathering represents something far greater: it is a celebration of access, of resilience, and of the enduring human capacity to rise beyond circumstance.

The National Open University of Nigeria stands on a simple but radical philosophical foundation: that education is not a privilege reserved for the few, but a right that must be extended to all. Here, the boundaries that once defined who could learn and who could not are deliberately dismantled. Here, opportunity is not rationed; it is expanded.

This is why this University speaks to the working class – the trader who studies after the day’s toil, the public servant who seeks renewal of intellect, the artisan who refuses to allow skill to be divorced from knowledge. It speaks to the young person in a remote village, where distance once silenced ambition. It speaks to those in correctional centres who, even within confinement, refuse to imprison their minds. It speaks to the underprivileged who understand that while circumstances may delay destiny, they cannot ultimately defeat it. And above all, it speaks to the youth of this nation – the bearers of possibility, the architects of tomorrow.

In the wisdom of our ancestors, we are reminded that however long the night, the dawn must inevitably break. For many of you seated here today, this moment is that dawn – the point at which hope takes form and aspiration finds direction.

But let us be clear: the dawn is not the destination, it is the beginning of the journey.

You have not merely been admitted into a University; you have been initiated into a disciplined intellectual tradition. Education, properly understood, is not the accumulation of certificates but the transformation of the mind – the movement from ignorance to insight, from assumption to understanding, from passive existence to conscious becoming.

At this juncture, it is important to underscore a truth that must fill you with pride: you are students of an Open and Distance Learning University at a time when Open and Distance Learning is not an alternative – it is the future.

Across the world, the walls of the traditional classroom are giving way to digital ecosystems of learning. Conventional universities – once defined by rigid physical structures – are now embracing online platforms, blended learning, and remote instruction. What was once seen as unconventional has become inevitable. What was once optional has become essential.

The implication is unmistakable: you are not late to the future, you are already living in it.

Wear this identity with confidence. You are not disadvantaged; you are strategically positioned. You are not secondary participants in the educational system; you are pioneers of its evolution. While others struggle to adapt to this model, you are already being shaped by it.

Yet, with this advantage comes responsibility.

The flexibility of Open and Distance Learning demands discipline. It requires self-direction, commitment, and intellectual maturity. In this system, success is not imposed, it is earned. You must therefore take ownership of your learning, cultivating the habits of inquiry, reflection, and perseverance.

Our philosophical traditions remind us that knowledge cannot simply be handed over, it must be actively pursued. And our communal wisdom further teaches that no individual journey is complete in isolation. Though you may be dispersed across cities, villages, and even correctional institutions, you are united by purpose. And in that unity lies your strength.

Ladies and gentlemen, permit me at this point to present the profile of this matriculation cohort, which reflects the scale, diversity, and inclusive character of this great University.

In this first semester of 2026, a total of 25,517 students are being matriculated across our various faculties. Of this number, 19,149 are undergraduate students2,194 are enrolled in Postgraduate Diploma programmes4,107 are pursuing Master’s degrees20 are in MPhil programmes, and 47 are doctoral candidates.

The faculty distribution further demonstrates the breadth of academic engagement within our institution: Management Sciences leads with 7,519 students, followed by Social Sciences with 5,933, Education with 3,526, Computing with 3,710, Health Sciences with 3,046, Science with 759, Arts with 704, Agricultural Sciences with 302, and Law with 18.

Each of these numbers is not merely statistical, it is human. It represents ambition where there was once doubt, determination where there was once limitation, and hope where there was once uncertainty.

As rightly emphasized in our institutional brief, the National Open University of Nigeria remains the foremost Open and Distance Learning institution in Nigeria and indeed the West African sub-region, committed to providing quality, accessible, and flexible education without the barriers of location, time, or circumstance.

Let me emphasize this with even greater clarity: Open and Distance Learning is no longer merely comparable to the conventional system – it has become the preferred mode of learning in our time. It is not only equal and proven; it is now setting the direction for the future of education globally. The evidence is unmistakable in the success of our graduates, who continue to distinguish themselves in government, industry, and academia. More importantly, institutions that once defined themselves by physical classrooms are rapidly redesigning their systems around digital and distance learning frameworks. The question is no longer whether Open and Distance Learning is viable; the world has accepted it as the new normal –the necessary architecture for accessible, flexible, and lifelong education in the 21st century.

And so, you must not only participate in this system, you must maximize it.

Engage actively with your facilitation sessions.
Approach your Tutor-Marked Assignments with diligence and seriousness.
Utilize the vast resources available on the Learning Management System.
Build intellectual communities with your peers.
And do not hesitate to seek guidance through our counselling structures and support systems.

These are not mere administrative instructions; they are pathways to excellence.

Dear students, your journey here is not merely about earning a degree. It is about becoming –becoming disciplined, becoming insightful, becoming innovative, and becoming responsible.

In a world increasingly tempted by shortcuts, you must choose integrity. In a society often challenged by ethical compromise, you must stand for truth. For knowledge without character is dangerous, and education without ethics is incomplete.

The wisdom of our heritage reminds us that the individual who is nurtured by the community must, in turn, strengthen that community. This University has embraced you fully, so that you may not only succeed, but also contribute meaningfully to the transformation of society.

Let your education not be an escape from your environment, but a tool for its elevation.

Do not measure your journey by ease, but by growth.
Do not define success by speed, but by depth.
Do not pursue knowledge merely for employment, but for enlightenment.

For wisdom is vast., it cannot be exhausted by one person, nor contained within one lifetime. It must be pursued continuously, shared generously, and applied responsibly.

To our parents and guardians, we thank you for your sacrifices and your faith. To our staff, we commend your unwavering commitment to this noble enterprise.

And to you, our dear matriculating students:

You stand at the threshold of possibility. The future is not something that will happen to you—it is something you must build.

Be proud of where you are.
Be confident in what you represent.
Be committed to what you must become.

Refuse mediocrity.
Embrace excellence.
Commit to growth.
And remain steadfast in the pursuit of knowledge.

On this solemn and historic occasion, I hereby formally admit you into the National Open University of Nigeria as bona fide students of this great institution.

May your minds be sharpened, your character strengthened, and your aspirations fulfilled. May this journey transform not only what you know, but who you become.

Welcome to a University without walls.
Welcome to the future of learning.
Welcome to a future without limits.

Thank you.

Professor Uduma Oji Uduma
Vice-Chancellor

Distinguished members of the University Governing Council,
Principal Officers of the University,
Deans, Directors, and Members of Senate,
Esteemed Faculty and Staff,
Proud Parents and Guardians,
And my dear Matriculating Students:

Today is not merely a ceremony; it is a moment of awakening. It is the quiet but powerful affirmation that no condition is permanent, no limitation is final, and no human aspiration is beyond reach when knowledge becomes the guiding light.

It is with profound honour, deep humility, and a strong sense of historical responsibility that I welcome you to this matriculation ceremony –my first as Vice-Chancellor of this great University. Yet, more than a personal milestone, this gathering represents something far greater: it is a celebration of access, of resilience, and of the enduring human capacity to rise beyond circumstance.

The National Open University of Nigeria stands on a simple but radical philosophical foundation: that education is not a privilege reserved for the few, but a right that must be extended to all. Here, the boundaries that once defined who could learn and who could not are deliberately dismantled. Here, opportunity is not rationed; it is expanded.

This is why this University speaks to the working class – the trader who studies after the day’s toil, the public servant who seeks renewal of intellect, the artisan who refuses to allow skill to be divorced from knowledge. It speaks to the young person in a remote village, where distance once silenced ambition. It speaks to those in correctional centres who, even within confinement, refuse to imprison their minds. It speaks to the underprivileged who understand that while circumstances may delay destiny, they cannot ultimately defeat it. And above all, it speaks to the youth of this nation – the bearers of possibility, the architects of tomorrow.

In the wisdom of our ancestors, we are reminded that however long the night, the dawn must inevitably break. For many of you seated here today, this moment is that dawn – the point at which hope takes form and aspiration finds direction.

But let us be clear: the dawn is not the destination, it is the beginning of the journey.

You have not merely been admitted into a University; you have been initiated into a disciplined intellectual tradition. Education, properly understood, is not the accumulation of certificates but the transformation of the mind – the movement from ignorance to insight, from assumption to understanding, from passive existence to conscious becoming.

At this juncture, it is important to underscore a truth that must fill you with pride: you are students of an Open and Distance Learning University at a time when Open and Distance Learning is not an alternative – it is the future.

Across the world, the walls of the traditional classroom are giving way to digital ecosystems of learning. Conventional universities – once defined by rigid physical structures – are now embracing online platforms, blended learning, and remote instruction. What was once seen as unconventional has become inevitable. What was once optional has become essential.

The implication is unmistakable: you are not late to the future, you are already living in it.

Wear this identity with confidence. You are not disadvantaged; you are strategically positioned. You are not secondary participants in the educational system; you are pioneers of its evolution. While others struggle to adapt to this model, you are already being shaped by it.

Yet, with this advantage comes responsibility.

The flexibility of Open and Distance Learning demands discipline. It requires self-direction, commitment, and intellectual maturity. In this system, success is not imposed, it is earned. You must therefore take ownership of your learning, cultivating the habits of inquiry, reflection, and perseverance.

Our philosophical traditions remind us that knowledge cannot simply be handed over, it must be actively pursued. And our communal wisdom further teaches that no individual journey is complete in isolation. Though you may be dispersed across cities, villages, and even correctional institutions, you are united by purpose. And in that unity lies your strength.

Ladies and gentlemen, permit me at this point to present the profile of this matriculation cohort, which reflects the scale, diversity, and inclusive character of this great University.

In this first semester of 2026, a total of 25,517 students are being matriculated across our various faculties. Of this number, 19,149 are undergraduate students2,194 are enrolled in Postgraduate Diploma programmes4,107 are pursuing Master’s degrees20 are in MPhil programmes, and 47 are doctoral candidates.

The faculty distribution further demonstrates the breadth of academic engagement within our institution: Management Sciences leads with 7,519 students, followed by Social Sciences with 5,933, Education with 3,526, Computing with 3,710, Health Sciences with 3,046, Science with 759, Arts with 704, Agricultural Sciences with 302, and Law with 18.

Each of these numbers is not merely statistical, it is human. It represents ambition where there was once doubt, determination where there was once limitation, and hope where there was once uncertainty.

As rightly emphasized in our institutional brief, the National Open University of Nigeria remains the foremost Open and Distance Learning institution in Nigeria and indeed the West African sub-region, committed to providing quality, accessible, and flexible education without the barriers of location, time, or circumstance.

Let me emphasize this with even greater clarity: Open and Distance Learning is no longer merely comparable to the conventional system – it has become the preferred mode of learning in our time. It is not only equal and proven; it is now setting the direction for the future of education globally. The evidence is unmistakable in the success of our graduates, who continue to distinguish themselves in government, industry, and academia. More importantly, institutions that once defined themselves by physical classrooms are rapidly redesigning their systems around digital and distance learning frameworks. The question is no longer whether Open and Distance Learning is viable; the world has accepted it as the new normal –the necessary architecture for accessible, flexible, and lifelong education in the 21st century.

And so, you must not only participate in this system, you must maximize it.

Engage actively with your facilitation sessions.
Approach your Tutor-Marked Assignments with diligence and seriousness.
Utilize the vast resources available on the Learning Management System.
Build intellectual communities with your peers.
And do not hesitate to seek guidance through our counselling structures and support systems.

These are not mere administrative instructions; they are pathways to excellence.

Dear students, your journey here is not merely about earning a degree. It is about becoming –becoming disciplined, becoming insightful, becoming innovative, and becoming responsible.

In a world increasingly tempted by shortcuts, you must choose integrity. In a society often challenged by ethical compromise, you must stand for truth. For knowledge without character is dangerous, and education without ethics is incomplete.

The wisdom of our heritage reminds us that the individual who is nurtured by the community must, in turn, strengthen that community. This University has embraced you fully, so that you may not only succeed, but also contribute meaningfully to the transformation of society.

Let your education not be an escape from your environment, but a tool for its elevation.

Do not measure your journey by ease, but by growth.
Do not define success by speed, but by depth.
Do not pursue knowledge merely for employment, but for enlightenment.

For wisdom is vast., it cannot be exhausted by one person, nor contained within one lifetime. It must be pursued continuously, shared generously, and applied responsibly.

To our parents and guardians, we thank you for your sacrifices and your faith. To our staff, we commend your unwavering commitment to this noble enterprise.

And to you, our dear matriculating students:

You stand at the threshold of possibility. The future is not something that will happen to you—it is something you must build.

Be proud of where you are.
Be confident in what you represent.
Be committed to what you must become.

Refuse mediocrity.
Embrace excellence.
Commit to growth.
And remain steadfast in the pursuit of knowledge.

On this solemn and historic occasion, I hereby formally admit you into the National Open University of Nigeria as bona fide students of this great institution.

May your minds be sharpened, your character strengthened, and your aspirations fulfilled. May this journey transform not only what you know, but who you become.

Welcome to a University without walls.
Welcome to the future of learning.
Welcome to a future without limits.

Thank you.

Professor Uduma Oji Uduma
Vice-Chancellor

Faculty Breakdown of Newly-Matriculated Students

The 25,517 students matriculated at the 30th ceremony are spread across nine faculties of the National Open University of Nigeria. The table below shows the distribution.

FacultyNumber of Students
Management Sciences7,519
Social Sciences5,933
Computing3,710
Education3,526
Health Sciences3,046
Science759
Arts704
Agricultural Sciences302
Law18
Total25,517

Management Sciences accounts for nearly 30 per cent of the total intake, reflecting continued strong demand for business and management-related programmes through NOUN’s open and distance learning system. Computing follows closely, with 3,710 students choosing technology-related programmes. At the programme level, 19,149 students are undergraduates, while over 6,300 are enrolled in postgraduate programmes ranging from PGD to Doctoral level.

Key Themes From the Vice-Chancellor’s Address

Professor Uduma’s address centred on several themes that are central to the mission of the National Open University of Nigeria. He emphasised that NOUN exists to dismantle barriers to education, serving working professionals, rural dwellers, young people, and even inmates in correctional centres who refuse to let confinement limit their intellectual growth.

The Vice-Chancellor was emphatic that open and distance learning has moved beyond being an alternative to conventional education. He described it as the preferred mode of learning globally, noting that traditional universities are now redesigning their systems around digital and distance learning frameworks. He urged the new students to see themselves as strategically positioned at the forefront of this shift.

He also spoke at length about the responsibilities that come with the flexibility of ODL. He called on students to engage actively with facilitation sessions, approach their Tutor-Marked Assignments (TMAs) with diligence, use the resources on the Learning Management System, build intellectual communities with their peers, and seek guidance through the university’s counselling and support structures.

The address closed with a call for integrity, discipline, and a commitment to using education not merely for personal advancement but for the elevation of communities and society at large.

Final Thoughts

The NOUN 30th Matriculation Ceremony is a landmark moment for the 25,517 students who have been formally admitted into the National Open University of Nigeria. Professor Uduma Oji Uduma’s address set the tone for what the university expects from its newest cohort — excellence, discipline, and a deep sense of purpose.

Whether you are an undergraduate student in the Faculty of Management Sciences, a Master’s candidate in Health Sciences, or a doctoral researcher in any of NOUN’s nine faculties, the Vice-Chancellor’s message applies equally: take ownership of your learning, embrace the flexibility of distance education, and refuse to settle for anything less than your best.

For the latest updates, announcements, and resources, visit the official NOUN website at https://www.nou.edu.ng.

FAQs About NOUN 30th Matriculation Ceremony 2026

When was the NOUN 30th Matriculation Ceremony held?

The ceremony took place on Wednesday, 8th April 2026, conducted virtually across NOUN study centres nationwide.

How many students were matriculated at the NOUN 30th ceremony?

A total of 25,517 students were matriculated, including 19,149 undergraduates, 2,194 PGD students, 4,107 Master’s students, 20 MPhil students, and 47 doctoral candidates.

Who delivered the address at the NOUN 30th Matriculation Ceremony?

The Vice-Chancellor, Professor Uduma Oji Uduma, delivered the address. It was his first matriculation ceremony since assuming office.

Which faculty had the highest enrolment at the NOUN 30th Matriculation?

The Faculty of Management Sciences led with 7,519 students, followed by Social Sciences with 5,933 and Computing with 3,710.

What was the main message of the VC’s matriculation address?

Professor Uduma charged students to embrace excellence, reject mediocrity, and take full ownership of their academic journeys. He described open and distance learning as the future of education globally and urged students to see their NOUN enrolment as a strategic advantage.

Who administered the matriculation oath at the NOUN 30th ceremony?

The Registrar of NOUN, Mr. Oladipo Ajayi, administered the matriculation oath to the students via the Zoom platform.

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