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Plagiarism: TETFund Insists on Scrutiny Over Research Proposals
Kuni Tyessi in Abuja
The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) says all research proposals by lecturers and other scholars will be subjected to an anti-plagiarism test before attracting the funding of the agency.
Executive Secretary of TETFund, Sonny Echono, who made this known yesterday in Abuja during a courtesy visit by Committee of Vice Chancellors of Nigerian Universities (CVCNU), said only the proposals that would scale through the CVC-developed anti-plagiarism software would get its grant.
TETFund lamented the attitude of Nigerians that now depend fully on the internet or engage the services of foreigners in the writing of projects and theses.
“We have received feedback, we heard it is now possible to go to internet and copy complete thesis or to engage even private actors outside this country, some countries have become notorious for that and we believe in the anti-plagiarism device you have developed we go a long way in detecting this and ensuring compliance.
“Indeed, we have adopted a policy in TETFund that going forward all proposals coming to us for support must go through your system and receive certification that they have acquired the minimum standard required from all publishers and for all authors before they can benefit from our support.
Speaking further, Echono challenged universities to do more by ensuring that more Nigerians are studying in the country to preserve the huge resources being spent in foreign institutions abroad.
“ If you look at the amount that we expend sending children across our shores – overseas for education, the cost per student sending people to Europe and America in particular, the cost to sponsor one child there is enough to train 15 or 20 back here.
“Given the magnitude of challenges we face, we must find a way of looking inward, that is why we keep challenging, especially the private universities to create synergy and to compete with these foreign universities that are attracting our students,” he said.
Earlier, the chairman of CVCNU and Vice Chancellor of Niger Delta University, Professor Samuel Gowon Edoumiekumo, said the body, established in 1962, has a membership of 218 universities approved by the National Universities Commission (NUC).
“The CVCNU serves as a platform for assisting Nigerian universities attain academic, administrative and community relations excellence through cooperation and exchange of ideas of its leadership,” he said.
Professor Edoumiekumo, who was joined during the visit by the Secretary General of CVCNU, Professor Yakubu Ochefu, among others, expressed delight over the committee’s partnership with TETFund in the area of anti-plagiarism and digitalisation of theses.
“The CVCNU is working closely with the Fund to deploy the thesis digitisation for Nigerian tertiary institutions. This is in addition to deploying our home grown Plagiarism Detection Software called EagleScan.
“The application is a best-in-class solution that will enable all final year and postgraduate students undertake a plagiarism check before they submit their long essays/thesis, developed by a team of software engineers from six public and private universities in Nigeria, EagleScan plugs into several local research repositories and offers 14 features, including local language support, that make it stands out against local and international competitors.
“The Fund’s support for both projects is a significant turning point in the efforts to develop a National Academic Research Repository,” he said.