- It’s UCU again
- NCHE pushes for reforms
- Students urged to embrace AI for job creation at UCU Career Expo
- Feasting with family: How students celebrated Eid
- Basemererwa challenges removal as EC Chair, runs to Tribunal
- UCU Honours College donates materials to Bishop West Primary School.
- BUL Women edge UCU Lady Cardinals to extend poor start
- UCU Cardinals end campaign with 2–1 win over IUIU
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By Bill Dan Arnold Borodi Uganda Christian University (UCU) has once again emerged as the overall winner of the 16th National Council for Higher…
National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) has called for urgent amendments to Uganda’s innovation and higher education frameworks, warning that existing policy limitations are constraining the development and commercialisation of innovations emerging from universities.
Students at UCU have been urged to embrace artificial intelligence (AI) as a tool not only for job seeking but also for job creation in an increasingly digital economy.
Let’s begin with the culprits. While sugary foods are widely known to be harmful, many people don’t realise how some common foods quietly cause tooth decay.
It’s often portrayed as an ideal way to connect and intentionally get to know someone on a deeper level to determine if they’re a suitable partner for a long-term, committed relationship, leading to marriage.
Many men who become fathers today grew up without positive father figures. This absence of good role models often leads to difficulties in parenting. Without examples of nurturing and supportive fatherhood, some men lack the knowledge or understanding of how to effectively care for and guide their children. This gap can sometimes result in harmful behaviours, including harshness or abuse, as negative patterns from their own childhoods are repeated.
“It takes a step to remove the blind fold to see. The stories are actually in open space to us, but we are blind folded by different biases,” said Catherine. Alumni from the School of Journalism attended, the dean School of Journalism, and journalism students
It began innocently. The student recounts how he was introduced to codeine through international students, particularly Nigerians, during his university years.
Rt. Rev. Assoc. Prof. Fred Sheldon Mwesigwa, Bishop of Ankole Diocese represented the Chancellor, the Most Rev. Dr. Stephen Kaziimba Mugalu, and praised Prof. Nyende for reaching this important academic level, saying it showed his hard work and deep knowledge.
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