I Want To Be A Fashion Designer – UDUSOK First Class Graduate
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A First Class graduate of the Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUSOK), Aishat Biliaminu, says she will go into fashion designing.
Aishat Biliaminu |
Her ambition initially was to study
Medicine and Surgery at the Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto (UDUS). But
Aishat Biliaminu could not make it as she was offered admission to study
Biological Sciences, where she made a First Class. However, the valedictorian
says she plans to go into fashion designing. NURUDEEN AKEWUSHOLA (200-Level
Mathematics) writes.
The dream of all First Class
graduates is to get a lucrative job. But no so for Aishat Biliaminu, a First
Class graduate of Biological Sciences of the Usmanu Danfodiyo University,
Sokoto (UDUS).
The valedictorian, who finished with
a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 4.50, plans to be a fashion
designer.
For Aishat, a youth Corps member in
Edo State, she prayed for a First Class from the day she gained admission into
the institution.
According to the indigene of
Erin-Ile in Kwara State, she planned to study Medicine and Surgery, but this
dream was aborted, no thanks to a low score in the Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examination (UTME).
However, she accepted her fate and
accepted the course she was offered.
She said: “I wanted to study
Medicine initially, but I was not offered admission in 2011. Then, I sat for
another UTME the same year and put in for Medicine. I got 88 per cent in
post-UTME, but I was not offered the course because of a low UTME score. I was
offered Biological Science. I cried when I could not get Medicine. I didn’t
like Biological Science.
“I wanted to study a professional
course, which my parents wanted. They were also sad when I did not get
Medicine. My dad asked me to sit for another UTME, but I didn’t like the idea.
I applied to change from Biological Science to another medical course, but I
wasn’t successful. I had to accept my fate. I promised my parents that I would
finish with a First Class to make them happy.”
Achieving the feat did not come easy
for Aishat. Like her peers, she had some challenges.
Was her feat ever threatened by
failure? “Yes,” Aishat said, adding: “I was, unexpectedly, given D in CHM 102
and I thought I might not finish with a First Class. My classmates advised me
to go to the lecturer and complain, but I declined because it could be
dangerous to my academic pursuit. I accepted it as my fate and worked hard to
ensure such never happened again.”
Besides, accommodation was another
challenge that almost threatened Aishat’s goal. Except in 100-Level, when she
stayed on the campus, Aishat said she could not get accommodation till she
completed her studies. She squatted for the rest of her stay in the
institution.
She said: “Getting accommodation was
a major challenge as I moved to higher academic level. I only got accommodation
when I was a fresher, but I squatted in my remaining years in the school. It
wasn’t that my parents did not have money to get me a good space. I wanted to
stay on the campus, but the politics of hostel allocation did not allow me to
get a bed space.”
Aishat said she knew what she wanted
from the outset of her academic sojourn, which made her invest ample time and
energy in her academics. Finishing with a CGPA of 4.50, she said, was below her
expectation. She added that the challenges she faced during her studies
hampered her performance.
“I believe I could have performed
better, but couple of challenges I faced affected me and led to tumbling of my
cumulative grade. But, I am still thankful that I finished with a First Class,”
she said.
Aishat said she had sleepless
nights throughout her days in the institution. Whenever she saw her peers
going for night reading, she felt challenged and this spurred her to folow
them.
“I saw every classmate as a
competitor. Whenever I saw them going to read at night, I would lose sleep
because I wanted to maintain my academic standing. This encouraged me to study
hard. Whenever I was tired of reading and felt like going to sleep in the
hostel, the sight of students reading would change my mind,” she said.
But Aishat, unlike her peers, did
not go to the library or classrooms to read. She read in the mosque, where she
said she got tranquility and assimilated faster.
She said: “Sometimes, I read early
before sunrise because there is high assimilation then. When I woke up, I would
take my bath and cook. Then, I would go and read if there was no lecture. But,
if I had early morning lectures, I would go to mosque to read after the
lectures. I love reading in the mosque because of the tranquility. I spent the
rest my time there.”
All work and no play, the saying
goes, makes Jack a dull boy. For Aishat, it was not all about night reading.
She balanced her studies with good sleep and films watching during her leisure.
“Whenever I was not going to study
or go for tutorial classes, I attend social function. I always attended
meetings of Erin-Ile Students’ Union and our annual day programme. Beyond that,
I watch films and also take hours of sleep,” she said.
Aishat advised students to choose
wisely when choosing friends. She discouraged students from choosing friends
who have nothing meaningful to contribute to their goals. This belief made her
to keep friendship with First Class peers, including Bolaji Ajape of Veterinery
Medicine, Ola Lukman and Simon Adegoke of Biochemistry.
Asked what her plan is after the
National Youth Service, Aishat said: “No time to waste. I have been spending my
time learning fashion designing. After my service year, I want to go fully into
fashion designing. I have started. I have plans to employ people to sew clothes
for me. Although I might eventually go into lecturing, my attention now is
focused on fashion.”
Source: The Nation.
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