DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF
COMPUTERIZED TRANSCRIPT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
ABSTRACT
This project is a computerized
information management for transcript management which will help to over-come
the undesirable problem associated with misplacement of student records,
student’s grades, slow and strenuous accessibility of student report and
record, inaccurate record keeping and poor information management within the
schools. Here the aims and objectives of the study will be easily retrieved
with increased data security, and there will be reduction in the amount of
resources, which will lower the cost of processing of student transcript, since
information is stored in a database with reduced data redundancy. This will
also prevent over-working of personnel and reduce in the bulkiness of file and
record. This program developed/designed will ensure easy flow of information in
the school, and accurate information management in all school.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
There were three fundamentally
distinct education systems in Nigeria in 1990. The indigenous system, Quranic
Schools and formal European-style education institutions. In the rural areas
where the majority lived, children learned the skills of farming and other
work, as well as the duties of adulthood, from participation in the community,
this process was of ten supplemented by age based schools in which groups of
young boys were instructed in community responsibilities by mature men. By the
1970s, education experts were asking how the system could be integrated into
the more formal schooling of the young, but the question remained unresolved by
1990.
Western-style education came to
Nigeria with the missionaries in the mid-Nineteenth century. Although the first
mission school was founded in 1843 by Methodists, it was the Anglican Church
missionary society that pushed forward in the early 1850s to found a chain of
missions and schools. Followed quickly in the late 1850s by the Roman Catholics
in 1887 in what is now Southern Nigeria, an education department was founded
that began setting curricum requirement and administered grants to the mission
societies. By 1914, when North and South were United into one colony, there
were fifty-nine government and ninety-one mission primary schools in the South;
all eleven secondary schools, except for king’s college in Lagos, work run by
the missions.
The education system focused strongly
on examinations. In 1916 Fredrick Lugard, first governor of the Unified Colony,
set up a school inspectorate. Discipline, building and adequacy of teaching
staff were to be inspected, but the most points given to a school’s performance
went to the numbers and ranking of it’s examinations results. This stress on
examination was still used in 1990 to judge educational results and to obtain
qualification for jobs in government and the private sector.
As more information is made available
in a variety of formats and media and in a variety of locations, the need to
manage information/data efficiently becomes more and more critical. Both staff
and public users want access to stored information and want to access it more
efficiently. It is the university policy to improve both the efficiency and
effectiveness of result processing operations (student record/grades), and
services through the implementation of A computerized transcript management
system.
DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF COMPUTERIZED TRANSCRIPT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 58
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock

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