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Landmark University
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Landmark University is a private Christian university, affiliated with the Living Faith Church Worldwide and located in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, Nigeria. In 2014, it was featured among the top five universities in Nigeria by Webometrics.[4]
Key Information
Governance
[edit]World Mission Agency (WMA), a Christian mission organization, founded by Bishop David Oyedepo, is the umbrella governing body of Landmark University. The Chancellor, David Oyedepo, serves as the chairman of the board of trustees of the World Mission Agency. The board of trustees of the World Mission Agency is responsible for the appointment of members of the Board of Regents (Governing Council) of Landmark University. The Board is the apex governing body of the university.[citation needed]
The pro-chancellor of the university was Pastor Yemi Nathaniel. His appointment took effect from August 2014. According to the chancellor, the role of the pro-chancellor is to facilitate decision-making and approval processes in the university as well as spiritual oversight of the university community. The position of pro-chancellor has been retired.[citation needed]
The current vice-chancellor is Professor Kolawole O. Ajanaku[5] who replaced Professor Charity Aremu.[6]
Agrarian revolutionary drive
[edit]The chancellor of Landmark University has on multiple occasions highlighted that the university is aimed at improving the agricultural sector of Nigeria and Africa at large.[7][8][9] Before the Oil boom of the 1970s, Nigeria's economy was thriving as an agrarian economy and the nation gave attention to Agriculture. After the Oil Boom, the agriculture industry in Nigeria has been on a decline, the Nation that was a one-time exporter of several cash crops has become import-dependent so much that it cannot on its own feed its population talk less of exporting to other countries.[10] Landmark University aims to start an agrarian revolution in Nigeria and Africa that would restore the Nation's lost glory and redirect its attention to the many natural earthen resources that it has.
The university encourages its students to venture into agriculture whether it is their core discipline or not[11][8] and encourages the enrolment of Nigerian students into Agriculture-related courses through scholarships and Career talks.[9] In addition to this, the university has pioneered a Certificate and Diploma Course in "Agri-preneurship" in Nigeria, a program designed to enlighten its participants on the entrepreneurial opportunities that exist in Agriculture.[7]
The university has made ties with several leading Agriculture Institutions both in Research and practice and many other institutions in the pursuance of their agrarian revolutionary drive. Some of these institutions are the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)[12] and the National Space Research and Development Agency (NASRDA).[13]
In nearly 7 years of existence, the university runs 6 Agriculture related programs, namely Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, Animal Science, Crop Science, Soil Science[14] and Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering[15] and has graduated over 388 agriculture professionals. The school also has a total of 1,059 hectares of farming land;[16] 320 hectares on the university property in Omu-Aran, Kwara State,[17] 354 hectares at Eleyin Village along the Omu-Aran-Ilorin highway[18] and 385 hectares at Agbonda also in Kwara State.[19][20] According to the former Vice-chancellor of the school, Professor Aize Obayan, Landmark University produces most of the food items consumed on its campus and sells farm produce to its neighbouring communities.[9] Some of the agricultural products of the university's farm are eggs, frozen chicken, fish, soya beans, cassava, rice,[21] fufu flour[17] and many others including innovative agricultural products like the Brown Rice.[22]
Academic programmes
[edit]College of Agricultural Sciences
[edit]- Agricultural Extension and Economics
- Agricultural Extension and Rural Development
- Agricultural Economics
- Animal Science
- Crop and Soil Sciences
- Food Science and Nutrition
College of Business and Social Sciences
[edit]School of Business
[edit]School of Social Sciences
[edit]College of Science and Engineering
[edit]School of Pure and Applied Sciences
[edit]- Industrial Physics
- Industrial Chemistry
- Industrial Mathematics
- Computer Science
- Biochemistry
- Microbiology
- Geophysics
School of Engineering
[edit]Campus life
[edit]The university is situated on its campus in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, where all its academic activities take place. As of 2014, Landmark University had a student population of 2684 including international students from other African countries.[3] Landmark University holds mid-week church services for her students every Tuesday and Thursday between the hours of 8:00 am and 9:45 am. Each student is expected to attend at least one of these services every week. All students are required to live on the university's campus in the hostels built for them. Students are expected to be back in their respective hostels before 9:00 pm daily.
The school provides opportunities for students to be involved in practical skill acquisition sessions as a part of the school's Entrepreneurial Development Studies (EDS) course. Students learn various skills including baking, bead making, soap making, fashion design, automobile works, fishery, and many others.
Former Vice-Chancellors
[edit]- Professor Mathew Ajayi - 2011 to July 2014.[23]
- Professor Joseph Afolayan - August 2014-August 2015[24]
- Professor Aize Obayan - August 2015 – July 2017
- Professor Olayanju Adeniyi - August 2017 – September 2021[6]
Notable faculty
[edit]- Professor Aize Obayan - former Vice-chancellor
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Nigeria must utilise research findings, says Oyedepo". 22 November 2017.
- ^ "The Vice-Chancellor – PROFESSOR CHARITY ONYE AREMU". Landmark University. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
- ^ a b University, Landmark. "Landmark University | Student Life". lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 2018-01-17.
- ^ says, Damilare Adegoke (2014-07-31). "2014 Best Universities in Nigeria - Ranking by Webometrics". Nigeria Universities - Polytechnics and College of Education news. Retrieved 2021-02-27.
- ^ "The Vice-Chancellor – PROFESSOR KOLAWOLE O. AJANAKU". Landmark University. Retrieved 23 April 2022.
- ^ a b "Landmark Varsity gets new VC - Vanguard News". Vanguard News. 2017-09-19. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ a b "Wanted: Agrarian revolution for economic development". Punch Newspapers. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ a b "At Landmark University, every student is a farmer – Oyedepo". Nigerian Tribune. 2016-12-08. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ a b c "Landmark University to Ignite Agrarian Revolution - Oyedepo". Agronigeria. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ University, Landmark. "Landmark University | Our Story". lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ Ahmad, Romoke (December 29, 2016). "We encourage students to build careers in agriculture". Daily Trust. Archived from the original on 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "IITA formalizes partnership with Landmark University". IITA News. 2017-10-23. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "Landmark varsity partners NASRDA on agric technology". Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "Landmark University | College of Agricultural Science". cas.lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "Landmark University Available Courses. | Students Nigeria". Students Nigeria. 2017-07-03. Archived from the original on 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "LANDMARK UNIVERSITY KICKS OFF OUTGROWERS SCHEME TO EMPLOY GRADUATES | Ilorin, Kwara News". www.ilorin.info. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ a b University, Landmark. "Landmark University | University Farms". lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "ELEYIN PLANTATION FARM | Aize Obayan". aizeobayan.agr.lmu.edu.ng. Archived from the original on 2018-01-16. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "Economic recession is an opportunity to explore agriculture -Landmark varsity V-C Aize Obayan - The Nation Nigeria". The Nation Nigeria. 2016-10-08. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "LMU Farms | Aize Obayan". aizeobayan.agr.lmu.edu.ng. Archived from the original on 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "LANDMARK UNIVERSITY BEHIND RICE PRODUCTION, SEE PICS". 2017-12-15. Archived from the original on 2018-01-16. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ University, Landmark. "Landmark University | News & Events". lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 2018-01-16.
- ^ "Professor Joseph. O. Afolayan Appointed Acting Vice-Chancellor of Landmark University". lmu.edu.ng. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
- ^ "Obayan becomes Landmark University's V.C". guardian.ng. 24 August 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
Landmark University
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Establishment
Landmark University was established as a private institution by the Living Faith Church Worldwide, a Pentecostal Christian denomination, with Dr. David O. Oyedepo, the church's president and founder, serving as the university's chancellor and primary visionary.[1][3] The university's creation stemmed from Oyedepo's emphasis on addressing Nigeria's agricultural and food security challenges through education, aiming to foster an "agrarian revolution" by training leaders in relevant fields.[1] On March 7, 2011, the National Universities Commission (NUC), Nigeria's regulatory body for higher education, granted Landmark University a provisional license to operate as a degree-awarding institution.[1][4] This approval enabled the rapid setup of academic infrastructure in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, a rural area selected for its alignment with the university's agricultural focus.[1] Full operations commenced on March 21, 2011, coinciding with the official dedication ceremony led by Oyedepo, marking the intake of the inaugural cohort of undergraduate students.[1] Initial programs were concentrated in three colleges: Agricultural Sciences, Sciences and Engineering, and Business and Social Sciences, reflecting the institution's mandate to prioritize practical, solution-driven education over traditional liberal arts models.[1] By design, the university admitted only full-time undergraduates in its first year, with no postgraduate offerings at launch, to build a focused foundational structure.[4]Key Milestones and Expansion
Landmark University was granted a provisional license by the National Universities Commission (NUC) on March 7, 2011, authorizing it to operate as a private degree-awarding institution focused on undergraduate programs in agriculture and related fields.[1] The university was formally dedicated by its founder, Bishop David Oyedepo, and commenced full academic operations on March 21, 2011, launching with three foundational colleges: Agricultural Sciences, Sciences and Engineering, and Business and Social Sciences.[1] These initial offerings emphasized practical training to drive an agrarian revolution, aligning with the institution's mandate to leverage Nigeria's agricultural potential for economic self-sufficiency.[1] Early expansion included the initiation of community development initiatives on December 3, 2011, which extended the university's influence beyond campus through outreach and practical agricultural projects.[8] In September 2014, under the leadership of the vice-chancellor at the time, the School of Postgraduate Studies was established to broaden research capabilities and advanced degree offerings.[9] Concurrently, the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) conducted an accreditation visit from October 19 to 23, 2014, granting interim accreditation to programs such as Agricultural/Biosystems Engineering (65.4% score) and Chemical Engineering, signaling growing recognition of the engineering faculty's standards.[10] Subsequent growth accelerated with infrastructure development and program maturation, culminating in a perfect accreditation record from the NUC in November-December 2024 exercises, where all 23 undergraduate and postgraduate programs received full approval.[11] This milestone underscored the university's expansion in academic quality and capacity, with enrollment rising from an initial cohort to support broader research and teaching scopes.[12] In 2025, international benchmarks highlighted further institutional expansion: Landmark University ranked first in Kwara State and the North Central region, and fourth nationally among 36 ranked Nigerian institutions, in the Times Higher Education (THE) Impact Rankings, reflecting advancements in sustainable development goals alignment.[5] It also achieved second place in Nigeria and 251-300 globally in the Interdisciplinary Science Ranking 2025, demonstrating growth in research output and cross-disciplinary innovation.[13] These achievements, coupled with events like the inaugural Building the Next Exporter program on May 15, 2025, in partnership with the Nigerian Export Promotion Council, illustrate the university's evolution into a hub for agricultural exports and regional economic impact.[14]Governance and Administration
Leadership Structure
Landmark University's governance is structured around the Board of Regents, which serves as the apex body responsible for strategic oversight, policy formulation, and key appointments, including that of the Vice-Chancellor.[15][16] The Board is chaired by the Chancellor, Dr. David Oyedepo, who holds a ceremonial and visionary role aligned with the university's founding principles.[17] The Pro-Chancellor, Pastor (Mrs.) Faith Oyedepo, supports the Chairman in board proceedings and represents continuity in institutional leadership.[16][18] The Vice-Chancellor acts as the chief executive officer, managing academic, administrative, and operational affairs under the Board's directives. Appointments to this position are ratified by the Board of Regents, ensuring alignment with the university's mission. Principal officers, including the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Registrar, Bursar, and Librarian, form the executive management team, reporting to the Vice-Chancellor. Academic leadership is decentralized through college deans and directors of specialized units, facilitating program-specific decision-making.| Office | Current Holder |
|---|---|
| Vice-Chancellor | Prof. Kolawole O. Ajanaku |
| Deputy Vice-Chancellor | Prof. John Ojediran |
| Registrar | Engr. Adebayo Ajala |
| Chaplain | Pst. Popoola Joshua |
Chancellorship and Vice-Chancellors
The Chancellor of Landmark University is Dr. David Olaniyi Oyedepo, founder and presiding bishop of Living Faith Church Worldwide, who has held the position since the institution's establishment in 2011.[3] As Chancellor, Oyedepo chairs the Board of Regents, the university's highest governing authority, overseeing major policy decisions, strategic appointments, and alignment with the institution's core mandates, including faith-based education and agricultural innovation.[18] The role emphasizes visionary leadership rather than operational management, with the Chancellor approving key executive appointments recommended by the Board.[21] The Pro-Chancellor position supports the Chancellor in governance, currently held by Pastor (Mrs.) Faith Oyedepo, who participates in Board deliberations and ceremonial functions.[22] Previous Pro-Chancellors, such as Pastor Yemi Nathaniel, have similarly facilitated transitions in university leadership. The Pro-Chancellor's involvement ensures continuity in the university's ecclesiastical and administrative framework. The Vice-Chancellor acts as the principal academic and executive officer, managing daily operations, academic affairs, and implementation of the Chancellor's vision. Appointments are made by the Board of Regents for fixed terms, typically five years, with substantive Vice-Chancellors distinguished from acting or interim holders. Professor Charity Aremu served as the 4th substantive Vice-Chancellor, appointed effective October 1, 2022, focusing on academic excellence and institutional growth during her tenure.[21] She was succeeded by Professor Kolawole O. Ajanaku, the 6th substantive Vice-Chancellor, appointed effective September 1, 2023; Ajanaku, a specialist in industrial chemistry with over 28 years of experience including prior roles at Covenant University, has emphasized research innovation and administrative efficiency.[15] Earlier substantive Vice-Chancellors, numbering at least three since 2011, have included figures like Professor Aize Obayan, who advanced postgraduate programs and interdisciplinary initiatives from 2015 onward.[9] This succession reflects the university's emphasis on merit-based leadership aligned with its foundational principles.Mission and Institutional Philosophy
Agrarian Revolutionary Drive
The Agrarian Revolutionary Drive constitutes a foundational element of Landmark University's institutional philosophy, positioning the university as a catalyst for agricultural transformation across Africa. Established in response to Nigeria's post-independence shift from a leading agricultural exporter in the 1960s to a major food importer by the late 1980s—driven by the oil boom, rural-urban migration, and neglect of arable land—the drive seeks to harness the nation's vast human and natural resources for self-sufficiency and economic revitalization.[1] Chancellor Dr. David Oyedepo has articulated this as a commitment to "raising a new generation of solution providers through the covenant channels of inspiration; an army of young people who will be committed to solving local problems and by extension commanding global influence."[1] The vision explicitly aims to spearhead an agrarian revolution by exploring "hidden treasures in the mother-earth," thereby restoring the dignity of the black race through productive engagement with soil, crops, and livestock.[23] This drive manifests through targeted educational and practical initiatives designed to cultivate agripreneurial expertise and innovation. Landmark University prioritizes programs in agricultural sciences, emphasizing value addition, supply chain management, and profitable farming models to address food insecurity and unemployment.[24] The African Agripreneurship Development Centre (AADC), conceived by Oyedepo, delivers modular training in agricultural business skills, offering certifications from diplomas to degrees, with a focus on hands-on application to inspire a mindset shift toward agriculture as a viable profession for economic growth and job creation.[24] Complementary efforts include operating commercial research farms that demonstrate scalable techniques in crop production and livestock rearing, fostering real-world problem-solving among students and contributing to local food supply chains.[1] To advance the drive continent-wide, the university pursues strategic collaborations and policy engagements. In March 2022, Landmark University partnered with the African Union Commission to popularize agrarian initiatives, aligning with broader goals of enhancing agricultural productivity and youth empowerment across member states.[25] International ties, such as with the University of Nottingham, support research in sustainable farming practices tailored to African contexts.[26] These efforts underscore a pragmatic orientation toward reversing dependency on imports, with metrics like farm outputs and graduate employability in agribusiness serving as indicators of progress, though long-term impacts remain tied to sustained investment and policy support.[23]Faith-Based Educational Mandate
Landmark University's faith-based educational mandate derives from its affiliation with the Living Faith Church Worldwide and emphasizes the integration of Christian biblical principles into all facets of teaching, learning, and campus life. Established in 2011 under the vision of Chancellor Bishop David Oyedepo, the institution seeks to produce leaders who address global challenges, particularly food security, through a framework that prioritizes spiritual formation alongside academic excellence.[1] This mandate views education as a divine instrument for restoring human dignity and advancing agrarian solutions, with faith serving as the foundational driver for innovation and character development.[27] Central to this mandate is the "Total Man Concept," which holistically develops students' spiritual, mental, and physical capacities to align with perceived divine purposes. Programs incorporate biblical teachings to cultivate core values including Spirituality, Integrity, Possibility Mentality, Capacity Building, Responsibility, Diligence, and Sacrifice, all rooted in scriptural principles.[27][28] Faith integration extends to mandatory spiritual activities, such as chapel services held multiple times weekly, which reinforce discipline and collective devotion as cornerstones of student life.[29] Admission policies enforce this mandate by requiring applicants to demonstrate God-fearing character and unwavering commitment to obedience toward God, irrespective of background, to foster a unified Christian mission environment.[28] Curricular elements, including Entrepreneurial Development Studies and Agri-preneurship, embed faith-based perspectives to equip graduates as value-adding professionals capable of societal transformation.[27] This approach, as articulated in university proceedings, aims to counteract secular educational models by prioritizing biblical ethics in leadership training.[27]Academic Programs
College of Agricultural Sciences
The College of Agricultural Sciences constitutes one of the core academic units at Landmark University, established upon the institution's licensing by Nigeria's National Universities Commission on March 7, 2011, to deliver undergraduate programs in agriculture-focused disciplines.[1] This college aligns with the university's emphasis on practical agricultural training to address food security challenges in Nigeria and Africa, offering programs that integrate theoretical knowledge with hands-on farming and research applications.[30] It houses multiple departments that oversee bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees, preparing students for roles in agribusiness, extension services, and sustainable farming practices. Key departments within the college include Agricultural Economics, Agricultural Extension and Rural Development, Animal Science, Crop Science, and Soil Science.[31] Undergraduate offerings feature Bachelor of Agriculture (B.Agric.) degrees in these areas, requiring five years of study including supervised practical work experience on the university's integrated farms.[32] Postgraduate programs extend to Postgraduate Diplomas (PGD), M.Sc., and Ph.D. levels in the same specializations, with admission criteria mandating a minimum second-class lower division for master's entrants and relevant prior degrees for doctoral candidates.[33] These curricula emphasize empirical approaches to crop yield optimization, livestock management, and economic modeling of agricultural systems, supported by facilities such as demonstration farms and soil testing labs. Research within the college focuses on high-impact areas like climate-resilient crop varieties and soil fertility enhancement, contributing to the university's broader outputs in peer-reviewed journals on African agriculture.[34] Faculty-led initiatives have produced graduates who apply evidence-based methods to local farming constraints, such as pest resistance and nutrient deficiencies, though specific output metrics remain tied to institutional repositories rather than independent rankings.[30] The college maintains a student-to-faculty ratio conducive to mentorship, fostering causal linkages between academic training and real-world agricultural productivity gains in Nigeria's agrarian economy.College of Business and Social Sciences
The College of Business and Social Sciences at Landmark University encompasses departments focused on business administration, economics, and social sciences, offering undergraduate and postgraduate degrees aimed at developing professional skills in these areas.[35] Established as part of the university's initial academic structure upon its founding in 2011, the college supports the institution's emphasis on practical, research-oriented education aligned with national development needs in Nigeria.[1] Undergraduate programs include B.Sc. degrees in Accounting, Business Administration, Economics, Politics and International Relations, Sociology, and Mass Communication, each spanning four years and requiring O'Level credits in relevant subjects such as Mathematics, English, and Economics.[32][36] The Mass Communication program includes film-related courses across levels: at the 100 level, MCM101 Foundations of Broadcasting and Film; at the 200 level, MAC215 Introduction to Film and Cinema and MCM209 Drama, Film and Documentary Production; at the 300 level, MAC344 Film and Video Production; and at the 400 level, MAC417 Film Criticism. These courses cover foundational concepts, introduction to film, production aspects, and criticism.[37] Postgraduate offerings feature Postgraduate Diplomas (PGD), Master's degrees (M.Sc., MBA), and Ph.D. programs in Accounting and Finance, Business Administration, and Economics, with admission typically requiring a minimum second-class lower degree or equivalent professional qualifications.[33][31] The college's departments are Accounting and Finance, Business Administration, Economics, Politics and International Relations, Sociology, and Mass Communication, where coursework integrates theoretical foundations with applied projects, such as case studies in financial management and policy analysis.[35][38] Prof. Egbide Ben-Caleb, a professor of Accounting and Finance, serves as Dean, overseeing academic delivery and research initiatives within the college.[39]| Department | Undergraduate Program | Postgraduate Programs |
|---|---|---|
| Accounting and Finance | B.Sc. Accounting | PGD, M.Sc., Ph.D. in Accounting and Finance |
| Business Administration | B.Sc. Business Administration | PGD, MBA, M.Sc., Ph.D. in Business Administration |
| Economics | B.Sc. Economics | PGD, M.Sc., Ph.D. in Economics |
| Politics and International Relations | B.Sc. Politics and International Relations | N/A |
| Sociology | B.Sc. Sociology | N/A |
| Mass Communication | B.Sc. Mass Communication | N/A |
College of Science and Engineering
The College of Science and Engineering at Landmark University comprises departments in engineering and pure and applied sciences, offering undergraduate and postgraduate degrees focused on technical innovation aligned with the university's agrarian and technological mandates.[40] Undergraduate programs include B.Eng degrees in Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Electrical and Information Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Mechatronics Engineering, each spanning five years and emphasizing practical applications in resource management and industrial processes.[32] In the sciences, B.Sc programs cover Biochemistry, Computer Science, Industrial Chemistry, Industrial Mathematics, Industrial Physics, and Microbiology, integrating foundational research with industry-relevant skills such as computational modeling and biophysical analysis.[41] Postgraduate offerings in the college include M.Eng and M.Phil degrees in specialized engineering fields like Power and Machinery, Soil and Water Conservation, and Crop and Food Processing within Agricultural Engineering, alongside M.Sc programs in scientific disciplines such as Biochemistry and Microbiology.[40] These programs require prior qualifications including a relevant bachelor's degree with minimum CGPA thresholds, such as 3.0 on a 5.0 scale for master's entry, and emphasize thesis-based research on topics like renewable energy systems and microbial biotechnology.[31] The college received accreditation evaluation from the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria (COREN) in October 2014, assessing facilities, curriculum, and faculty for engineering programs.[10] In June 2025, the university achieved full accreditation status across its programs, including those in the college, as confirmed by the National Universities Commission, marking sustained compliance with national standards for engineering and science education.[12] Notable student outcomes include the first-ever 5.0 CGPA graduate from the Mechanical Engineering department in 2023, highlighting rigorous academic standards.[42] Research within the college addresses practical challenges, such as engineering solutions for agricultural mechanization and applied scientific investigations into material properties for industrial use, supported by departmental labs though specific output metrics remain institutionally aggregated.[43] Faculty contributions include rankings among the global top 2% scientists, with expertise in mechanical and related engineering fields driving peer-reviewed publications on topics like mechatronics applications.[6]Campus and Facilities
Physical Infrastructure
Landmark University's campus, located in Omu-Aran, Kwara State, Nigeria, spans facilities designed to support its agricultural and academic focus, with key structures including specialized college buildings. The Second College Building, measuring 9,445 square meters, houses programs in business and agricultural sciences.[4] The College of Engineering occupies a 5,508-square-meter facility equipped with modern workshops.[4] Similarly, the College of Pure and Applied Sciences features a 5,543-square-meter building with well-equipped laboratories for scientific research and instruction.[4] Student housing consists of eight halls of residence—four for males and four for females—accommodating up to 4,720 students, each equipped with common rooms, butteries, and salons for communal activities.[4] [44] Staff accommodations include 15 blocks of two-bedroom flats, 16 blocks of three-bedroom flats, three blocks of two-bedroom chalets, and 20 duplexes for senior faculty.[4] The Centre for Learning Resources serves as the primary library, a three-floor ultra-modern structure spanning 1,230 square meters, housing reference materials, e-books, and access to online databases; it operates extended hours from 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. on weekdays.[4] [26] Information and communication technology infrastructure includes computer laboratories in the First and Second College Buildings with a total of 420 networked systems, a 100-system simulation lab, and a 50-system e-learning lab.[4] Additional facilities encompass a 2,882-square-meter chapel seating 2,500, a 1,581-square-meter medical center providing tiered health services, a sports complex with a FIFA-standard soccer pitch and various courts, and a cafeteria offering local and continental meals.[4] The campus maintains self-sufficient utilities, including waterworks, reservoirs, a sewage treatment plant, and provisions for constant power and water supply.[4] [44] A faculty building was completed and commissioned in April 2019 to expand academic capacity.[45]Student Life and Activities
Student life at Landmark University emphasizes holistic development aligned with the institution's agrarian and faith-based mandate, integrating academic rigor with mandatory spiritual, physical, and entrepreneurial activities. All students reside on campus in eight halls of residence—four for males and four for females—with a total capacity of 4,720 beds, featuring common rooms, butteries, and salons for recreation and social interaction.[4] Strict residency rules prohibit cooking, opposite-sex visitors beyond reception areas, unauthorized appliances, and items such as mobile phones, jeans, and drugs, with penalties including fines up to ₦10,000, confiscation, suspension, or expulsion enforced by hall officers and the Students Disciplinary Committee.[4] Daily roll calls at 9:30 p.m., enforced "great silence" from midnight to 5:00 a.m., and lights-out at 12:30 a.m. maintain discipline, while 24/7 security, power, water, and internet access support campus living.[4] [44] Spiritual activities form a core component, with mandatory attendance at chapel services, including the Covenant Hour of Prayer from 5:30–6:30 a.m. Monday through Friday, mid-week services on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 8:00–9:30 a.m., and Sunday worship in two shifts accommodating up to 2,500 in the 2,882 m² chapel facility.[4] Chaplaincy units such as the Contemporary Choir, Ushering Unit, and Evangelism Team, coordinated under the University Chaplain, engage students in worship events like monthly Weeks of Spiritual Emphasis and annual choir concerts, requiring participation as a graduation prerequisite.[4] The Covenant Support Squad organizes compulsory community outreach to orphanages, remand homes, and prisons, fostering service-oriented values.[4] Absences or disruptions in chapel incur forfeiture of class attendance credits and disciplinary actions ranging from warnings to suspension.[4] Physical and recreational pursuits promote fitness under the "Total Man Concept," with compulsory jogging (exemptions requiring medical certification) and access to the Sports Complex featuring a FIFA-standard soccer pitch, basketball, volleyball, and tennis courts.[4] [46] Available sports include athletics, football, volleyball, lawn tennis, basketball, table tennis, badminton, chess, and scrabble, organized by the Sports Sub-Unit and Student Representative Council for intramural hall and college competitions, as well as inter-university matches.[46] The annual Chancellor’s Cup football tournament occurs in the Omega Semester, alongside female-specific fitness programs like "Who Says You Can’t Lose Weight."[46] Common rooms in residence halls host indoor games, enhancing physical development as outlined in university policy.[46] Student governance and organizations include the elected Student Council, led by a Chairperson, Vice-Chairpersons, and Sports Coordinators, requiring officers to maintain a minimum CGPA of 3.50 and demonstrate "godly character."[4] Registered student associations, needing at least 20 members and similar leadership standards, support academic, social, and spiritual growth, while para-church groups are prohibited without Chaplaincy approval.[4] Specialized entities like the Google Developer Group on Campus and a proposed Nigerian Red Cross detachment provide avenues for technical and humanitarian engagement.[47] [48] The Centre for Entrepreneurial Development Studies mandates training in 21 vocations, such as soap making and fashion design, to instill practical skills.[4] Campus events reinforce institutional values, including mandatory orientation for freshmen covering university philosophy and spirituality, matriculation ceremonies, convocation, and general assemblies like Founder’s Day, with non-attendance penalized by attendance forfeiture.[4] A corporate dress code—modest skirts below the knee for females, formal shirts and trousers without sagging for males—applies from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., prohibiting tight, transparent, or revealing attire, with violations leading to removal from classes or exams.[4] Overall conduct policies ban sexual immorality, gossip, cult involvement, and substance use, with appeals processed through an Appellate Committee and severe infractions resulting in expulsion after counseling attempts.[4] These elements ensure a structured environment prioritizing discipline, faith, and self-reliance.[4]Faculty and Research
Notable Faculty
Professor Kolawole O. Ajanaku serves as the sixth substantive Vice-Chancellor of Landmark University, appointed effective September 1, 2023, by the Board of Regents chaired by Dr. David O. Oyedepo.[15] A Professor of Industrial Chemistry specializing in materials chemistry, Ajanaku holds a B.Sc. (1992), M.Sc. (1995), and Ph.D. (2009) from the University of Ibadan, with 28 years of teaching and research experience prior to his appointment.[15] His achievements include being the first Professor of Industrial Chemistry at Covenant University in 2015, receiving Outstanding Lecturer awards in 2008/2009 and 2010/2011, a TWAS-CSIR postdoctoral fellowship in 2011, and authoring 85 publications (62 Scopus-indexed) with an H-index of 14; he has supervised four M.Sc. and eight Ph.D. students.[15] Several faculty members have gained international recognition through inclusion in the Stanford University–Elsevier list of the world's top 2% scientists, based on citation impact metrics from 2022–2023 data released in September 2024.[49] These include Dr. A. Ayodele Adebiyi in Computer Science, Dr. Adeolu Adediran in Mechanical Engineering, Dr. Oluwole Oladeji in Physical Sciences, and Dr. Oladipupo Ogundokun. Deans of the university's colleges represent key academic leaders: Professor Stephen Abolusoro (College of Agricultural Sciences), Professor Emmanuel Ajisegiri (College of Engineering), Professor Shola John Adebiyi (College of Postgraduate and Allied Sciences), and Professor Joseph Taiwo (College of Business and Social Sciences).[19] Professor Enoch Oyawoye serves as Dean of the School of Postgraduate Studies.[19] Dr. Ezekiel Omole, in the Department of Physical Sciences, received the prestigious Nigeria Society of Physical Sciences award in February 2025 for contributions to physical sciences research.[50]Research Initiatives and Outputs
Landmark University's primary research hub is the Centre for Research, Innovations and Discoveries (LUCRID), which coordinates projects, fosters interdisciplinary collaboration, and aligns outputs with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals through initiatives like research incubators and webinar series.[51][52] LUCRID hosts regular events, such as the Research Incubator 2.0 series launched in the 2024/2025 academic session, aimed at bridging knowledge gaps and enhancing publication quality among faculty and students.[53] The university supports scholarly dissemination via an institutional repository established to archive and provide open access to theses, journals, and datasets, advancing its research agenda in a resource-constrained environment.[54] Complementary efforts include a weekly publication spotlight and committees for national education data banking, promoting visibility of outputs in agriculture, engineering, and social sciences.[55][56] Research outputs have grown significantly, with Scopus-indexed publications increasing from 75 in 2017 to 228 in 2018, surpassing 1,000 by May 2020.[57] In 2019, Landmark ranked second among Nigerian institutions for researcher concentration in the top 500 national authors.[58] These metrics contributed to its recognition as the youngest university in Nigeria's top 10 for research productivity in Elsevier's analysis of Times Higher Education data.[59] Bibliometric performance underscores impact: in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2026, the institution scored 61.9 out of 100 in research quality (based on citation impact and reputation surveys) and 18.4 in research environment (volume, income, and reputation).[60] For sustainability-oriented research, it placed 4th nationally in the 2025 Impact Rankings among 36 Nigerian participants, leading Kwara State and the North Central region, evaluated via SDG-aligned publications, citations, and partnerships.[5][61]Achievements and Rankings
Academic and Impact Rankings
Landmark University appears in the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings 2026 within the 1001–1200 band globally, tying for third place among Nigerian institutions alongside Covenant University and Bayero University.[62] This placement reflects scores of 20.2 in teaching, 18.4 in research environment, 61.9 in research quality, 22.1 in industry engagement, and 37.2 in international outlook.[60] In subject-specific THE rankings for 2025, it falls in the 601–800 band for business and economics, 801–1000 for engineering, and 501–600 for physical sciences.[60] In the THE Impact Rankings 2025, which assess contributions to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Landmark University ranks in the 401–600 band globally among 2,526 institutions from 130 countries, placing fourth in Nigeria (among 36 ranked), first in Kwara State, and first in Nigeria's North Central region.[5] It leads Nigeria and ranks 84th globally for SDG 2 (Zero Hunger), aligning with its agricultural focus, and performs strongly in SDG 13 (Climate Action) and SDG 15 (Life on Land).[5][61] Other metrics include a 10th place in Nigeria (7014th globally) in the SCImago Institutions Rankings 2025 for higher education, with a research rank of 3000th worldwide based on publication volume, impact, and quality.[63][64] EduRank positions it 40th in Nigeria and 5367th globally in 2025, noting top-50% performance across 24 research topics, particularly in agriculture, environmental science, and biology.[65] It does not feature prominently in QS World University Rankings, which prioritize older, research-intensive institutions.[66]| Ranking Body | Year | Global Position | Nigeria Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| THE World University | 2026 | 1001–1200 | =3rd | Tied with Covenant and Bayero Universities[62] |
| THE Impact | 2025 | 401–600 | 4th | Leads in SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) nationally[5] |
| SCImago Institutions | 2025 | 7014th | 10th | Research-focused metric[63] |
| EduRank | 2025 | 5367th | 40th | Strong in 24 topical areas[65] |

