By Praise Afolabi
Professor Abdallah Uba Adamu, a native of Kano, holds a unique place in Nigerian academia. He is among the very few Nigerians – and the only one in Northern Nigeria – to be promoted to the rank of professor in two separate disciplines.
At Bayero University, Kano, he was elevated in 1997 as the institution’s first Professor of Science Education. Fifteen years later, in 2012, he again made history as the first Professor of Media and Cultural Communication. The achievement established him as a rare bridge between the sciences and the humanities.
Beyond teaching and research, Adamu is widely known for his work on Hausa language, history, culture and film, as well as the growing influence of social media. In the 1990s, he pioneered the digital encoding of Hausa special characters – ɓ, Ɓ, ɗ, Ɗ, ƙ, Ƙ – on computers, an innovation that gave the language new visibility and usability in the digital age. He has also written extensively on Hausa popular culture, including the rise of the Kannywood film industry, positioning him as one of the foremost cultural commentators from Northern Nigeria.
His leadership extended beyond Bayero University when he was appointed Vice-Chancellor of the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) in 2016. For five years, until 2021, he introduced reforms that modernized the institution and expanded access to distance learning. Under his stewardship, NOUN strengthened its credibility, embraced new technologies, and opened doors for working professionals and underserved communities to pursue higher education.
Yet, for all his academic achievements, Professor Adamu is also admired for his approachable personality. He has cultivated a strong following on social media, particularly Facebook, where his blend of wit, humor and scholarship has made him a relatable public intellectual. Unlike many in the ivory tower, he engages freely with everyday conversations, mixing serious reflections with lighthearted commentary.
Adamu’s career demonstrates the power of scholarship that crosses boundaries and remains connected to society. More than a professor twice over, he is a cultural voice, digital pioneer and storyteller whose influence continues to resonate in classrooms, online spaces and across Northern Nigeria’s cultural landscape.

