Tag: JAMB

  • Over 120 inmates register for JAMB

    Over 120 inmates register for JAMB

    …Security agencies parade man for defrauding over 100 students

    Over 120 inmates in the Ikoyi and Kaduna prisons registered for the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), conducted by Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB).

    The Computer Based Test (CBT) will run for a week in different centres around the country.

    Registrar JAMB, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede while addressing newsmen yesterday in Abuja debunked news of the postponement of examination.

    He said that all candidates that have been invited for the exams this year must comply with the exam schedule sent to them, condemning the news making rounds of a postponement as the handiwork of mischief makers.

    Prof. Oloyede also revealed that the suspect paraded had defrauded over 100 students, by registering the examination on the behalf to his personal mail and collecting N10,000 from each student.

    He said: “Over 120 inmates in Ikoyi and Kaduna prisons registered for this years CBT examination.

    “JAMB did not postpone the examination, it will take place as announced, all candidates that were invited for the exams will lose the chance to write the exams this year if they fail to show up at the scheduled time and date. Students should ignore the mischief makers sending messages of a postponement, it is not true.

    “Security agencies arrested a man who defrauded over 100 intending JAMB candidates, he registered the exams for them in a way that all the messages and notifications sent to the students entered into emails handled by him and when the students come to him, he prints it out and collects N10,000 from each student.”

  • 50 get free JAMB forms

    member of the Lagos State House of Assembly Rasheed Makinde has given out about 50 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) forms to pupils in his constituency.

    Makinde, representing Ifako-Ijaiye Constituency II, said the gesture was to help the less privileged.

    The gesture, he said, was borne out of his passion for qualitative education and youth development.

    “I am seeing great men and women of tomorrow here who will soon be making waves all over the world. It is my own way of contributing to the society and development of education,” he said.

    Makinde said he had facilitated employment for over 80 indigent people from his constituency.

    The council’s All Progressives Congress (APC) chairman, Prince Adewale Bello hailed the lawmaker’s gesture.

    “The best investment anybody can make is to educate children, to secure a future for them. We appreciate our lawmaker, we want more of this. We need people like this in the corridor of power. It is nice, I am happy, he is doing well,” he said.

  • JAMB candidates get examination centres

    JAMB candidates get examination centres

    Candidates for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) have confirmed receiving their examination centres as promised by JAMB.

    Some candidates, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Thursday, said that they have started getting their centres from Wednesday.

    However, a few others told NAN that they were yet to get their centres.

    NAN reports that the JAMB Registrar had promised that all candidates would receive their centres before Saturday.

    In a related development, Mr Ikeh Callistus, ICT, Lab Manager, Christ the King College, (CKC) Gwagwalada said the centre was ready for the UTME which would commence on Saturday, May 13, 2017.

    Callistus said the college had 278 computer systems but only 250 would be used for the examination per batch while 28 systems would be kept in case of any unforeseen circumstances.

    Similarly, at the Digital Bridge Centre and the Global Distance Learning Institute the stories were the same; the centres would also use 250 computer systems for the examination respectively.

    According to Mr Eugene Onyirimba, Manager Global Distance Learning Institute, 250 computers would be used while 25 would be reserved as backup.

    “As required by JAMB we would use 250 computers for the examination and we have 25 as backup at the centre.

    “We are prepared for the examination; we did well during the JAMB Mock examinations and I believe we will do much better during the UTME,’’ Onyirimba said.

    However, at the Best Intellect International School, Old Kutunku, Gwagwalada, FCT, the centre expressed fear that it might not be used for the UTME.

    Mr Micheal Edeh, ICT Technician of the centre, said that none of the UTME candidates has been posted to the centre.

    According to him, many candidates were registered at the centre during the registration.

    He also said that the centre participated in the JAMB Mock examination held on April 29.

    “ We are worried; all the candidates we have printed their centres were posted to other centres; we have not seen any one posted to this centre.

    “ JAMB promised to visit the centre but we are yet to see the officials; we don’t know if it has debarred us from participating in the UTME exams on Saturday,’’ Edeh said.

    The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has registered 1, 736, 571 candidates for the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) scheduled to hold in 624 centres nationwide.

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Examination (JAMB), has advised candidates for the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), scheduled to commence on Saturday, to check their e-mails for notification of their examination centres.

    JAMB’s Head, Media and Information, Dr Fabian Benjamin, gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Thursday.

    Benjamin said the advice became imperative because of agitations by some candidates over non-communication on their examination centres by the board to them, less than 72 hours to the commencement of the all Computer Based Test (CBT). (NAN)

  • JAMB scores self high on conduct of 2017 admission

    JAMB scores self high on conduct of 2017 admission

    •Board records 1.7m UTME candidates

    The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has scored itself high in the conduct of 2017 admission exercise in spite of the condemnation of the exercise by candidates, parents and other stakeholders.

    The board said the record of the 2017 admission exercise set the pace for greater success in the future.

    It urged Nigerians to have confidence in JAMB and similar government agencies.

    A statement issued by the board’s Head Media and Publicity Dr. Fabian Benjamin after an emergency meeting in Jos, the Plateau state capital yesterday, noted some challenges JAMB faced in the 2017 exercise.

    “JAMB has concluded the sales of 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) application document in grand style, recording over 1.7 million candidates at the close of the site by 12 midnight on Friday May 5, 2017.

    “The board urges Nigerians to have trust in its processes as they are meant to enhance productivity, eliminate examination malpractice and promote transparency to an unprecedented level.”

  • Attention JAMB!

    SIR: In spite of the benefits of Computer-based test (CBT) introduced by the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board (JAMB), the JAMB CBT centres seem least prepared for the forthcoming examination.

    The recently conducted mock examinations threw up challenges that if left unchecked will jeopardize candidates future as failure is imminent. For instance, most computers used at some centres like LAUTECH Ogbomoso, Oyo State were problematic leaving the candidates helpless. The time for JAMB to do something is now!

     

    • Mr. Ajala,

    Lowcost, Ogbomoso. 

  • JAMB: Fresh confusion over examination centres

    JAMB: Fresh confusion over examination centres

    There is confusion over the allocation of centres to candidates of the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation (UTM) examination next month by the Joint Admission Matriculation Board (JAMB) to states outside their residences.

    Checks revealed that the examination body has started issuing centres and seat numbers to candidates.

    The slip containing the centre and seat numbers, according to checks by our correspondent also contain the examination towns where candidates will seat for the forthcoming examination.

    The exact names of the centre, according to JAMB, will be sent to the candidates’ email boxes in dues course.

    However, the online publication of candidates’ examination towns by the body appeared to have been greeted with more confusion ahead of this year’s UTM examination.

    Across the country, candidates and their parents are angrily protesting what they called the gross insensitivity of the management of the examination body in the choice of examination towns for many of the candidates.

    The Nation gathered that a good number of the candidates have been allocated centers outside their states of residence.

    The situation will see many candidates from Lagos state having to travel all the way to Ekiti, Ondo, Edo and other such states for the examination.

    Candidates, who spoke with our correspondent in Lagos, lamented the financial and physical difficulties they will encounter with the development.

    They added efforts to complain to the examination body and seek changes in their current examination towns are not yielding fruits.

    Their claims were corroborated by some parents and guardians who also lamented the development while urging JAMB to urgently do something about the situation.

    A 17- year- old candidate posted to Ondo State said she has never travelled out of Lagos alone.

    “When I printed out my JAMB e-registration slip last week, I was shocked to discover that I will be writing the examination in Ondo State.

    “I registered here in Lagos. I have never been to Ondo. I wonder why I have to go to Akure or Ondo town to write ordinary JAMB.

    “I am confused by the whole development. I don’t know if I will still write the examination,” she said.

    The mother of another aggrieved candidate ruled out the likelihood of her going to Ekiti state to write the examination.

    The middle-aged woman condemned what she called the unrealistic approach of JAMB.

    According to her, it is obvious that the examination body no longer understands how to go about organizing the yearly matriculation examination.

    “JAMB or what is it they are called should understand how young some of these candidates are.

    “My daughter is barely 18 years old and they want her to travel from Ikorodu to Ekiti just to sit for examination.

    “Aside the cost implication, the danger of such trip is not worth risking by such a young child.

    “They need to realize that they are scaring these children away from seeking education,” she argued on phone.

    But JAMB denied sending any candidate to far flung examination towns against their wish.

    Its spokesperson, Dr Fabian Benjamin, said all the candidates chose the locations they wanted to write the examination themselves.

    Benjamin wondered why candidates who willingly filled the towns they are posted to while registering online will turn around to claim the body is forcing them to go to distance.

    “We didn’t send candidates out of town against their wishes on our own. They chose their examination towns themselves.

    “That is the truth of the matter. And to be candid, there is no fault of JAMB in any of these things you are talking about.”

    Asked why new centres were not created to prevent candidates having to go far away from their bases, he said: “We didn’t do that because we didn’t want to be accused of being biased.

    “We gave all the candidates the right of first refusal in choosing their examination towns. But where the centers run out quickly, we didn’t create new ones.

    “In fact, I foresee a situation where somebody in Lagos will write JAMB matriculation examination in Maiduguri soon because some places will always fill up before others.

    “And if we continue to make provision for more centers, somebody somewhere will say we are biased.”

     

     

  • ASUU and JAMB: A Choice Between Progress and Retardation

    Two institutions profoundly depict the choices before Nigerians as the world moves onto the next phase in advancement. There is the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) and the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB). Both typify our chance at progress or retardation. The choice to be made should be guided about the driving forces of either option.
    JAMB has been innovative. It migrated to the digital platform way ahead of other government agencies. It was before its time in adopting online application. It moved away from Pencil and Paper Based Test to Computer Based Test. It implemented an array of other measures that cemented its position as a leader in embracing change. The end result is an organization that has shortened the wait time from sitting for its entrance examination from over three months to just a few hours.
    On the opposite of the spectrum is ASUU, which has earned itself a reputation that places it on similar footing with the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) and that is not referring to our university lecturers as not better than motorpark touts even though they are known to descend into unprovoked unruliness. ASUU has largely proven to be allergic to innovation and evolved to be less relevant than it was at twilight of return to democratic rule in 1999. It had largely retained the combative and confrontational approach that might have been useful under military rule but has no place in the current dispensation that promotes collaboration over conflict.
    It is understandable that ASUU has no interest in catching up with the rest of world – its members, university lecturers, have not done much to explore the open source digital educational tools and platforms that are powering the contemporary classrooms. Asking them to contribute to that pool of resources would be asking for too much since they cannot give what they do not have anyway.
    What provokes head scratching is the venomous passion with which they are insisting on keeping the rest of the country at their own level of Information and Communication (ICT) illiteracy. Even if they have not made the necessary sacrifice to upgrade their tech skills they have no right trying to block the wholesale adoption or application of ICT for processing candidates that are coming into higher educational institutions as they recently tried to do with JAMB. Naturally, teachers that with cyberphobia would loathe the fact that JAMB is a catalyst for populating campuses with tech savvy youths, but even if JAMB were not to play this role nothing would stop the eventual arrival of digital natives – the generation to whom tech savviness is second nature, from showing up on campuses.
    At this point the best ASUU can do is to throw the Chairman of its University of Ibadan Chapter, Dr Deji Omole under the bus and distance itself from the shallow arguments he put forward in condemning the changes and innovations made by the current JAMB Registrar, Professor Ishaq Oloyede. The funny reasons included trying to brand the cost of registration for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination as prohibitive when it costs less than the amount an undergraduate spends on one glorified handout called textbook; if a candidate cannot afford the registration fee for the entrance examination then buying 16 handouts in a session would be a living nightmare.
    To call for the scrapping of JAMB over the postponement of a mock examination is disingenuous and exposes the quality of analytical skills of those behind ASUU, which indicates there may be no skills at all in the first instance. The Collins Dictionary online defines mock examination as “an examination, esp in a school, taken as practice before an official examination”. Dr Omole and his ilks in ASUU must therefore note that the “mock examination” he was ventilating over was not the one that would be used for admission, its purpose was to give willing first time candidates a feel of the actual examination with all the attendant benefits. His failure to understand this basic concept raises questions that are better not posed in this instance because of the damning answers they will provoke.
    For teachers that have been known to run cash-for-admission rackets, there is no confusion as to where the call for the scrapping of JAMB is coming from. What they are overtly asking for is to declare an open season for corruption where university applicants would become fair game for exploitation. The corruption around university admission as currently known  would be a rehearsal compared to what is to come when there is no regulatory body to enforce both the process and standard for university intake.
    Granted that it is a trade union and not a professional body, which does not justify artisanal reasoning and behaviour, ASUU were nonetheless has the responsibility to be forward thinking and do the needful towards nudging university education in Nigeria onto the path of progress. JAMB has shown leadership in this direction and the least the union can do is to reform its members to be empowered to teach the improved quality of undergraduates that gain admission on the strength of the world class entrance examination that JAMB conducts.
    Nigerians would therefore do well to side with JAMB while putting ASUU in its place as a busy body that is out to usurp the role of another and would do anything, including calling for the demise of its object of interest, to have it way. Should this happen, higher education would have suffered an immeasurable setback would only profit ASUU to the detriment of Nigerians. So should we scrap JAMB or sack the reformists that is working tirelessly at the place? It is a path we must never tread.
    Agbese is a trained educationist,  Oil Gas Expert and contributed this piece from the United Kingdom.
  • UTME: Mock exam to hold Saturday 

    UTME: Mock exam to hold Saturday 

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has fixed Saturday 29th (this weekend), for the conduct of its Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) mock examination in some selected centres across the country for interested candidates.

    JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede made the announcement during a workshop to train its officials for the coming UTME examination in Abuja on Wednesday.

    He said the mock examination would take place in 633 computer based test (CBT) centres across the country.

    The examination body had announced the suspension of the conduct of its mock examination earlier scheduled to hold Saturday, 8 this month in some selected centers across the country indefinitely, blaming the postponement on failure from its technical partners.

    But JAMB registrar said the agency was trying to conduct its examinations in the best way that would not be wasteful or make Nigeria inferior in the community of examination bodies.

    Prof. Oloyede said: “We have identified those technical hitches and quickly made necessary correction and tighten loose nuts. As a matter of fact, a trial mock was conducted last week in 10 states and the exercise was 99 percent successful

    “All we are trying to do is to do things the best way that will not be wasteful, that will not make Nigeria inferior in the community of examination bodies. What we are trying to do is find the most efficient way of conducting our examination.

    “I believe whatever can work in another place can work in Nigeria. For us, what we are trying to do is to give the best of our services to this great nation of ours. I need not be the registrar of JAMB if there will be no change positively.

    “We believe that come next Saturday (this Saturday), we will do our best. What we have done now is that last Monday we conducted a preliminary mock in ten places across the country and it was 99 percent success. We conducted it in Sokoto, Abuja, Lagos, Ilorin, Nasarawa, Lokoja and we tested the technology again it was working but it worked because of the cooperation of all.

    “I don’t expect full perfection from all the system. There would be saboteurs that might work against us and that was why we have plans A, B and C, in addition to several other backups in case any of our plan fails. At the end of the day, it would be said of me that I have done my best.”

    He alleged that powerful forces was working hard to derail the smooth conduct of the examination nationwide, vowing that JAMB would not return to status quo.

    “People are head bent on creating problems where none exist. I believe their toes are very big and I don’t mind stepping on them. Believe that at the end of the day Nigerians will know the truth and who to appreciate and who to condemn.

    “So I expect all other stakeholders involved in the system not to sabotage the efforts of the board but reciprocate such gesture and goodwill so that we could give Nigerians the best of services they deserve,” he said.

     

  • JAMB: When Truth Hurts Infinitely

    Nigerians resent truth. They abhor it and seek to cage it within the prisms of their crooked instincts. When President Muhammadu Buhari launched the national re-orientation campaigns for attitudinal change tagged #ChangeBeginsWithMe#, many Nigerians never saw the wisdom. But successive events are now illuminating the necessity of the campaigns.
    There is nothing good leadership at any level or institution introduces that some dubious Nigerians would not contrive ways to defile it. Last week, the Chairman, Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), University of Ibadan Chapter, Dr.Deji Omole canvassed for the resignation of the Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board (JAMB) Professor Ishaq Oloyede over the hiccups in the registration for Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) experienced in some parts of the country.
     The academic from Uni-Ibadan, which currently hosts the national secretariat of ASUU, the body which remained the only odd voice that opposed Oloyede’s appointment on selfish grounds, posed like a nationalist and mouthpiece of ASUU. He unconvincingly decried the difficulties candidates are experiencing in registering for the exams online.
    But Dr.Omole, an academic knew, but failed to acknowledge that the introduction of the Computer Based Test (CBT) by JAMB was mainly to curb the high incidence of exam fraud. It was designed to ensure candidates presented by JAMB for admissions in higher institutions in the country were genuinely accessed as qualified for further studies in the courses they applied.
    But as it is typical with Nigerians, fraudsters invaded the process of UTME online and created difficulties in some states of the federation. And the fraudsters who invaded the system have also been arrested and are being prosecuted, an indication that the JAMB Registrar is alive and awake to his responsibilities.
    But instead of looking at the issue dispassionately, Omole purportedly speaking for ASUU erroneously thought it was the incompetence of the JAMB helmsman and he should resign. Beneath the seeming patriotic call for Oloyede’s resignation were the shadows of the resurrection of the old feud ASUU had with Oloyede, when he was the Vice Chancellor of University of Ilorin, over the sacked Unilorin ASUU members.
    They haunted Oloyede while he was still in academics and when he was elevated to the position of JAMB Chief Executive Officer, ASUU was the first to threaten industrial action, should the Presidency fail to reverse the appointment. The Presidency perceived the campaigns against Professor Oloyede’s appointment as baseless and stood its grounds. The anger is yet to dissipate and when fraudsters hijacked the registration process, it became the justification of a section of ASUU to call for his resignation. Its good tidings because at least to the extent that they failed to get him sacked and now, they are begging him to resign.
    So, whatever good intentions; whatever reforms Professor Oloyede is battling day and night to instil sanity into the system became meaningless to the Uni-Ibadan ASUU boss. But his colleagues at Unilorin considered his vomits as balderdash. The Chairman of the  Unilorin  branch of ASUU, Dr. Usman Abdulraheem and  the Secretary, Dr. Mary  Lewu   clearly stressed in a statement that  “All negative actions and commentaries of ASUU,  University of Ibadan cannot dim the  ever shining star of Prof. Oloyede because this workaholic is too committed to achieving excellence in every assignment.”
    Except a section of ASUU which is on vengeance mission against Professor Oloyede, no Nigerian is in doubt about his competence and excellence in any assignments. Just barely a year as JAMB boss, Oloyede has introduced reforms and innovations in the conduct of UTME, which are not just novel in Nigeria alone, but in other West Africa countries.
    Aside the implementation of the CBT, the JAMB boss has also introduced nation-wide mock examinations for prospective candidates of UTME to test their preparedness for the actual exams. And it is free and the JAMB board considered it as part of its Corporate Social Responsibility to both the students and the society.
    It remains a miracle that candidates no longer write UTME and wait endlessly for months to see the results. And there is near zero incidents of missing results. Candidates paying for the exams pay directly to government’s Treasury Single Account (TSA), an indication that the JAMB boss is not concerned with duping or cheating candidates or the government.  It is a strong statement about his disposition on accountability, transparency and probity anywhere he serves.
    Professor Oloyede has not only secured the online system of registration for UTME by issuing personalized access codes to accredited CBT centres throughout the country; it also have features to detect abuses aimed at circumventing the registration process. It explains the arrest of culprits in some parts of the country like Borno, Oyo and Ogun states among others.
    Nigerians must learn to be fair to themselves, especially those in leadership positions.  In spite of the deliberate and dubious manipulation of the registration process, Oloyede’s JAMB has been able to authentically register over a million candidates out of the 1.5 million estimated for the 2017 CBT for UTME within the first three weeks. No yardstick of assessment, if not influenced by malice would neither say, an exercise with such records of success is a failure nor the JAMB boss is incompetent.
    It is extremely bad taste, that Professor Oloyede, a very strong and positive character, a workaholic,   who spends sleepless nights, sometimes in the office to ensure, the system flows smoothly and that abuses are curbed to confer credibility on the UMTE process is vilified by a section of ASUU, instead of commendation.   The Uni-Ibadan ASUU boss laughably canvassed for the scrapping of JAMB and the replacement of university entry exams jointly conducted by JAMB, with exams organized as detected by each university for their candidates.
    If Dr.Omole and indeed, other branches of ASUU who share his funny thoughts are really concerned with the improvement in the standards of education in Nigeria, like he pretended, ASUU should rather be concerned about why they churn out half-baked and unproductive graduates. They are not only culpable, but appear to delight in the sad reality that some of their students cannot correctly spell their names and yet they are issued degree certificates.
    This should be the concern of an ASUU genuinely inspired and disturbed by the fallen standards of education in Nigeria.  Professor Oloyede who is attempting to sanitize the entry process into higher institutions has become their enemy for inexplicable reasons. But it is unworkable to turn a personal feud into a national problem.
    Professor Oloyede should not be distracted by the noise from ASUU Uni-Ibadan and no matter how hard they sponsor malicious campaigns against him, Nigerians know that Oloyede has taken JAMB and UTME to amazing levels of innovations, which are working. The fraudsters shall continue to be detected, arrested and prosecuted until the system is finally freed from their fangs. But finally, until Nigerians learn to change their crooked instincts, blaming others for the criminal outings of others is no remedy.
    Kolawole PhD is a University teacher and contributed this piece from Keffi, Nasarawa State.
  • Edo IDPs: Dogara urged to fulfill promise on payment of WAEC fees  

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has been urged to fulfill the promise he made last year to pay examination fees for Internally Displaced Persons in Edo State.

    Dogara had in February 2017 promised to pay WAEC, NECO and JAMB examination fees from his personal resources to enable children in the IDPs camp get university education.

    He made the promise when he attended church service at the camp.

    Coordinator of the camp, Pastor Solomon Folorusho, told newsmen yesterday that Speaker Dogara was yet to fulfill the promises he made.

    Pastor Folorunsho disclosed that about 200 IDPs would write this year’s NECO and WAEC examinations.

    Folorunsho said 65 of the IDPs who attended secondary school at the camp are to write the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board examination this year.

    He said the IDPs have started farming for them not to completely depend on donation from people and complement whatever that is donated to the camp.

    “As the students are going to resume schools here, we have challenges of writing materials like notebooks, textbooks, mathematical sets calculators, pencils and biros among others.

    “We need those materials because 65 IDPS students are go to write JAMB while about 200 will write NECO and WASC this year. We need to prepare them for the examinations hence we called for financial assistance to see them through the examinations.

    “These children are Nigeria and we have to do every possible to make sure that they are educated though it is difficult for us. The state government has handed over blocks of classroom it built to us and Nigeria have been very generous to us in ensuring that the children actualise their dreams,” he said.