Tag: oloyede

  • CAN’s statement on Leah Sharibu counter-productive, says Oloyede

    The Secretary-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, yesterday described the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) statement that there might be a religious war if Leah Sharibu dies in Boko Haram captivity, as “destructive and counter-productive.”

    Adebayo Oladeji, the spokesman of CAN President Samson Ayokunle, had said: “Leah Sharibu must not die. Her death, God forbids, can spell doom for Nigeria. It can give an open invitation to religious war because Leah is being detained purely because of her religion.”

    Oloyede said he was as astonished as the Sultan of Sokoto and President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA), Alhaji Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar.

    According to him, religious leaders should realise that devilish tactics are not compatible with religious responsibilities.

    Oloyede spoke at the first Ramadan Lecture organised by the Right Development Limited, publishers of The Point Newspaper at LTV Combo Hall, Ikeja, Lagos.

    The theme of the lecture is “Achieving peace, stability and good governance in a multi-ethnic and multi-religious society: The Islamic perspective.”

    He urged religious leaders to dedicate themselves to the promotion of truth, peace and justice rather than utilising sacred trust for an evil cause, for God does not accept filthy offerings as a genuine sacrifice.

    According to him, the NSCIA had reached out to Boko Haram to facilitate the release of Leah Sharibu.

    Oloyede, the Registrar/Chief Executive of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), also urged religious leaders to stop promoting crisis in the country.

    He said: “Boko Haram has never hidden its mission of setting Nigeria ablaze through a religious war. Whose interest was the call to serve? Definitely, not that of the innocent Nigerian lady, Leah Sharibu. Is it fair, religious or Godly to, for the sake of political grandstanding and publicity-seeking, endangering the life of such a precious, principled and promising Lady?

    “I am sure the immediate family members of the lady would not subscribe to such politicisation of the misfortune. The unfortunate abduction of Leah and other girls, both Muslims and Christians, is intensely hurtful to all right-thinking persons. I am aware that the particular case of Leah made the leadership of the NSCIA reach out to all possible channels of reaching the group with a proposal to secure amnesty for the group provided Leah and other girls in captivity are released and the group surrender their arms. This knowledge made the careless threat particularly painful.”

    The NSCIA scribe expressed regret that religious leaders in the country had derailed from the ways of God.

    He enjoined religious leaders in Nigeria to make concerted efforts to properly guide their followers in order to enhance peace and unity of the country.

    “It is time religious leaders in this country knew that playing politics with religion will amount to serious punishment from God. Most clerics today, manipulate things in their favour, hence disturbing the peace of our society. This is not limited to any religion; it goes to both Christian and Muslim leaders in this country. Look at the Benue crisis, for instance, some religious leaders were quick to relate it to religious war, and this can lead to war. Likewise, the case of Leah Sharibu was also tagged to be a religious issue. All these will not improve, but amount to a crisis in our society,” he said.

    Chairman on the occasion and the Baba Adeen of Yorubaland, Edo and Delta states, Chief Sarafa Tunji Ishola, said the term “Islamic terrorism” used in certain quarters was a misnomer and part of the efforts to paint the Islamic religion in bad light.

    Ishola described Islam as a religion of peace, which ensures justice for all human beings.

    National Amirah of The Criterion, an association of Muslim Women in Business and Professions, Alhaja Fatimat Oyefeso called for tolerance between religious groups in the country.

    This, Alhaja Oyefeso said, will engender peaceful and harmonious society.

    According to her, Islam is a complete way of life.

    “Just follow its tenets and the world will be peaceful,” she said.

  • NGO honours Adebule, Oloyede others

    A Non-Governmental Organisation, Academic Excellence Initiatives (AEI) has honoured the Lagos State Deputy Governor Dr Idiat Oluranti Adebule, Ogun State House of Assembly Speaker Suraj Ishola Adekunbi, Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Registrar Prof Ishaq Oloyede, and Head of West African Examination Council (WAEC) in Nigeria Mr Olutise Isaac Adenipekun.

    Also honoured were the Lagos State University (LASU) Vice-Chancellor Prof Olanrewaju Fagbohun, Chairman Ogun State Local Government Service Commission Comrade Rotimi Rahman, Founder of International Sport Academy Chief Olusegun Odegbami, Tag Kyñeticks Nigeria Limited and two local government chairmen in Lagos State.

    AEI Project Coordinator Prince Adesegun Ogungbayi said the honorees were rewarded for their outstanding performances in their offices.

    The award tagged 2018 Global Educational Excellence Award, Ogungbayi said featured presentation of cash and gifts to schools that won the Scholars’ Day competition.

    According to him, Daru Naim International College, Lutron College and MIMS College came first, second and third respectively at Ben Auto Events Centre, Akowonjo, Alimosho, Lagos.

     

  • Corrupt JAMB officials may not be prosecuted, says Oloyede

    Corrupt JAMB officials may not be prosecuted, says Oloyede

    The Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, said yesterday that the board might not handover its officials, alleged to have embezzled money, to anti-graft agencies.

    He spoke in Abuja at the launch of a book written to honour him.

    The book, a collection of essays, was authored by Y.O. Imam, R.I Adebayo and A.I. Ali-gan, and presented to the public at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja.

    Oloyede said the focus of the board was to return money belonging to the Federal Government to the Federation Account.

    He said JAMB would invite law enforcement agencies to recover whatever belonged to the government.

    The registrar said: “It is a continuous process. When anybody is unable to account for whatever belongs to the government, our first duty is to ask the person to refund and if that person refunds honourably, there will be little or no need to go further. But if somebody refuses, then we will have to take the necessary step of calling in the law enforcement agencies to recover whatever belongs to the government.

    “We know there are many honourable people that even when they make mistakes and you call their attention to it, they will try to rectify it. For those people, there is no problem.

    “For anybody, whether internal or external, who has taken what does not belong to him from JAMB, if he or she returns what he has taken and once we give evidence and the person returns quietly what he has taken, we will have no reason; because I am not an auditor and I am also not a policeman, but in the course of my duty, if I find out that there was something you ought to have accounted for, once you account for those things, we will just close it and ensure that whatever belongs to the government is passed to the government.”

    He said it was sad that Nigerians had turned the N36 million allegedly swallowed by a snake in its office in Benue State into a national joke.

    Prof. Oloyede said its officials, not ‘rogues,’ who refused to be compromised during examinations, should be hailed.

    He added: “I am talking about those people that will go somewhere for examination and they will be given millions of naira and they will come and return the money and still insist the examination of that centre be cancelled.

    “Those are the people that should be celebrated, not those who are rogues and who are just looking for any excuse and then we are glorifying what is a sad story. I believe many of you, who are doing the sacrifice for the country, God in his own way will support you.”

  • Oloyede: When leaders walk the talk

    Sitting down and fighting off the occasional writers’ block virus that has become the bane of many newspaper columnists, I was almost tempted into giving up on writing this week. If that had happened, it wouldn’t be because there was no plethora of topics to whine about. After all, this, week like many others before it, didn’t go without the melodrama that defines us a people. The Nigerian narrative did not run short of the usual screaming headlines of divisive politics, gargantuan corrupt practices in high and low places, killings of hapless citizens and the elevated deceit padded as the highest display of patriotism by a fleecing, egoistic and selfish elite. Our country is never lacking in the paradox of a morally deflated leadership that waxes strong on the theoretical and lofty ideals that make a society great. The problem is that they hardly set the example for anyone to follow. They are the practical examples of failed theorists and the evidence is seen in how we have wobbled endlessly in search of a redeeming hero as Nigeria wanders from pillars to post. Bugged by these scary thoughts and after a frustrating session of fiddling with the computer keyboard, I had resolved to let this week pass by without an input on this page until I stumbled on a tiny piece titled “JAMB Chief Oloyede’s Example” written by the hilariously serious Gbenga Omotoso, the Editor of ‘The Nation’ newspaper and published on Thursday. That piece encapsulates what I hasten to describe as the missing link in the governance structure of the Nigerian state.

    Perhaps, I would not be writing about the Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board, Prof. Ishaq Olarewaju Oloyede (according to Wikipedia), today if I had followed the herd mentality of the religious puritans and ethnic jingoists in our midst who marked him out as being unworthy of that office simply because of his field of expertise in the academia. On assumption of office on October 8, 2016, the lingo on the tongues of those who couldn’t wait to see his faltering steps in a ‘difficult terrain’ as the JAMB office was: “What significant or tangible reform can a Professor of Islamic Studies bring on stream in that office?” Of course, this was also tainted with the refrain that President Muhammadu Buhari had appointed his ‘Muslim brother and co-Northerner’ to that examination body with the aim of ‘Islamizing’ the educational system. In spite of the fact that Oloyede is a Yoruba name, his longtime professional sojourn in a North Central state, Kwara, was enough to tag him as a Northerner out to implement a Buhari agenda in JAMB. This, I believe, was running wild in the warped imaginations of some persons. No one bothered to find out the fact that this man, who has rewritten the story of transparent leadership in governance in less than two years, is an indigene of Abeokuta South Local Government Area of Ogun State. A simple search on the web would reveal more about how he traversed the educational and entrepreneurial sectors of the university system before he was picked to head JAMB. But that’s the story for another day.

    In a society with an abysmal dearth of quality leadership, Oloyede stands out as a symbol of hope for millions of people who have lost a belief in any redemptive moment for this country. In his piece, Omotoso, in unraveling answers to how JAMB was able to return a princely sum of N8bn to the treasury under Oloyede, wrote: “Simple. He plugged all the loopholes and reined in the fat cats that had been preying on the agency’s cash.” Yes, that may true. But it is more than that. In the past and even presently, heads of governments, ministries, departments and agencies have spoken glibly about how they have curbed corruption by strictly implementing all that Omotoso had mentioned above without any impact to the national treasury in terms of inflows. Such measures didn’t stop the ritual in which various corruption-certified MDAs gather at every end of December to ‘share unspent funds and cook up papers” to blot out the larceny. I am almost sure some crooked officials in JAMB would have suggested that Oloyede should take this route—a safe haven of pilfering billions. But for his firmness and resolve to walk his talk while holding aloft the flag of integrity, Oloyede could have fallen for the sweet coated lure of the bureaucracy like many before him had done in the past,

    One thing is sure, Oloyede’s action is not accidental neither was it influenced by the fear of Buhari. It is, to my mind, built on his moral convictions to live by the standards he set for others. On assumption of office, he was very clear about his leadership style at his first meeting with the Management Staff of the Board and State Coordinators, saying: “Indiscipline is a serious form of corruption. Many people who criticise others are also corrupt by virtue of their sheer indiscipline. The first rule in heaven is order and the bane of our development as a nation is indiscipline.

     

    Distinguished colleagues, indiscipline begins from attitude to time but it does not end there. Discipline requires that the right thing is done at the right time for the right purpose. Discipline requires that we all clean our corners in our respective capacities. Lateness to work, laziness at work, disrespect for deadlines, insubordination and so on are viruses that often cripple an organisation. I will implore you to hold discipline sacrosanct because indiscipline is corruption.”

    Can we, for once, be serious about sifting the grains of wisdom from Oloyede’s speech copiously quoted above? Without self-discipline, how could he have resisted the temptation to keep ‘some billions’ for himself from the N8bn that has been remitted to the Federal Government’s coffers as unspent funds? Or do we take it that this Professor of Islamic Studies, a father and head of an extended family does not have people that rely on his generosity to survive the tough times? Not really. It is just that, like he said, discipline requires self-cleansing before one can instill same on others. Contentment is also key to attaining that reality. That is what Oloyede has brought into bear in running JAMB.

    Truth be told, Oloyede’s activities, since assuming office, are not without some shortcomings especially in the technicalities of the conduct of the exams. He could have faltered in one way or the other, yet the things that define his leadership far overshadow those faltering steps in his bid to correct the lapses in the system. Oloyede has shown that he is unshakably committed to transforming JAMB while he remains transparent and accountable. For a man who, among many other positions, performed creditably well as the “Chairman of the University of Ilorin Holdings Ltd where he served as Director, Unilorin Consultancy Services’, it is not surprising that he has placed his integrity as a priceless commodity that cannot be bought with tempting billions of which most of his predecessors never bothered to remit. His singular action is the reason why the government has decided to probe those agencies that feed fat on the system—the ones that eat everything and go back to the government to beg for more to waste of frivolities!

    When we look around us, there are scores of government agencies that rake in billions yearly and resort to under-the-counter sharing of the excess to ‘close the books’ in times like this. As I write this, the crooked hands in those agencies are preparing for another kill in spite of the stellar example being set by Oloyede’s JAMB. Some may even be sniggering at Oloyede as the killjoy puritan that has come to ‘spoil the show’ for the harvest of looting that has impoverished millions and rendered a nation impotent—a country that is scared of freeing itself from the grip underdevelopment. If only many of us would truly follow Oloyede’s decision to shun greed and live by example by embracing the highest ethos of self-discipline, maybe the process of a rediscovery of our humanity can truly begin. But are we ready to walk through that arduous road to success in a country where selfishness is the norm rather than being an exception? That’s the troubling question that the Oloyede example throws back at us. Let’s answer him!

  • Kudos for Oloyede over supplementary UTME’s conduct

    Kudos for Oloyede over supplementary UTME’s conduct

    The Forum of Non-Governmental Organisations in Nigeria (FONGON), an umbrella body of over 100 Non-Governmental Organisations in the country, has praised the Prof. Ishaq Oloyede-led Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) over the conduct of last Saturday’s supplementary Universal Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) across the country.

    In a statement issued in Abuja yesterday by the group’s National Coordinator, Comrade Wole Badmus, it said reports indicate a smooth and transparent examination process in the over 170 centres with over 85,000 students partaking. It said: “This is another milestone for the JAMB in its quest to give a corruption free test for applicants into the Nation’s tertiary institutions of learning.

    “Prior to the supplementary exam, concerned students were adequately informed of data pertaining to the examination venue, time and date via text messages, E-mails and newspaper advertorials. This is to curtail a situation where some applicants will claim ignorant of their particulars in order to perpetuate assessment fraud’ the statement went further.

    “Prompt release of examination results and adequate briefing of the public on matters relating to the tests are steps capable of reinforcing public confidence in the examination body.

    ‘It is equally heartwarming that in the post examination audit of the last UTME, the board blacklisted over 71 CBT Centres with 48 of them receiving outright ban from participating in future exercise. This, to us will go a long way in aiding the war against examination malpractices in the country as operators of other private CBT Centres will have a rethink before collaborating with unscrupulous members of the public to perpetuate examination fraud in their centres.

    “We hereby advise the JAMB to take additional steps by taking up legal actions against major players in examination derelictions in competent courts of law.

    “His far reaching reforms has greatly transform the board from an organisation that hitherto command little public confidence into a cynosure of all eyes and reference point for a hitch-free, transparent dealings in public business.”

  • JAMB releases 1,606,901 UTME results, says Oloyede

    JAMB releases 1,606,901 UTME results, says Oloyede

    The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has released 1,606,901 results out of the 1,718, 425 that registered in the just concluded Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    The JAMB registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, said this at a news conference in Abuja yesterday.

    Oloyede said the results were released within 24 hours of the examination, adding that the remaining 80,889 candidates’ results would be released soon.

    He said it was also a deliberate act by the board to withhold about 76,923 results due to some alleged malpractices in some of the Computer Based Centres (CBT) where exams were held.

    “Six weeks into the registration, we harvested in preparation for the exam about 1.7 million registrations.

    “But so far, we have released the results of 1,606,901 candidates leaving us with a balance of 80,889.

    “Out of this 80,889, we have deliberately withheld 76,925 results for further investigation because of alleged malpractices.”

    The registrar said results would henceforth not be released immediately from 2018 unless every issues pertaining to the conduct of an examination had been thoroughly looked into which depict the international best practices.

    He added that results that had not been released would be released before the commencement of admission exercise.

    He also said supplementary examination would be conducted soon for candidates who had hitches in the registration and examination processes.

    Oloyede attributed some of the hitches to some CBT owners and cyber cafe operators.

    “Anybody whose biometric could not be verified will be allowed to do the supplementary examination.

    “As at today, 640 candidates out of 1.7million candidates did not do biometric verification, reasons being that some fraudsters registered candidates across online.

    “In this case, the students are not guilty of the offence and hence will be made to write the exam again under my own very eyes.”

    Oloyede highlighted some of the exam malpractices to have been initiated by parents who pay heavily to buy fake questions for their wards.

    He said others include deliberate shut down and disconnection of network by some CBT owners to access questions on the computers and also exploit candidates of their fortune.

    “In the course of our monitoring, JAMB had to buy question for N20,000 and also cases where CBT centres approaches our staff promising N500,000 for them to give out questions.

    “These are some of the challenges we experienced in this exam,” he said.

    He added: “Parents of these super VIP paid N200, 000 for each of the candidates to be able to score high marks. We are able to be ahead of them. Next year we are going to put electronic jammers in all the CBT centres. They better start to think of another way because we know that is what they do and we will also plan ahead of them.”

    Oloyede, however, promised to introduce electronic jammers in subsequent examination to further reduce malpractices.

    He called on public and religious institutions to avoid letting out their premises to CBT centres as this create room for fraudulent practices.

    He advised candidates having issues or any form of correction to go to designated JAMB CBT centres and do so for free.

  • JAMB, Registrar Oloyede bags highest award over successful CBT-UTME

    Coalition of Civil Society Organizations for Transparency on Governance has hailed the management of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, over the successful conduct of the recent Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
    CCSOTG subsequently conferred the title of ‘IDEAL CHANGE AGENT’ on JAMB Registrar, Professor Ishaq Oleyede for the well-conduct of the examination.
    The highly revered group, which mission is to hold government and government agencies accountable by making sure they affect their abilities and deliver their mandates to the public, noted that after monitoring the exercise, it concluded that the Oleyede-board has done well.
    CCSOTG said its reaction became imperative following the recent reform process in the sector, which attracted divided opinions from the general public on its impact for the selection of undergraduates.
    The group said, after monitoring the exercise, it discovered that JAMB should be given more kudos than knocks.
    “You will agree that this was imperative given the conflicting positions being stated by various stakeholders. It was therefore necessary that the coalition places itself in vantage position to be able to speak to facts.
    “We therefore leveraged on our wide network to do on the ground monitoring of the examination. This of course was after we had dedicatedly followed the processes leading to the exercise itself. The aftermath of the examination, which included the release of results were also closely watched,” Sabo Odeh Executive Director/Convener of the organization made this known at a press conference held in Abuja on Thursday.
    According to Odeh, after observing the Computer Based Test UMTE, which JAMB monitored through closed circuit television (CCTV) in addition to other traditional assurance system, observed that despite the best efforts of JAMB, organization of the UMTE experienced some hitches.
    He observed that lapses were however externally motivated to an extent that the Board had limited wiggle room to influence them otherwise.
    Odeh said the CBT Centres would still have to do more to meet the standards demanded by JAMB.
    He said, “Since these are businesses that deploy their facilities for other uses, the burden is on them to upgrade as necessary since they are not offering their services for free. Our suggestion is that JAMB should explore new partnerships with a view to delisting centres that have proven problematic.”
    The group’s convener also observed that the board needed to improve on broadband connectivity, which he said some critics noted that the “connectivity was a critical issue in the conduct of the examination. Unfortunately, this is a national issue that requires further investment in broadband infrastructure by telecommunications companies.
    He also cited the instance of computer literacy where, “some candidates did not have computer literacy skill on the level to allow them comfortably write the examination. Such candidates do not however constitute the majority. Our recommendation is for JAMB to work with the relevant stakeholders to boost the computer literacy of secondary school students so that they would have become capable at the point of writing the examination.”
    Despite all the hitches, the group confirmed that, “conduct of the UTME was orderly, conformed with best standards at most parameters, and is commendable. Instances of malpractices were however recorded at centres where people colluded to cover the cameras with hoods.”
    It also hailed JAMB for the timely release of results of candidates, which has justified the innovations put in place by JAMB
    It also suggested that JAMB should consider a-three-year ban for both candidates and centres implicated in malpractices. The push to reform our nation should be grounded in the education sector.
    “Having duly considered the organization of the UTME, its conduct and results that reflect the reality of the Nigerian situation, we have resolved to award the Registrar of JAMB, Professor Ishaq Oleyede with one of our most prestigious honour. We hereby confer on Professor Oloyede the honour  of IDEAL CHANGE AGENT. This is even more so as he has, of all the President’s appointees, demonstrated uncommon leadership qualities and commitment within the shortest period of his appointment.”
  • As Oloyede Demystifies JAMB’s UTME/ CBT Puzzle

    Nigerians should shout aloud, with thumps up in the air for Professor Is-haq Oloyede, the current Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board (JAMB). I say everybody should shout loud praises to him. Wait a minute! Why am I sounding like an incensed Pentecostal Pastor, whose tithe basket caught the biggest “fish” ever, minutes before the commencement of the evening session of “signs and wonders?”
    It is not exactly so; but it’s something close to it. Hurray! the JAMB registrar has shamed critics again; he has silenced skeptics. He has left the professional exam fraudsters and their allies jobless and lurking everywhere on the corridors of the educational sector in Nigeria speechless. Oloyede conducted a seamless and near 100 percent successful Computer Based Test (CBT) for the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME) in spite of malicious opposition to it.
    It is in the character of those who reap from the decay in the education sector to always vehemently oppose any innovation or the application of reforms that would sanitize the system. Therefore, they attacked the JAMB registrar and threw all sorts of defamatory missiles at him. They called him names and sued for his crucification.
    Shockingly,  a faction of ASUU, particularly the Ibadan Zone was part of this conspiracy. They wrote memos, petitions and probably, resorted to voodoo to attack Professor Oloyede.  When the antics failed to create the damage and halt the sanitization of JAMB exams, they laughably called for the sack of the JAMB registrar, a tested performer, whom they maliciously brand as incompetent.
    Even without JAMB’s independent Information Communication Technology (ICT) infrastructure to anchor this laudable innovation of CBT, Professor Oloyede, a university teacher and administrator per excellence, worked out a perfect synergy with private ICT centers proprietors and superintended over a near hitch –free CBT exams.   And come to think of it, over 1,736,571 candidates sat for the exams, which were segmented in batches across the nation in a span of one week in 642 centers.
    The JAMB boss developed a water-tight and sensitive ICT security alert system that detected exam fraudsters who connived with JAMB approved operators of  CBT centers. They were watched in the central control room, caught and penalized together with fraudulent candidates accordingly.
    In addition, candidates’ widely applauded the conduct of the CBT as smooth and easy-going. They were full of praises for JAMB, as the online business of UTME has speeded every process   of the exams.
    While veiled opponents of sanity in the conduct of exams in Nigeria hid their faces in shame, independent observers equally joined candidates in eulogizing JAMB for the conduct of a perfect exam. The Joint Action Coalition on Education (JACE) deployed its officials who monitored the conduct of the CBT in all the 36 states of federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). And they returned a verdict of excellence on JAMB generally and Professor Oloyede in particular.
    A statement by JACE Southwest Zonal Co-ordinator,  Mr. ​Ayokunle Adumashin conveyed it in floating details.  It stated;  “From our observations: ​​The examination was orderly and met set standards in all in the centres monitored by our coalition. The few incidents recorded, were largely issues pertaining to human factor and not caused by systems or process.
    ”​The examination showed the imperative for continued investment in broadband penetration and stability in addition to improving on power supply situation in the country. The suggested improvements would totally eliminate the few glitches recorded,” it pontificated.
    It is my conviction that those who have sworn to pull back Nigeria in the regime of “Change mantra,” as enunciated by President Muhammedu Buhari  cannot be prevented from venting their spleen and anger against anyone, like Professor Oloyede,  who is determined to create a difference. But they are powerless to halt the moving train of “change” and the positive whirlwind shall continue to blow in institutions manned by competent hands, who share the same vision with Mr. President.
    We are an unfortunate people. In Nigeria, we all know,  the desire of candidates to cheat in every exam, whether conducted by JAMB, WASSCE or the universities is given a boost by parents desperate to see their children acquire certificates they cannot defend the knowledge certified by the certificates’. There are exam leakage  syndicate all over Nigeria . And  shockingly, it is a means of livelihood for the crooks. Even with the implementation of the CBT, we have noticed how some operators of ICT centers dubiously connived with candidates to compromise the sanctity of the exams.
    But thanks to JAMB’s  surveillance and alertness. These fraudulent characters were secretly detected by the security devices JAMB installed and today, the few candidates yet to receive their results are those caught up in the exam fraud scam, which is being further investigated by JAMB. It has continued to release results of centers and candidates absolved from complicity after investigation. It will not surprise me, if tomorrow another band of veiled antagonists to sanity in Nigeria’s educational sector attempts to blackmail JAMB and Professor Oloyede with it.  It is the sad narrative of our debased lives.
    As expected, these parasites have begun subtle campaigns, alluding to JAMB tinkering with the idea of dumping the CBT for the analogue Paper and Pencil Test (PPT) for the UTME. But JAMB has refuted it as untrue, false and extremely misleading. The CBT mode of exams has come to stay and the black hearts can jump into the Lagoon, at their peril.
    Rather the JAMB boss and JAMB board are further modifying the  CBT mode to make it much easier and  friendly to erase the technophobia that gripped some candidates in the 2017 edition of CBT exams.  They are determined to consolidate on the gains recorded in the last exercise.
    A recent statement by the JAMB boss, Professor Oloyede at  Arewa House, Kaduna, during a  strategic planning retreat on monitoring and supervision of 2017 UTME,  divulged the decision of JAMB’s  board  to henceforth adopt the use of the eight keys,  instead of the traditional mouse for computers.
    He informed;  “From the general feedback on the adoption of the Computer Based Test mode, we have noted the challenge of computer low level literacy of some candidates, especially with the phobia for the mouse.”
    “This has been responsible partly for the call by some people for reversal to the Paper and Pencil Test mode. In order to ensure equity and level playground for all candidates taking the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, the Board has designed a system that will allow candidates use only eight (8) keys without the use of the mouse,” Oloyede expatiated.
    But we must accept the unalterable truth that the entire world and knowledge are  ICT driven now. Nigeria in the 21st century, cannot afford to continue to run its educational system on the analogue mode. ICT –driven CBT has several advantages to the educational system and the candidates tested through it.
    First, the online registration is more accurate and leaves low incidents of errors; it checkmates exam fraud; no issues of impersonation;  it ensures the quick and almost instant release of results to candidates, who get it in the comfort of their homes through online channels.
    And above all, the CBT will provoke the intensity of ICT education at the lower rungs of the educational system to compel schools to properly teach their students the use of ICT in readiness for JAMB’s CBT to proceed for higher education.  These are the pluses ICT/ CBT have  impinged on our economy, education and national life as a  nation.
    In foreign countries, the whole process of learning is done online.  E-learning has replaced paper and biro or chalk and blackboard. There is no university overseas that still subjects students to the primordial system of learning as some debased Nigerians insist on retaining.   We should be grateful to Professor Oloyede and by implication, the innovations brought by JAMB in education.
     We now know that  the CBT which seemingly appeared  impossible is not just do-able, but perfectly too. All universities in Nigeria should emulate his example and kick-start the process of thinking of how to administer knowledge through e-learning.
    Of course, I know Professor Oloyede is not new on the game. He faced stiff opposition as Vice Chancellor of University of Ilorin,(Unilorin) when set out to introduce  e-learning techniques.  He was stoutly opposed.
    But  I know him as a man who is never afraid of trial and he ventured into it  and came out successful, like the JAMB case has demonstrated. Today, Unilorin sits on the pioneering seat of universities in Nigeria to adopt e-learning and has continued to attract unprecedented public patronage. Those in doubt, should spare a day and take a trip to Unilorin where Oloyede also introduced the CBT exams and it’s working perfectly. Once again, thumps up for Professor Oloyede. He is my perfect role model.
    Kolawole PhD  writes from the Institute for International Strategic Studies, Abuja.‎
  • Oloyede: Bulldozer of a Different Kind

    Every man fights, at least, a battle once in his life time. He either wins or loses. But African allegories are replete with great warriors who are famed for conquering all forces anytime they step out on the battlefield. They are venerated each time the call of duty beckons. And those determined to render honest leadership in Nigeria face a battle-like situation against retrogressive forces.

    The current Registrar of Joint Matriculation and Admissions Board (JAMB), Professor Is-haq Oloyede strikes like one such Nigerian-African. He does not belong to the clan of the traditional sword brandishers, but to the ilk of academic and administrative warriors. His missile never misses a target; he is conqueror and a bulldozer of a rare and extraordinary breed. He is a man who sets his mind and eyes on success anywhere fate has ordained him to serve, and he delivers accordingly.

    His admirers recall his inherited animosity with ASUU when he became the Vice Chancellor (VC), University of Ilorin (Uni-lorin). ASUU fruitlessly tried to prematurely terminate his tenure as VC for hardening to their voice the sacked Uni-lorin ASUU members. Thereafter, they resorted to witch-hunting and glaring attempts to frustrate the exercise of his academic prowess on university campuses in Nigeria.

    In further pursuit of this agenda, ASUU mounted a baseless, but stiff opposition against his appointment as JAMB Registrar and backed it up with the near criminal blackmail of the federal government to reverse it or face industrial action. And now, there have been mounting antagonisms by some stakeholders in the education sector against his determination to sanitize JAMB of exam malpractices and other irregularities to bestow credibility on the exam body.

    In all instances and at every point, Professor Oloyede has proved his mettle as a true African hero, who cannot be obstructed by diversionary and unprogressive forces. He bestrode every area of national assignment confidently, deflating all missiles against him and depositing awful footprints. No place has the current JAMB boss ever worked that the walls are not etched with his positive shadows in reforms, innovations and accomplishments. He makes deafening conscious efforts to succeed anywhere he serves his fatherland.

    But the forces of darkness do not easily give up a fight. They do not surrender even when defeated, lest they be branded effeminate. So, they have continued to push forward plots to frustrate, obstruct and distort Oloyede’s graph to sanitize the exam body. But as usual, he is beating them in their tracks.

    Professor Oloyede’s latest battle is his insistence to entrench the Computer-Based Test (CBT) style of examinations for candidates sitting for the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME). Antagonists’ cried foul and unreasonably described the online registration for the 2017 UTME as a failure, when fraudsters invaded some registration centers in some states. But the JAMB boss moved swiftly to solve the problem, as security agents apprehended the fraudsters’.

    One could not fathom why the detractors had to describe as a failure, an exercise, which had successfully registered over a million candidates for the 2017 UTME out of the anticipated 1,500 candidates in the first three weeks. This happened in a country, which has certified problems of logistics, such as lack of electricity, poor internet services and other inadequacies. But the JAMB boss and his team worked tirelessly, sometimes, spending the night in the office to ensure the online registration does not become a fiasco.

    Professor Oloyede’s innovations introduced trial or mock exams for the prospective candidates to test the workability of the CBT system and readiness of the examinees. The stakeholders in the education sector in Nigeria never gave him the benefit of doubt to do it. They only sighted failure; while Professor Oloyede sensed success and the benefits to candidates and the educational system in Nigeria.

    These are stakeholders who have vowed that nothing good would ever come out of Nigeria again and they vehemently kicked against it. But the JAMB boss insisted and the mock exams held successfully nation-wide, with a perfection that beats the imagination. And the candidates have been better armed for the actual examinations.

    That the JAMB boss dared the odds to hold the mock exams, with such resounding success is indication of the worth of Oloyede’s administrative acumen. It advertises him as a persona with a strong and unyielding character to be trusted with the most difficult of assignments, but he would not disappoint his superiors.

    This singular innovation, which is unique in the West African sub-region is celebrated around the world too, as the rating of Nigeria’s JAMB today has soared incredibly. With the CBT for the 2017 UTME successfully and conveniently conducted, Prof. Oloyede has etched a niche for the board as conducting one of the best examinations in the history of Nigeria. There are numerous such exam bodies in Nigeria still struggling to understand the basics of conducting a credible exam. Such bodies should emulate this exemplary, focused, innovative and result-oriented leadership.

    Quite unfortunately, when opponents failed to nail the JAMB boss over the mock exams, some of them prayed fervently it drooped. Hence the vile propaganda was practically dismantled by the board, opponents again embarked on another leg of campaigns’. Very disingenuously, thoughtlessly and laughably, they claimed candidates for 2017 UTME would not receive examination centers because of imagined “loopholes” or “shortcomings” the attackers of the reforms in JAMB eerily sighted in the online registration of candidates.

    Again, the JAMB headed by Oloyede disappointed them, as candidates confirmed receiving their examination centres as promised by the exams body, days before the date of exams through SMS, e-mails and other channels.

    And for each of the CBT centers approved by JAMB for the 2017 CBT-UTME, there were reserve computers to take care of unseen circumstances like system failure while exams were in progress.

    Adhering to his principle of success in all his endeavours, the JAMB Registrar succeeded in registering 1, 736, 571 candidates for the 2017 UTME for 624 centres nationwide, who would sit for the exams in batches. He exceeded the estimated number of candidates’ by nearly 250, 000 candidates, who all successfully wrote the examination last Saturday, May 13, 2017 hitch -free.

    An administrator who goes the extra mile to grab success deserves accolades, because in the bid of Nigeria to go digital in government or public business, there have been a lot of hiccups. The normal and peculiarly Nigerian situation would have seen poor electricity supply or outright power outage and faulty machines taking the shine off this maiden attempt by Professor Oloyede to adopt CBT for UTME as the new norm for JAMB candidates.

    Banks, INEC’s e-voting, GSM companies, internet service providers have suffered these setbacks at different times. But these repulsive threats could not hold back the JAMB boss and determined for success now as never before, he treaded where devils dreaded and came out triumphantly.

    So, Oloyede has proven that he is an academic and administrator who does not believe in living by chance or happenstance, but a man who consistently lives by choice; the conscious and deliberate choice of working to succeed and defining new limits of excellence for himself and institutions’ he has led in the educational sector.

    Thus far, the skeptics could go ahead with their doubts; the antagonists can continue with the blackmail; the black sheeps in the system can continue with their intrigues and plots to scuttle his reformations in JAMB and his target of purifying the entry exams into Nigerian higher institutions. But Professor Oloyede has never been defeated in such battles. Another opportunity has offered it and him to proven his critics dead wrong.

    With this maiden, but successful implementation of CBT for UTME, Nigerians genuinely concerned with the fallen standards of education are contemplating honouring him as Nigeria’s Ambassador of free and fair examinations, devoid of malpractices. So, the JAMB boss has already silenced critics and opponents alike to the salvation of the educational sector and the glory or prosperity of Nigeria.

    Odoma, is President, Africa Arise for Change Network and writes from Abuja.

  • ‘Oloyede won’t disappoint UTME candidates’

    ‘Oloyede won’t disappoint UTME candidates’

    AN umbrella body of over 100 non-governmental organisations, the Forum of Non-Governmental Organisations in Nigeria (FONGON), has expressed confidence in the ability of the Prof. Is-haq Oloyede-led Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to conduct a credible Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    The group, in a statement issued in Abuja on Friday, said Oloyede was out to correct the anomalies of the past.

    It said the registrar would correct this institutionalised corruption and fraud in the system, through “holistic and painstaking approach”.

    The statement by its National Coordinator, Wole Badmus, added that the Oloyede-led JAMB will prove that the postponement of the mock UTME is in the interest of the candidates.

    The group sought public support and prayer for the successful conduct of the coming and future examinations.

    The statement reads: “Within the short space of period of the JAMB Registrar, many far-reaching measures have been put in place to safeguard the credibility of the UTME. Now, unlike before, all JAMB-approved examination centres are equipped with examination computers and Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras to track down any form of examination malpractices within and outside the halls. Candidates are, therefore, expected to spend more time to study and adequately prepare for the examination rather than look for leaked questions as cheating in any form will be picked by the CCTV camera while the entire results will be cancelled.”