Tag: utme

  • This JAMB

    This JAMB

    •The board has repeatedly failed to live up to expectations; let varsities conduct their exams

    The release of the 2013 results of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has once again provided cause for much soul-searching by parents, candidates and JAMB itself.

    In spite of the efforts of the board’s officials to gloss over the challenges of this year’s UTME, there can be no doubt that there were simply too many problems for candidates to contend with. The registration process was fraught with difficulty, as many candidates complained of the inability to easily submit their forms online. Examination centres for many candidates were found to be in areas that were relatively distant from their own homes, and led to a lot of inconvenience.

    The UTME examination itself was characterised by delays, last-minute changes and other break-downs in established procedure. Many candidates arrived at designated venues only to find that they had been relocated to other venues without their knowledge. The biometric verification formalities were often inefficient or not working at all, causing delays and frustration. The resultant confusion provided ample opportunity for examination malpractice.

    Given such poor omens, it is perhaps not surprising that the UTME results were not particularly encouraging. Only 10 out of about 1.64 million candidates were able to score more than 300 marks in the examination; 628 candidates scored between 270 and 299 marks. About 50 per cent of those who sat the examination scored less than 200 marks. Some might attribute this poor performance to the falling standard of education in the country; it might well be; but JAMB is not helping matters with its incompetence.

    Meanwhile about 12,000 results were withheld, while another 68,000 are still being scrutinised. This has led to protests by some candidates in Kano State who are demanding the immediate release of their results. Even the results are in question: some candidates are claiming to have received scores in subjects that they did not register for; others say they have multiple results for the same subjects.

    For an organisation which has been in the business of conducting matriculation examinations since 1978, this cannot be good news. Despite modern improvements in technology, logistics and administrative practices, candidates find it more difficult to register, less easy to locate their centres, experienced increased delays during examinations, and display greater uncertainty about the validity of their performance. Added to this is the still-unsolved problem of inadequate places for those seeking university admission: only about 520,000 spaces are available for the 1.6 million hopefuls who sat for the UTME.

    JAMB has failed to live up to its central mission of acting as an efficient clearing-house designed to facilitate the university admissions process. The anomalies it was set up to prevent have been replaced by even greater disjunctions which continue to undermine it at every turn. The board appears to be losing credibility almost on an annual basis, as parents and candidates become increasingly frustrated with an organisation which seems to be bent on making an-already difficult situation even worse.

    It is time for a new paradigm. Individual universities must be permitted to conduct their own entrance examinations and send the results to JAMB, whose clearing-house function would now be restricted to that of ensuring equity, geographical spread and inclusivity in admissions.

    The advantages are self-evident. Candidates will no longer have to endure sleepless nights in front of computers in their efforts to register; any university that makes the registration or examination process unduly difficult will be dropped in favour of those that do not. The double jeopardy of sitting for UTME and post-UTME will be eliminated. Universities will be under greater pressure to ensure that they are good enough to attract the best students. In essence, the decentralisation of tertiary matriculations examinations is almost certain to make it more efficient and more equitable.

  • ChamsCity pilots computer- based UTME

    Candidates for this year’s edition of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) were availed the choice of Computer Based Test (CBT) and the Dual-Based Test (DBT) format during the recently concluded 2013 examinations conducted nationwide. The CBT and DBT are a radical departure from the traditional Paper Pencil Test (PPT) which is the benchmark in the country.

    ChamsCity, the country’s largest and most advanced digital mall was among the designated centre for students who chose the Computer Based Test format over the Paper Pencil Test in Abuja, Lagos and across major cities. Over 400 students who chose CBT format wrote the 2013 UTME at ChamsCity Abuja under the direct supervision of Professor Dibu Ojerinde, Registrar, Joint Admission Matriculation Board (JAMB).

    According to Prof. Ojerinde, there was an increase of about 13.35 per cent in the number of candidates who registered for this year’s exam when compared with those registered last year. “1,735, 720 candidates applied for this year’s UTME as against last year’s 1,503,931 registrations. This represents an increase of 13.35 per cent; the total number of candidates sitting for the exam today is about 1.5 million while those writing outside the country are 378 in number”.

    Explaining the rationale behind the adoption of Computer Based Test format, the JAMB helmsman said it is in line with the commitment of the examination board to do everything possible to make sure that the best is given in the area of service provision to the students.

    To underscore the significance of the CBT format, the Honourable Minister for Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Ahmed Rufai, visited the ChamsCity Centre, Abuja during the examinations. Throwing her weight behind the pilot programme, she reiterated the need to secure a better future for the Nigerian child by giving them quality education services and providing necessary materials that measure with international standard. She emphasized that the federal government will do everything in its capacity to give quality education to the Nigerian Student

    Engr. Akin Sawyer, Director, Chams Plc commended the Federal Government and JAMB for taking the bold step by piloting CBT format to ensure that the Nigerian child have equal opportunities and access to ultra modern learning and educational tools like their counterparts in developed economies. He added that Nigeria can fast-track attainment of its vision of becoming one of the top 20 economies in the world through investment in education, especially in the areas of science and technology.

    ChamsCity in 2008 was certified by the Guinness world record as the largest digital cafe in the world and is equipped with over 1000 computer systems to serve various needs. ChamsCity is a business unit of Chams Plc and the centres in Lagos, Abuja and Port-Harcourt have served as enabling platform for various computer and non computer based trainings and testing.

  • UTME candidates protest seizure of results

    •’We’ve been marginalised’

     

    About 1, 000 candidates, who wrote the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) on April 27 in Edo State, have asked the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to release their results.

    The candidates, who marched on major streets, and the secretariat of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Benin City yesterday, said their centres had no biometric machines.

    They said seizing results on account of their not being captured was an attempt to deny them admissions.

    The angry candidates, who carried placards with inscriptions which read “Out of 1.7million candidates: where are the spaces in the universities?”; JAMB don’t frustrate us”; “JAMB release our results”, said they have other plans, if JAMB does not take heed.

    A candidate, Anthony Ozabor, who wrote the exam at St Maria Goretti College, Benin City, said JAMB had two centres there.

    He said he has been checking his results online only to find that he has none.

    Ozabor said the excuse by JAMB is that the machines showed they were absent.

    “How can hundreds of thousands of candidates be absent for such a widely publicised exam that they have been preparing for since last year?

    “The problem is that JAMB did not send the machines and it did that to ensure that it collected money from as candidates as possible only to deny them results after.

    “If it doesn’t release our result then it should refund our money.

    “Today we have been to the Benin JAMB office and the officials used the police to drive us away; they said we should go to JAMB headquarters in Abuja.”

    When contacted, an official at the Benin office denied knowledge of the protest.

    He added that results for those who wrote the exam were available online.

    Also in Calabar, Cross River State, candidates who have no results for allegedly not providing adequate biometric information on the exam day have said they were being marginalised.

    According to them, the thumb printing machines which were available at the exam centres were faulty, hence they should not be punished for it.

    Angela Okon, who wrote the examination at Government Secondary School, Akim, in Calabar queried, “do we have to suffer because JAMB machines are not functioning properly.

    “When I registered for the exam in a cyber café, I thumb printed as part of the registration process and then there was no problem.

    “On the day of the exam the thumb printing machine was not functioning properly, but the officials told us to write our exams that there was no problem.

    “Now I have gone to check my result and there are telling me that I have no result because I did not thumbprint. Is it my fault?

    Another candidate, Victor, said: “The fact that they had malfunctioning biometric machines does not mean we have to suffer.

    “This is the fourth time I am writing this exam. I beg relevant authorities to do something about this situation before it becomes a problem they would not be able to handle.”

    Officials at the zonal office in Calabar refused to say anything.

  • UTME Candidates protest seizure of JAMB scores

    UTME Candidates protest seizure of JAMB scores

    About 1, 000 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) candidates who wrote this year’s Joint Admissions And Matriculation
    Board (JAMB) examinations in centres across Edo state on Tuesday asked the JAMB to release their results.

    The candidates who marched through the major streets of Benin City, and the secretariat of the Nigeria Union of Journalists; (NUJ), Benin
    City said the centres where they wrote the UTME  had no biometric machines so seizing results on account of their not being captured by
    the machines was an attempt to deny them admissions.

    The angry candidates who carried different placards with inscriptions which read, “Out of 1.7million candidates: where are the spaces in the
    Universities”, JAMB do not frustrate us”, “JAMB release our results”, amongst others said they have other plans if JAMB does not take heed.

    Anthony Ozabor who was a UTME candidate in St Maria Goretti College in Benin City where he said JAMB had two centres said that they have been
    checking their results online only to find that they have none, arguing that the excuse by JAMB is that the machines showed that they were absent.

    “How can hundreds of thousands of candidates be absent for such a widely publicized examination that they have been preparing for since
    last year. The problem is that JAMB did not send the machines and they did that to ensure that they collected money from as candidates as
    possible only to deny them results after”.

    He added, “Today we have been to the Benin JAMB office and they used the Nigerian Police to drive us away; they  said we should go to headquarters of JAMB in Abuja”.

    However, an official at the Benin JAMB office denied knowledge of the candidates protest adding that results for those who actually wrote
    the UTME were available online for those interested to cross-check and take action.

  • Six UTME candidates die in road crash

    Six UTME candidates die in road crash

    On the eve of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) held nationwide last Saturday, six candidates among those travelling to Onitsha in Anambra State to check their centres died in an accident. A palm kernel oil-laden tanker rammed into five buses, killing the candidates and injuring others. UCHE ANICHEBE (500-Level Law, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka) reports.

     

    For months, they prepared for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) held nationwide last Saturday. They were in high spirits and looked forward to writing the exam.

    Twenty-four hours to the D-Day, some candidates travelling to write the exam in Onitsha, the commercial hub of Anambra State, died on the Enugu-Onitsha Highway when a palm kernel oil-laden tanker rammed into five of the buses conveying them.

    The accident occurred at 3:30pm at the UNIZIK Junction of the highway, which is always packed with students.

    The tanker hit five “pick and drop” buses, which were carrying passengers at reduced fares under a pedestrian bridge beside Tracas Motor Park. The buses were operating close to the park.

    Sympathisers, who rushed to the scene, wailed as bodies were removed from the mangled 18-seater vehicles. Several others were injured.

    Witnesses said more than 17 people died, but the rescue team of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) put the casuality figure at six.

    Witnesses said the tanker, with Abia State registration number AE 729 UMA, which was on high speed, veered off the highway and rammed into the parked vehicles. The victims, who were mainly UTME applicants, were going to Onitsha to check for their examination centres.

    The driver of the trailer might have lost control of the vehicle following a faulty brake, a witness told CAMPUSLIFE. He added that the uncontrolled speed of the driver may have caused the accident.

    CAMPUSLIFE gathered that two of the buses were fully-loaded; the other three had a few passengers.

    Sympathisers defied a torrential rain to rescue victims. The buses somersaulted several times and rested on their sides, making it difficult for the rescue team to remove the trapped victims.

    The rescue team, which included policemen, FRSC officials, commercial drivers and students used various devices and materials to break the vehicles’ doors to remove victims.

    Several UTME past question papers, exam slips and textbooks littered the scene.

    The injured were rushed to the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) Teaching Hospital, Nnewi and Amakwu General Hospital, Awka. As at press time, the whereabouts of the trailer driver was unknown.

    In tears, one of the injured applicants, Chika Onwuka, said: “I was travelling with my cousins – Oby and Fred – when we heard a loud bang on our bus. Everybody started screaming. The windows shattered and fell on us. I did not know what was happening but I saw people running towards our direction. The door of the bus could not be opened; the rescuers broke it with an object and everybody started rushing out. I saw the tanker and I fainted when on seeing how a blue bus I saw a few seconds behind us was badly damaged with dead bodies. I saw people bleeding seriously.”

    Another victim, who did not give out his name, said: “I didn’t know how I came out of the bus. When I came down, I saw a man who had been eating groundnut on the last seat before the collision and I noticed he was still with his head broken.”

    A driver, who simply identified himself as Goddy, said: “Today is a very bad day for us in this park. I saw the tanker coming on full speed. I think the tanker driver had the intention to hit the foot of the bridge but he missed and ran into the park at the same speed. I can say that many of the passegngers in the park were travelling for tomorrow’s (Saturday) exam.”

    A driver of one of the affected buses, who did not give out his name, said: “The tanker hit the first two buses. The force sent the second bus to another bus which then hit my own bus, which was about moving to Onitsha. My bus is badly damaged; all the windows and windscreens are shattered and everyone, including I suffered injuries. But nobody died in my bus. Students going to write their JAMB exams in Onitsha and some elderly people were in my bus. Luckily, we all survived.”

    A FRSC officer, who pleaded for anonymity, said the bodies had been deposited at the Amakwu General Hospital, Awka. He said: “The tanker hit those “pick and drop” buses that normally pick up passengers under the bridge at the front of Tracas Park. The affected buses did not have passengers’ manifest as required by law and this has put us in a difficult situation to identify the family members of the victims, most of whom were students.” He said six people died and 17 others were injured.

    After the accident, commercial activities in the park was suspended till about 2pm the following day.

  • The high, the low sides of UTME 2013

    The high, the low sides of UTME 2013

    No fewer than 1,629,102 registered for the Paper and Pencil Test (PPT) option of the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) held nationwide last Saturday. The examination was not without drama. The candidates, their parents and guardians, invigilators, security operatives and other examination officials were the cast in the drama.

    At many centres, there were issues with centre changes, invigilation, lateness and examination malpractices. Despite the efforts of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to check examination fraud, many candidates, in some cases with the help of officials, circumvented the measures. They entered the exam halls with what is referred to as “contraband”.

     

    Strictness

    The examination was either good or bad, depending on the candidate’s centre. Officials in some centres The Nation visited played strictly by the rules. They did not allow lateness; they dispossessed candidates of foreign materials before being allowed into the hall, and issued malpractice forms to those caught. At other centres, the officials looked the other way, or even ‘helped’ the candidates for a fee. Their malpractice forms were returned intact to JAMB.

    JAMB officials at SMA College, Jakande Estate, Oke-Afa, Isolo, a Lagos suburb, were strict. They frisked the candidates and before the examination started they caught many with prepared answers scribbled on small pieces of paper hidden under shirt sleeves, in shoes, and other parts of the body.

    A JAMB supervisor told The Nation that those apprehended would be handed over to the police.

    “They (written answers) were collected from them before allowing them to enter the hall. We also warned them to drop whatever they had on them because if caught they would be made to fill the malpractice form. We have written the names of those we caught with answers in the hall, they have filled forms and we are going to hand them over to the police when they come,” he said.

    He praised the teachers, saying they did a good job by cooperating with JAMB officials to fish out fraudsters.

    Another invigilator said: “This school is very standard. I am impressed with the school and I recommend the school. Other private schools collect money but this one doesn’t. I have worked in a private school before and I know what I am saying.”

    Candidates who wrote the examination at Pavillions 2 and 3 of the University of Calabar (UNICAL) saw invigilators as enemies or friends depending on the level of ‘understanding’. Many complained about strictness, sternness and harshness of some invigilators. They were said to have resisted cooperation, and the use of mobile phones which can be deployed in receiving answers via SMS.

    A female candidate, who wrote in Pavilion 3, described the invigilators’ strictness as wickedness.

    “The invigilators and the supervisors were so wicked and strict. They didn’t allow us to chat with friends, even the person staying beside you. The strictness of my invigilator compelled me to use my brain. I pray I pass this Jamb,” she said.

    Ekande Johnson, who wrote at the Definitive Library, UNICAL, also, according to him, used his brains because there was nothing like ‘cooperation’ at his centre.

    “All our invigilators squeezed their faces, starting from the beginning of the exam to the end. The security officers took our mobile phones from us but later returned them after the examination. In Physics and Mathematics, I just had to shade any alphabet that I felt will be the answer because I didn’t know them,” he fumed.

    One girl was heard discussing with her friends afterwards that effective security meant she could not use her phone to receive answers she had paid an exorbitant amount for.

    “I arranged with my mercenary to send me answers in Physics and Chemistry but the security was too tight that I had to drop my phone in my bag. What is hurting me now is that I paid the runs guy for three subjects but did not benefit from it. I pleaded with my invigilator to allow me enter with my mobile phone that this is the fourth time I’m writing Jamb but he refused,” she said.

    An invigilator at UNICAL, Kingsley Eneje, said the strictness was to ensure that no malpractices were recorded. He thanked JAMB for the maximum security measures taken to check malpractices, especially the biometric thumbprinting capture system which, since introduced in 2011, has helped reduce impersonation.

     

    Compromised officials

    At centres where the invigilators and supervisors did not think collecting money to help candidates cheat was a bad idea, the rules were dumped. Candidates who did not prepare were happy, describing the invigilators as angels and thanking God for sending them their way.

    At many centres in Kano and Jigawa states, candidates had a field day, using cell phones and other devices to get expo.

    “Oga, by the grace of God, this is my last attempt for JAMB. I tried this examination for more than four times. But with what happened in the hall today, I am rest assured of a better score when the chips are down,” one of the candidates told our reporter.

    According to him, in collaboration with the invigilators and security agencies who allegedly collected some money from candidates, “we were given the freedom to do whatever we liked. It was like a jamboree and I thank God for everything.”

    A candidate who wrote at Pavilion 2 UNICAL said his invigilator was God-sent because he “cooperated.”

    “The exam was okay and our invigilator cooperated well as he allowed us to cooperate. In fact, he was God-sent to help us,” he said.

    It was not only invigilators helping candidates. Security operatives were also indicted. At the Faculty of Arts centre, one of the three within the Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo, an official of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), one of the paramilitary bodies deployed by JAMB to provide security, was caught attempting to send answers to some candidates through two cell phones.

    A microchip with solutions to Mathematics (Type A) was also found on him. The officer who identified himself as Kazeem Adewale was caught by LASU security guards. Sandwiched between two security officials inside one of the university’s vans, he started pleading, claiming the phones and microchips were given to him by his boss, another female officer who he simply identified as Adesanu.

    He said in Yoruba: Egbon, ee de bami bewon; sebi Yoruba bii temi leyin naa nso (please big brother, kindly help me appeal to them) he said to our reporter.

    His boss, Adesanu, denied giving the phones and microchips to the suspect. Adewale was handed over to men from Ojo Police Station.

    Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic) Prof Sena Bakre, who coordinated the three centres within LASU, said she had suspected Adewale was up to no good.

    “He (Adewale) was moving around with suspicion,” said Prof Bakre. “He never stayed at his duty post. As soon as I realised this, I alerted LASU security to secretly place surveillance on him until he was eventually caught.”

    Prof Bakre also said she suspected Adewale’s atrocities had the backing of his superiors, adding that following the suspect’s arrest, other NSCDC officials became nervous. She urged JAMB to beam its searchlight more on NSCDC officials, fingering them as one of the abettors of examination practices during the UTME.

    “For me, I no longer find this civil defence people dependable again. They are usually the ones that help many of these students get the answers either via cell phones or any other means. I think the authority should do something about this. These people have outlived their usefulness,” she said.

    To cut corners during the examination, many candidates registered in states or centres far from their homes. The Nation observed that thousands of candidates moved from one state to the other, especially from the Southeast to the Southsouth, Southwest and Northern states to write the examination, not because of inadequate centres as claimed during the registration, but because of fraud. They were helped by teachers and principals who charged them huge sums to organise special centres where they could write the examination and be assured of high grades.

    According to Christian Ndu, a parent, in Nnewi, Anambra State, there was massive examination malpractice across board. Many who claimed to be principals of private schools and even government schools, and some cyber café operators, took their candidates outside Anambra to Cross River, Delta and Benue states to write the examination.

    He said: “This generation of students could not write examinations in their schools but in arranged schools outside their states with the connivance of school heads. They are destroying the future of our children. They would grow to be disasters in the various offices they would be working.

    “I witnessed a situation where a school took over 300 students on Friday aboard Rivers line Transport to schools in remote areas in Rivers and Cross River state and each student was forced to pay extra N3,500 for the exams excluding the normal JAMB fees.”

    While officials collected money for examination malpractice, at the Community High school, Obioma in Udi local government area of Enugu State, close to Anambra, the teachers charged candidates N500 each to make use of the schools chairs for the examination.

    Some of the candidates told The Nation that the teachers made it compulsory for over 400 candidates in the school and anybody that failed to pay was not given the question papers or OMR sheets. Candidates that did not have enough were forced to borrow from their friends.

    A female candidate told The Nation that the teachers must have made over N300,000 from the forced levy.

     

    Lateness

    In the course of monitoring the UTME, The Nation discovered some candidates deliberately came late to enable them import answers into the hall.

    In some centres in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State Capital, some came late, when the invigilators would not be strict in their supervision. Their alibi was mainly distance and transport hassles and in many cases they won the sympathy of the invigilators who allowed them to take the exams.

    In some centres in Agege, Lagos, The Nation observed that a few candidates arrived more than one hour after the examination started and were not allowed into the halls. Many of them broke down in tears. They went on their knees or prostrated for the supervisors to allow them in.

    Asked the reason for their lateness, some said they had to reprint their photo card (a one-page document detailing their names, registration number, centre name and number, institutions and programmes information, as well as their photographs) that morning because they learnt they needed a reference number which was only uploaded online recently.

    But a supervisor at the Dairy Farm Senior Secondary School, Agege centre, Mr Oladayo Ibrahim, said the reprint was unnecessary as the candidates only needed to provide their registration and centre numbers for verification.

    “I don’t know why you troubled yourself to reprint this slip when nobody will collect it from you. What we need for the verification is only your name and centre number. You people just talked to yourselves and decided to do what JAMB did not ask you to do,” he said to two candidates who came one hour late but were allowed into the examination halls.

    But one young man who came after them was not that lucky though he laid prostrate on the sandy ground begging invigilators to beg the supervisor on his behalf. He pleaded in Yoruba: “When I got to the gate, they said I should reprint my slip so I picked a bike immediately; that was why I came late.”

    At Sanngo Senior Secondary School, another centre nearby, three girls came 90 minutes late and wept as they waited for the supervisor, Mr Ahmed Ojodu, to attend to them. They claimed to have gone to another centre located in Pen Cinema, which they could not name, where their names did not turn up when they thumbprinted. They had no answer when asked why it took them more than one hour to get to Sanngo which is less than 10 minutes from Pen Cinema by foot.

    Reminding the girls that the exam started at 9a.m., he asked them to return home. “It is 10.30a.m. and you are just coming when some people are concluding their exam. Please don’t harass me. Go home and come and write next year,” he said.

    At Saint John of God Secondary School in Awka, Anambra State, more than 30 candidates were denied access to their centre because they were more than three hours late.

    The Nation gathered that security men denied them access to the venue despite their pleas. The reason, according to one of the teachers, was because they came to the centre at 1pm, when the examination started at 10a.m.

    “If we allow the students to enter the hall, they would not have done any thing tangible when the examination had almost ended, so the best option was to stop them from disturbing those who are serious,” the teacher said.

    An the affected candidate, who gave her name as Chinenye, told The Nation that the teachers were just wicked, adding that some of them arrived at the gate at 11.30am but “they failed to open the gate for us, claiming that we were late.”

    Some candidates in the north were late because of transportation problem. A candidate said she found it difficult getting a tricycle to the venue.

    “As you are aware, the state government banned the movement of commercial motorcycles and this greatly affected some of us that very day. For instance I paid through my nose to charter a tricycle to my centre; and apart from that, I arrived very late because it took me quite some time to get a tricycle that agreed to convey me to such a long distance.

    “Again, for the fact that the exam day was the last Saturday of the Month which is observed as sanitation day in Kano, transporters did not come out on time, unknown to them that the government cancelled the exercise,” Faith Emmanuel told The Nation.

     

    Cellphones

    Candidates were scanned by men of the NSCDC with metal body scanners to detect mobile phones or any metal object. However, some of them soon devised a means to avoid detection of the phones by removing the batteries.

    At the UNICAL centre, some candidates came with two mobile phones – one of which was submitted at the point of entry while the other was smuggled inside by removing its battery. A candidate said once the battery is removed, there is no way the scanner will detect the phone.

    After the exam, candidates from different centres in Lagos had a lot to say about how it went. Some spoke about how they were able to deceive the NSCDC officers. A female candidate said: “Upon all the security I still carry my own enter.” When asked by another how she did it, she said: “I carry am enter na.” Pointing to another female candidate, she added: “See this girl ehn, she carry plenty paper enter and they no catch her.”

    A female candidate who wrote at the Agidingbi Senior Secondary School, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos said in a phone conversation while on a bus after the examination that she was able to use the mathematics answers sent to her mobile phone.

    “I got Mathematics. That was the only one we used,” she said.

    In Ogun State, the NSCDC arrested 82 persons for examination malpractices.

    The suspects who were arrested at different centres were caught using phones, books, palm tops, scientific calculators, among others to answer questions.

    The Nation gathered that some of the suspects were texting question types to agents planted outside the centres and were getting responses from which they shaded the supposedly correct options on the answer sheet.

    The NSCDC Commandant for the state, Mr Aboluwoye Akinwande, said the suspects were arrested in 118 centres across Ogun Central, Ogun East and West. He said 30 candidates were arrested in Abeokuta; 17 in Lisabi; nine, Ewekoro; and one each at the Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, and the Molusi College centres.

    Akinwande said: “The first thing is that they have been made to fill relevant form. Investigation will be conducted,that will determine their culpability and then we can decide on trial as necessary information about them have been collected.”

     

  • Why scrap NECO, UTME?

    Why scrap NECO, UTME?

    SIR: There have been reports of plans by the Federal Government to scrap, merge or reverse some ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs). To go are 14-year-old National Examinations Council (NECO), the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) conducted by the 37-year-old Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB).

    The development is said to be sequel to the recommendations in the White Paper submitted to the Presidency by the Stephen Oronsaye-led Presidential Committee on the Rationalisation and Restructuring of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies..

    Quite understandable is the committee’s thought that it is time we reduced wastage caused by overlapping and duplicated functions of our ministries, departments and agencies. Oronsaye and his cohorts put the figure to be saved at about 853 billion naira between 2012 and 2015.

    The committee’s recommendation that NECO and UTME be scrapped is akin to cutting the head as an antidote for headache. At its arrival, NECO attracted praises from those who thought it would widen the choices candidates would make as to which examinations to sit in a nation long dominated by the regional West African Examinations Council (WAEC). NECO has since conducted the Senior School Certificate Examinations for which it has been issuing certificates to candidates. JAMB’s UTME had remained the only pathway to Nigerian universities until some varsities began to conduct post-UTME for admission seekers.

    Should NECO cease to be, WAEC will return as a monopoly; this will signify motion without movement. If we scrap UTME, universities will get full powers to conduct their entrance examinations with likely tendency of abuse of such freedom. The government should be wary of giving universities that have not been able to manage their finances efficiently the sole responsibility of handling admissions. Government should be mindful of the likelihood of students who do not have influential persons to pull strings for them lose out of what may become a ‘rat race’. If they do, they will end up not gaining admission to study in our universities. Then, we are back right where we are trying to depart from.

    In addition, applicants will have to criss-cross the nation in a bid to write examinations, thus being vulnerable to all manners of dangers ranging from kidnapping to road crashes. The current style that lets candidates write UTME where they please is a good one; the government should be wise enough to know.

    In all of this, the Federal Government has failed to admit that corruption – a vice it has done little or nothing to stamp out – is a crucial factor responsible for the poor management and non-performance of several of its moribund agencies. It illogically shifts the blame to some other factors such as ‘evil forces’. By planning to scrap NECO and UTME and sell such national heritage as the National Theatre in Lagos for the flimsy reason of poor management, government is not being sincere. Thus, it has successfully told the nation that effectively managing national institutions is only achievable by scrapping or selling them.

    The same government established new universities when it could barely fund existing ones. It has not chosen to scrap any. It is building a new Vice-Presidential residence when there is already a befitting one for the nation’s number two citizen.

    Rather than scrapping NECO and UTME, we believe government can explore other avenues to improving things. If truly the FG is not afraid of facing tough challenges, a good way of handling NECO, UTME, and other ‘going’ MDAs is to overhaul them.

     

    • Agboola Odesanya,

    Department of Mass Communication,

    University of Lagos, Akoka

     

  • UTME: Over one million will  be denied admission – Minister

    UTME: Over one million will be denied admission – Minister

    Only 520,000 of the 1.7 million that wrote the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) can gain admission, the Minister of Education, Professor Ruqayyatu Rufa’I, disclosed yesterday.

    Rufai expressed sadness over the fate of the remaining 1.2 million candidates whom she said cannot be accommodated.

    The Minister spoke after monitoring conduct of the UTME within schools in Abuja and Suleja, Niger State alongside the Registrar and Chief Executive of the Joint Admission and Matriculation (JAMB), Prof. Dibu Ojerinde.

    She called for Private Pubic Partnership (PPP) to resolve the crisis despite Federal Government’s effort in building more universities.

    The Minister also solicited for assistance of state governments in building more universities.

    A total of 1, 629, 102 candidates applied for the Paper-Pencil Test (PPT) while 15, 008 candidates applied for the Dual Based Test (DBT).

    91, 610 candidates applied for the Computer Based Test (CBT).

    The Minister called for acceptance of CBT because Nigeria cannot afford to lag behind in development.

    She said: “The education sector being part of the transformation agenda has to move forward. What we have just seen today is a simple transformation from Paper Pencil Test (PPT) to the dual examination.

    “If other countries are moving or developing, there is no way Nigeria cannot also move forward.

    “It doesn’t mean that if some students cannot sit for computer examination then all students in Nigeria cannot do it.

    She added: “There are some who are good in that and other should learn that way. We should be advanced like other countries.

    “We have started with the dual examination where we have taken the Paper Pencil Test (PPT) and the Computer Test.

    She assured thatresults will be out in the next 10 days.

    On carrying capacity, she said: “Our major concern is that a country like Nigeria having over 1.7 million that have sat for today’s examination and those that will sit for that of May to gain entrance into the university and the space that we have is 520 thousand for University, Polytechnic and Colleges of Education.

    “Assuming that we have 1.7 million that have sat for the examination and we have 520 thousand spaces, what are we going to do with the remaining 1.2 million candidates?

    “We cannot expand our carrying capacity simply to accommodate the remaining students without the expansion of our facilities.

    “Our facilities as of today are basically for the 520 thousand students and that we are calling for the improvement in access and we are calling for the Public Private Partnership (PPP).”

    A male candidate, Isaac Okebe, was arrested for impersonation and handed over to the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) for further interrogation.

    The candidate refused to answer questions from newsmen.

    Ojerinde said the rightful owner of the examination number was found to be in Enugu State after verification.

  • … latecomers barred in Lagos, 82 arrested in Ogun

    Except for few cases of lateness by candidates, the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) was hitch-free in some parts of Lagos.

    The examination started around 9.30am, some 30 minutes behind schedule due to delays in the biometric verification process in some centres visited.

    Some supervisors complained the process was slow. It however, did not delay the examination unduly.

    It was observed that a few candidates that arrived the centres more than one hour after the examination commenced were not allowed in.

    Many of them broke down in tears.

    They begged the supervisors to allow them in.

    Some of them said they were late because they had to reprint their photo card (a one-page document detailing their names, registration number, centre name and number, institutions and programmes information as well as their photographs) yesterday morning.

    The reference number, which they learnt they needed, was only uploaded only recently, according to them.

    The Supervisor for Dairy Farm Senior Secondary School, Agege, Mr Oladayo Ibrahim said the reprint was unnecessary.

    The candidates, he explained, only needed to provide their registration and centre numbers for verification.

    Two candidates who came one hour late were allowed into the examination halls but one young man who came after them was not that lucky.

    He begged invigilators to appeal to the supervisor on his behalf.

    His black fitted top and blue jeans were soiled in the process.

    At Sango Senior Secondary School, another centre nearby, three female candidates, who came one and half hours late wept profusely.

    They claimed to have gone to another centre located in Pen Cinema where their names did not turn up when they thumb printed.

    In Ogun, operative of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) arrested 82 candidates for examination malpractices.

    The candidates arrested from different centres across the state were caught using phones, books, palm tops, scientific calculators among others to answer test questions during the examination.

    The NSCD Commandant, Ogun State, Mr Aboluwoye Akinwande, told reporters the suspects were arrested from Ogun Central followed by Ogun East and West respectively.

    According to him, 30 persons were arrested at Abeokuta centre, Lisabi area 17, Ewekoro 9, while one arrest each was recorded for OOU centre and Molusi College senior and junior.

    Akinwande said: “The first thing is that they have been made to fill relevant form. Investigation will be conducted,that will determine their culpability and then we can decide on trial as necessary information about them have been collected.”

  • JAMB/NSCDC to deploy 10,000 men for UTME

    No fewer than 10,000 men and officers of the Nigeria Security and Defence Corps (NSCDC) would participate in the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) scheduled for April 27 across the nation.

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) which conducts the UTME has also announced May 18 as the date for the Computer Based Tests (CBT) version of the examination.

    A statement by JAMB Relations Officer Fabian Benjamin, noted that the management of the board headed by Prof ‘Dibu Ojerinde met with top management of the NSCDC represented by the Deputy Commandant-General (DCG) Operations, Mr Evans Ewerem on security plans for the examination vis-à-vis the role the agency would play.

    Issues bordering on effective monitoring and securing examination centres on the examination day and general conduct of the examination were discussed during the meeting held in Abuja.

    On his part Ojerinde said it has become a tradition for the Board to meet with the NSCDC prior to the UTME. He praised the agency for its achievements including exposing a fake NYSC orientation camp in Nasarawa and encouraged its men to keep up the good work.

    Also speaking, Ewerem assured the Board of the corps’ cooperation in ensuring the success of the 2013 UTME conduct. He added that all state commandants of the NSCDC would be invited to Abuja for briefing so men that would be deployed to centres are conversant with the new innovations for the examination.

    Ewerem urged JAMB to provide the agency with the names and addresses of the custodians and centres supervisors to enable them strategise on how to dispatch officials to various centres.