Tag: WAEC

  • FirstBank partners WAEC on e-registration

    First Bank of Nigeria Limited has been designated as sales points for the e-registration forms of candidates for this year’s November/December West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

    With over 750 branches across the federation and 120 years of business operation, the lender said that it has been a consistent partner for educational and economic development.

    The e-registration materials which have been available since Monday May 5 until Friday July 4 and can be obtained over the counter at all FirstBank branches across the country, at a cost of N11,440. Also, a late registration window period between Monday July 7 through Friday, August 1, this year will be available but at an additional charge of N21, 400.00 as stipulated by WAEC. Candidates are expected to collect an e-Receipt containing the registration PIN, the registration kit and the result checker scratch card after the payment of the fees.

    According to FirstBank’s spokesperson, Mrs. Folake Ani-Mumuney, FirstBank has been a major player in youth empowerment and development and welcomes this partnership as yet another platform for promoting excellence in the development of education in our country. Ani-Mumuney said the Bank had since been providing adequate support across its social media platforms to ensure that prospective candidates for the WASSC (Private Candidates’) Examination receive up-to-date information on the sales of the e-registration materials.

    She said: ”Our network of over 750 branches nationwide offers prospective candidates the opportunity to acquire the e-registration materials at locations close to them.“

  • Expedition Maiduguri, by Dame Jonathan

    Expedition Maiduguri is not a movie; at least not yet. It’s not a stage play either and neither is it a musical nor a block-buster novel. It is neither of these but you may derive some fascination from the fact that it might just as well turn out to be any of these. Yes, Expedition, with no less a progenitor than the first woman of the land, has the fluid potency of stirring up an epic creative work in any genre of your picking; Hardball conjectures.

    Why, all the elements are so conjugated in this theme that all you need do is just to sit down and bend over his keyboard. Here are some teasers: Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State is currently in the news (worldwide) as the headquarters of the leading terrorist group in Africa –  the rampaging Boko Haram. This group’s influence, power and glory are on current global ascendancy. They raised the ante of their dastardly operations when mid-April they herded away over two hundred nubile school girls into the thick forests in the Northeast fringes where Nigeria shares borders with Cameroon and Chad. If you think such large number of little damsels held under the foul breath of forest thugs and miscreants for weeks is not enough material for an opus, fair enough.

    But what about combining the above scenario with the idea of the first wife raising a brigade of some well-fed, voluptuous women in the land on a rescue mission to the forests of Borno? This is what Hardball has given the above working title: Expedition Maiduguri. Of course you can carve more creative titles of your own can’t you?

    Apparently enraged by the ineffectuality of the military-cum-security combo combing the Sambisa forest, the First Lady over the weekend started a move of her own in this single-minded mission to free the girls. In a highly publicised (and give it to her, the most novel) initiative so far in this  search and rescue pastime, our daring Dame summoned some ‘big women’ to a roundtable and they summoned some government officials, including the head of the West African Examination Council (WAEC). This is the body that organised the exam the girls were supposedly writing at the time they were circumscribed. It was this WAEC man who displayed on the television the names and photos of the girls. He also explained how come the girls had to write their exams in a dangerous and highly volatile zone.

    Touched, or shall we say, moved by this fresh stream of information and of course inspired by the now viral protesting, our gallant Dame has threatened to take to the streets too and launch protests of her own. Not in the safe cities of Lagos, Abuja and London, but right in the war zones of Maiduguri. She harangued the Borno State governor and of course must have wrong-footed the security team by charging into it like a bull in china shop. In her blustery and indignation, she forgot that her husband was the number one, chief responsible officer and commander in chief of all the forces in the land.

    With a boast that she had never embarked on any venture that failed, would our Dame override every protocol and embark on this Expedition? You can bet that Hardball will be on top of it for you.

     

     

  • ‘Lawyer arrested in Port Harcourt’

    ‘Lawyer arrested in Port Harcourt’

    A self-styled lawyer, Jonathan Morgan Danagogo, has been arrested by the police in Rivers State for parading himself as an exam malpractice prosecutor and a worker of the West African Examination Council (WAEC).

    The suspect, 30, was arrested at Zion International High School, Port Harcourt, during the West African Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

    It was gathered that Danagogo appeared at the exam centre and presented himself as a WAEC official.

    The Deputy Registrar/Zonal Coordinator of WAEC in Port Harcourt, Patrick Areghan, said the suspect was “an impostor”, adding that WAEC had no such name on its payroll.

    Areghan said the suspect’s arrest was a welcome development, as it would serve as deterrent to others.

    He warned head teachers and proprietors to desist from act capable of jeopardising their jobs.

    “We have about 570 schools writing the exams now.

    “So, in the course of going round some schools, our staffs came across one man who has named himself Barrister Jonathan Morgan Danagogo as Prosecutor for Exam Malpractice.

    “But it would interest you to know that we don’t have such a position in WAEC.

    He is a fake. He is neither from us, nor representing the interest of the council.”

    The Divisional Police Officer of Rumukpakani Abdulkarin Nuhu, said Danagogo has ‘confessed’ to the crime.

    He said the suspect has no university education.

  • Ghana leads in 2013 WASSCE

    Ghana leads in 2013 WASSCE

    Ghanaian candidates have clinched the top three spots in the May/June 2013 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), despite Nigeria producing 80 per cent of the candidates for the examination.

    Out of 2,109,122 candidates that sat for the examination in Nigeria, Ghana, The Gambia and Liberia, 1,689,188 registered for it in Nigeria.

    The three Ghanaians, who excelled in the examination, miss Ivy Ama Mannoh (1st Prize), Miss Rhoda Adu-Boafo (2nd Prize) and Master Mwinmaarong Lucio Dery (third), were honoured with the International Excellence Award during the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Governing Council of the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) held in Freetown, Sierra Leone.

    A statement by Mr David Aduloju, Director, Public Affairs, WAEC Headquarters, Ghana, noted that Ivy also won the Augustus Bandele Oyediran Award for the Best Candidate in West Africa, while the Distinguished Friend of Council award was conferred on Mr. V. A. V. James, a Sierra Leonean and former Head of the Freetown Office of WAEC, in recognition of his contribution to the development of education.

    In his keynote address at the opening of the three-day meeting, Sierra Leone’s President, Dr. Ernest Bai Koroma, congratulated WAEC on the successful execution of its mandate for 62 years despite various challenges that seek to undermine its standards.

    He urged stakeholders in education to stand firm and sustain the fight against examination malpractice in order to uphold credibility, integrity and excellence in all examinations.

    President Koroma, who was represented by the Minister of Education, Science and Technology, Dr Minkailu Bah, explained that his country’s decision to adopt a 6-3-4-4 system of education was to create the required contact hours for adequate syllabus coverage and improved performance in the terminal examinations.

    The meeting also featured the 19th Council Annual Endowment fund Lectures entitled: Last to be hired, first to be fired: Addressing the challenges of teacher management in the provision of quality education in Sierra Leone which was delivered by the Acting Vice Chancellor, University of Sierra Leone, Prof Ekundayo Thompson.

    During the meeting, Council received reports on its examinations conducted in the preceding year in the member countries and ratified the decisions taken on its behalf by various committees and also considered action plans of the national offices for quality service delivery in the year ahead.

    The council also congratulated the Liberian Government on the successful conduct of the WASSCE for the first time in that country in May/June 2013; and discussed plans to host an international conference on Education, Gender and Development in October 2014 in Liberia, as well as a National Stakeholders’ Dialogue on Examination Malpractice in each of the five member countries.

    The meeting ended with the election of the leader of the Sierra Leone delegation, Dr. Alhaji Mohamed Kamara, as Vice-Chairman for one year. He succeeds Mr. Baboucarr Bouy of The Gambia.

     

  • Dashed dreams as  candidates miss WASSCE

    Dashed dreams as candidates miss WASSCE

    The May/June 2014 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) is on.  But, no fewer than 30 candidates who registered with Mentors Secondary School in Ota, Ogun State, cannot write the exams. Reason: the school’s proprietor allegedly absconded with their registration fees. KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE and MOJISOLA CLEMENT report.

    •Proprietor absconds with registration fees

    Agnes Kalu regrets the day her mother’s friend recommended that she enrols at Mentors Secondary School in Dalemo near Sango Ota in Ogun State as an external candidate for the May/June 2014 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

    But for that suggestion, she would have been sitting for the examination at Omole Senior Grammar School, Omole, where she is an SS3 pupil. At Omole, Agnes would not have paid a dime as the Lagos State Government sponsors SS3 pupils for the examination.

    To register at Mentors High School, her mother paid N25,000 as WASSCE fees, N19,000 for specimen, logistics, form and some other sums for sundry expenses, totalling N47,500. To their dismay, the school proprietor, Mr Matthew Praise Akintayo, absconded with the money pupils of the school and external candidates paid for the examination. To make matters worse, the school is neither recognised by the Ogun State Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, nor the West African Examinations Council (WAEC).

    The case has since been reported to the Police, which have charged it to the Ota Magistrate’s Court.

    At the court, Mrs Dora Akintayo, is standing trial on a 38-count charge of obtanining money from the candidates under false pretence and converting the money into personal use. She said to have committed the offence with her husband, who is now at large.

    Some of the other victims are Olalekan Praise, Precious Ogundele, Femi Phillip, Igunmu Olasile, Mukaila Lateef, Daniel Abigael, Babatunde Dare, Amosun Gbemi, Omenai Victoria, Azeez Ganiyat, Ayeni Tosin, Abubakar Zainab, Yusuf Sunday, Sorunke Funto, Debedero Ibrahim, Babatunde Grace, Bernard Junior, Taiwo Bukunmi, and Oludele Tolani.

    Agnes and others candidates are depressed that they have missed the examination. Some of them are hiding from their friends because of the shame of not writing the exams; others have resorted to lying over the fate.

    The truth is that they have lost the chance to write the examination. The option left for them is to register for the November/December examination as private candidates.

    Agnes said: “I came all the way from Lagos to enrol for my WAEC after hearing good testiomines about him (Akintayo) from his last students. He collected N25,000 for registration of the examination, N1,000 for the form, N500 for passport, and N2,000 for practicals. Later, I was told to pay N5,000 for logistics. I thought the school was registered. I did not know it was not registered.”

    Olalekan Praise, a pupil of Mentors, said she was disappointed that her preparations since last year have been in vain.

    “I paid N45,000 for my WASC but my proprietor did not register me for the WASC. I feel so sad and dejected because I started coaching lesson for this examination last October, and now the examination I prepared for, I was not allowed to write,” she said.

    Mr Bukola Oludele is angry that his daughter, Tolani, would have to lose one year.

    “I am not concerned about the money the man ran away with. I am very angry because of the time wasted; now my child is at home while her counterparts are writing the examination. She feels dejected and has been lying to her friends that she is also taking the examination,” he said.

    Another parent, Mrs Esther Ogundele, said her daughter, Precious, has been downcast since the incident.

    “Precious is worried that she would be in the same class with her younger sister who is already in SS2 next year. To her, it is like she is repeating a class again,” she said.

    Parents say this was not the story last year. Mr Lekan Ayeni, a parent, said for the 2013 WASSCE, in line with the policy of WAEC’s policy not to conduct examinations for schools with low candidature (less than 20), the school partnered with another in its neighbourhood, Funmec College, to register its candidates for the examination. Ayeni said they expected to use the same school this year but were surprised when the story changed.

    Ayeni said he suspected foul play when his daughter, Tosin, came home about three weeks to the examination with a spurious bill, yet no definite information about details of the examination centre.

    “Last year, the students of Mentors wrote at Funmec International School, which is also in Dalemo. This year, they even used the Funmec school uniform to take passport photographs for the examination. We were all expecting them to use Funmec. But my daughter had been complaining that apart from taking photographs, they did not thumbprint or do any other registration. Later, the proprietor said they were not using Funmec again. But each time we asked which school they would use, he would say it would be sorted out. This continued until three weeks to the exam.

    “The week before the examination, the proprietor, Akintayo, told the children to go home and get N8,000 for specimen, N5,000 for logistics, N5,000 for party, and N1,000 for mock examination, making N19,000 after we paid an initial N25,000. That was when I became suspicious,” he said.

    He was not the only parent that kicked against the additional levies. Disagreements about the new bill led to an emergency meeting on March 29 during which Akintayo, who is now at large, insisted that parents pay the bill or their children would not be allowed to write the examination.

    Mrs Ogundele said the urgency of the demand close to the start of the examination on April 1, made her to part with N15,000 so that her daughter, Precious, would not be adversely affected.

    “We were asked to pay N15,000 again for logistics which all the parents said we did not have. Akintayo said the money was for specimen, practical, their end-of-the-year party and all that. He said if we did not pay, our children would not be allowed to write the examination. He also said he disallowed his sister-in law from writing a particular subject in the WAEC examination of last year because his father-in-law did not complete the payment. He said it was 10 minutes to the end of the paper that he got an alert from his bank that the money had been paid; that was when he allowed his sister-in-law to write the examination. His wife also confirmed it. So, we all looked at ourselves and said if he could do that to a close knit family, then surely he would do more than that to us,” he said.

    However, she said the situation assumed an alarming dimension when Akintayo’s wife, Dora, who heads the nursery and primary arm, claimed that her husband had been kidnapped, a day to the start of the examination.

    “It was the day I went to pay the money that the wife called me in the night crying that her husband had been kidnapped, and the next day was the beginning of the examination. But she calmed my nerves and told me that she would take the children to their centres that they should put on black skirt. On the day of the examination, the woman who was crying hysterically on the phone the day before was gorgeously dressed and she also made up her face and I was wondering about her claims that her husband has been kidnapped,” she said.

    The worst was yet to come. On the D-day, the parents and candidates said Mrs Akintayo abandoned them at a petrol station at Ipaja.

    Agnes said: “On April 2, the day of the first paper, Yoruba, she informed us that we were registered to write the exam at Ajasa at Ayola College. We went past the school and I was thinking there was another one with the same name. After some minutes, she said we have gone past our centre, so we turned back again. By that time we were already panicking because it was 8.30am and the Yoruba paper should have started.

    “She left us under the sun and said she was going to look for the centre. Later, when we called her around 9am, she told us not to disturb her as she is still looking for the centre when the paper had started already. By 12pm, again, we called her and she said she was still looking for the centre. The teachers that followed us ran away. She later called one of the parents with us that she has found the centre. She called the place Ayola College, on getting to the place, we discovered Ayola was a street and not a school.”

    But for the parents’ decision to follow the candidates that morning, Mr Ayeni said, they would have been stranded. He said most of them did not have money since they had paid N5,000 for logistics.

    Mr Ayeni said: “Some parents decided to follow the candidates. I asked the proprietor’s wife for the details and after a lot of pressure, she told me the school was called Ayola High School at Ajasa Command in Alimosho Local Government. So, we went there; later, she said the school was in Ipaja, we followed her. She later abandoned the students at a petrol station and disappeared. I had to pay N1,800 and another N1,400 to transport them from Ipaja back to Sango. We first reported the case at Meiran Police Station, from where we were redirected to Sango Police Station, which has the jurisdiction over the area of the school.”

    During the hearing of the case last Friday, Magistrate S.T. Bello, refused the plea of Mrs Akintayo’s father,….. to strike out the case. He appealed for the case to be struck out because he had refunded N420,000 of the money collected by the Akintayos. Magistrate Bello ruled that not all the victims had been accounted for and duly compensated. She, however, granted Mrs Akintayo bail and adjourned the case to May 21.

    When The Nation checked the status of the Mentors High School with the Ogun State Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, the Public Relations Officer, Mr Kayode Oduyebo, said the school is not registered, thereby illegal. He also said the ministry will formally take action against the school.

    “The school is not approved. It will be shut and the proprietor invited to the ministry,” he said.

    Shedding more light on the registration process, the Deputy Director, Public Affairs, Mr Yusuf Ari, said schools are only recognised by WAEC as examination centres after recommendations by the state Ministry of Education, and inspection by the council. In essence, he said the school cannot be registered by WAEC if it is not registered by the Ministry of Education.

    “To get recognition from WAEC, a school has to get approval from the ministry to start operating. When its pupils are getting close to the examination classes, the ministry will write to WAEC and recommend that the school should be given recognition. But that recognition is not automatic. WAEC will inspect the schools and give full or partial recognition if they deserve it. Partial recognition means that the school cannot present candidates for examination in some subjects and we tell them what to do about it,” he said.

  • Bill increasing penalty for WAEC offences scales second reading

    Bill increasing penalty for WAEC offences scales second reading

    A bill, which revises upward the penalties for malpractices in the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) examinations, has passed second reading in the House of Representatives.

    It seeks to amend Section 19 of the principal law to include more penalties.

    The Executive Bill, which was brought before members by the Majority Leader, Mulikat Akande-Adeola (PDP), was referred to the House Committee on Education by Speaker Aminu Tambuwal, after it was passed yesterday.

    Presenting the bill before members, the Majority Leader said it was to act as a deterrent to examination malpractices.

    According to the lawmaker, because of the high rate of examination malpractices, the council thought it fit to amend Section 19 of the principal law by providing the offences constituting such malpractices to include:

    “Illegal possession of examination papers; having foreknowledge of the contents of an examination paper or making use of an examination paper or the contents of it/in any manner whatsoever without lawful authority.

    “The Bill also provides through the amendment of sections 20 and 21 of the principal Act, a stiffer penalty of N200.000 fine instead of N2.000 and provision for disqualification and prohibition of a candidate, notwithstanding criminal prosecution of such cheaters.”

    The Majority Leader said the passage of the bill “will further guarantee the standard of examination, which is at its abysmal level at this point in time. There will be examination standardisation in Nigeria through the effective supervision by WAEC, which hitherto had been eroded.”

    Akande-Adeola said Nigeria is a heavy contributor of fund to the council, with considerable number of representatives on it, but is yet to domesticate the 2003 convention.

    “Notwithstanding the fact that Nigeria has ratified the convention, it is the only country out of the five constituting the council membership, which has not domesticated the convention.”

  • Reps pass bill increasing penalty for WAEC offences

    A bill that revises upwards the penalties for malpractices in the West African Examinations Council WAEC examinations, has passed second reading in the House of Representatives.

    The bill seeks to amend the whole of Section 19 of the principal law to include more penalties.

    The Executive Bill which was brought before members by the Majority Leader, Hon. Mulikat Akande-Adeola (PDP) was referred to the House Committee on Education by the Speaker, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal after it was passed Thursday.

    While presenting the bill before members, the Majority Leader said the bill is to act as further deterrent to examination malpractices.

    According to the lawmaker, because of the high incidences of examination malpractices, the council has thought it fit to amend the whole of Section 19 of the principal law by providing the offences constituting such malpractices to include: “Illegal possession of examination papers; Having for-knowledge of the contents of an examination paper; or Making use of an examination paper or the contents of it/ in any manner whatsoever without lawful authority.

    “The Bill also provides through the amendment of Sections 20 and 21of the principal Act, a stiffer penalty of N200.000 fine instead of N2.000 and of course provision for disqualification and prohibition of a candidate, notwithstanding criminal prosecution of such cheaters.”

    According to the majority leader, the passage of the bill “will further guarantee the standard of examination which is at its abysmal level at this point in time. There will be examination standardization in Nigeria through the effective supervision by WAEC which hitherto had been eroded.”

    Akande – Adeola further said Nigeria is a heavy contributor of fund to the council with considerable number of representatives on it, but is yet to domesticate the 2003 convention.

    “Notwithstanding the fact that Nigeria has ratified the convention, Nigeria is the only country out of the five countries constituting the council membership that has not domesticated the convention.”

  • WAEC trains principals, teachers

    No fewer than 350 teachers and principals in Lagos were among the first batch of those being trained by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC).

    With this large figure, experts say the nation may soon witness a significant improvement in the West African Senior School Certificate Examinations (WASSCE).

    The three-day capacity building, which kicked off at the Events Centre, Ikeja on Monday last week, is aimed at enhancing the skills of secondary school teachers, who are expected to impact their students, Head, WAEC National Office, Mr Charles Eguridu, said.

    “The council has deemed it necessary to make this training programme available to all teachers in the federation, in response to the perceived dwindling educational standard in the country and as part of its corporate social responsibility. The council believes that a better informed and equipped teaching force would greatly improve the quality of teaching and learning which will have positive impact on the educational development of the nation,” Eguridu added.

    On the objective of the training, Eguridu said the examination body was worried each time it announced results and there was a drop in statistics.

    “So, we asked ourselves what the problem was and what could be done,” Eguridu further explained.

    He continued: “What do we do if the succeeding generation after us will come and not be able to carry the responsibility of moving the nation forward in terms of education? We did a research and discovered that there is a general decline in the quality of teaching and learning in schools; so we decided that teachers should be trained.”

    He reminded teachers of their role as change agents, admonishing them to be attentive. He warned that should they be lacking the right skills and competences to teach, the children will not be well equipped to write exams.

    The state Commissioner for Education Mrs Olayinka Oladunjoye, underscored career development, which the trainees can apply in situations, such as decision making, creative thinking and human resource management.

    She said the importance of the programme could not be over emphasised, noting that well- trained teachers are the catalysts for breeding future leaders who are academically sound and are role models with an enterprise spirit needed for a sustainable and competitive national economy.

    Mrs Oladunjoye, who represented Lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola, at the event, also said: “The training is necessary because it will make us have sound teachers who can be role.”

    The Chairman, Committee on Education, Science and Technology, Lagos State House Abdul-Wahab Alawiye-King hopes the collaboration would achieve its aims.

    Alawiye-King implored the teachers to continue to give back to the children.

    “We are a part of this programme. It is a new way of teaching and learning. Sharpening the skills of the teachers in order to bring positive results for the teachers at the end of the day,” he said.

     

  • Osun employs 4,330 teachers

    Osun employs 4,330 teachers

    •To spend N400m on WAEC fees

    The Osun State government has employed 4,330 teachers to fill vacancies in public schools.

    Chairman of the State Basic Education Board (SUBEB) Felix Awofisayo told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday that 2,330 teachers were recruited by SUBEB for elementary and middle schools and 2,000 for secondary schools by the Teachers Establishment and Pensions Office.

    Awofisayo said letters had been issued to the teachers and warned them against rejecting postings to rural areas.

    He said Governor Rauf Aregbesola had increased the grants to elementary and middle schools, adding: “Salaries and allowances, including Teachers Special Allowance, are promptly paid as directed by the governor. The state is partnering agencies of the Federal Government to improve education.

    “The state has paid its counterpart fund to the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) till 2012 and received its matching grant from UBEC till 2012.”

    Also yesterday, the Permanent Secretary, Lawrence Oyeniran, said the government budgeted N400 million for the West Africa Examinations Council (WAEC) fees of 32,075 pupils.

    He spoke in Osogbo while defending the ministry’s 2014 budget before the Committee on Finance and Appropriation.

    Oyeniran said N350 million was budgeted for bursary to final year students of higher institutions and N100 million for scholarships to Master’s students.

     

  • Osun begins bursary payment

    Osun begins bursary payment

    •Pays N275m WAEC fees

    The Osun State government has started paying the 2012/2013 bursary to indigenes in their final year in tertiary institutions.

    Commissioner for Information and Strategy Sunday Akere said N207 million had been paid into the accounts of various tertiary institutions, adding that the balance would be paid as soon as the remaining institutions submit the returns of last year’s bursary payment.

    Akere said due to the introduction of the automated payment, N56 million was returned to the government by the institutions last year as unclaimed sum.

    He said N17 million should have been paid to indigenes in law schools, but the payment was delayed because the schools’ managements have not returned the records of last year’s payment to the government.

    The commissioner said students of Osun State origin have been listed to benefit from the Agbami Medical and Engineering Professional Scholarship Scheme for the first time since its inception.

    According to him, 78 students in nine universities have been listed as potential beneficiaries of the scheme.

    Akere said the scheme was based on merit and not the quota system, adding that the students are expected to record an average 60 per cent of their Grade Point or Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) result and would undergo a competitive computer test.

    He said the administration has paid N275 million West African Examination Council (WAEC) fee for final year pupils in public secondary schools, adding: “We paid N11,450 per pupil as WAEC fee and N1,850 per pupil as practical fee.”