Tag: Cut-Off Marks

  • Admissions: JAMB to announce cut-off marks July 18

    Admissions: JAMB to announce cut-off marks July 18

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has fixed Friday, July 18, 2024, for the Policy Meeting to deliberate on admissions cut-off marks into tertiary institutions.

    The meeting which is expected to set minimum cut-off marks for 2024/2025 admissions, would be chaired by the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman.

    This was disclosed in the Board’s weekly bulletin and made available to newsmen on Monday in Abuja.

    JAMB listed critical stakeholders expected at the meeting to include heads of regulatory agencies, such as the National University Commission (NUC) and National Board for Technical Education (NBTE).

    Others are National Council for Colleges of Education (NCCE), Heads of tertiary institutions in the country, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), among others.

    “During the exercise, the Registrar will present reports on the just-concluded Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and the ongoing Direct Entry (DE) applications.

    “The registrar will also analyse key performance indicators that could shape the policy directions of the government in the area of admission.

    “Also, the meeting would apprise stakeholders of the salient issues that cropped up in the course of the previous year’s admission exercise.

    “In addition, the policy meeting will look at the performance of candidates in the current year’s UTME in order to determine the year’s minimum admissible score,” it said.

    Recall that stakeholders had in the previous year agreed on the minimum admission requirement for admission into universities, polytechnics and colleges of education.

    The meeting would determine the year’s admission requirements while kick-starting the admission process for the current year.

    It would also discuss unresolved issues emanating from the previous academic year; and also appraise the compliance of stakeholders with extant advisories and suggest further amendments where necessary.

  • We don’t fix cut-off marks for UTME – JAMB

    We don’t fix cut-off marks for UTME – JAMB

    The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says no uniform minimum national Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) score for any of the tiers of tertiary institutions and neither does JAMB decide any such requirement for any institution.

    The board made this known in Abuja on Monday by the board Head, Public Affairs and Protocol, Dr Fabian Benjamin.

    Benjamin said the board did not and had never determined any uniform national UTME scores otherwise known as cut-off mark by the general public for any tertiary institution.

    “The lucid process of admission which the former President of the Academic Staff Union of University, Prof. Nasir Fagge, expounded and which was published in Premium Times is the exact process being followed in the conduct of admission exercise to tertiary institutions.

    “This process has even been improved upon with the elimination of human interference through its full automation with the introduction of the Central Admissions Processing System (CAPS).

    “For the purpose of emphasis, the board conducts the UTME and hands over the results to institutions for the conduct of admissions,” he said.

    He further said that before the admission exercise would commence, a policy meeting was usually held with all the Heads of the Institutions in attendance and chaired by the Minister of Education.

    According to him, at this meeting, the admission guidelines, which include recommendations from individual institutions and their preferred minimum admission scores, are presented and deliberated upon and not JAMB.

    “Prior to the meeting, for instance, more than 50 per cent of the universities had submitted in writing their minimum scores of 200 and above to the board for presentation to the meeting for the purpose of deliberation.

    “The same applied for the other tiers of tertiary institutions.

    “The implication of this process is that no institution will be able to admit any candidate with any score below what they had submitted as their minimum score,” he said.

    He, however, said there was nothing like a national minimum UTME score for all universities, polytechnics or colleges of education as it was only individual institutions which set their minimum entry scores based on their peculiarities.

    JAMB in September 2021 cancelled general cut-off marks for entrance into tertiary institutions, allowing the schools to set their minimum benchmarks.

    Benjamin also said that the board had no role whatsoever in the decision of the institutions to determine how or with what criteria they want to admit.

    “The role of the board is to ensure that the goalpost is not shifted in the middle of the game.

    “Furthermore, in most cases, the UTME score is not the sole determinant of placement of candidates into tertiary institutions.

    “As such, the undue attention to the so-called national minimum UTME score is a major conception of many ill-informed candidates who assumed that they have finally attained the benchmark having achieved the so-called minimum national score or “cut-off point’ for admission.

    “It is, therefore, a double jeopardy for many candidates who subscribed to the popular myth of a uniform UTME score (cut-off) for all universities, polytechnics or colleges of education in Nigeria,” it said.

    He said the board did not give uniform minimum UTME score (cut-off) for all universities, polytechnics or colleges of education.

    This, he added, was because each institution determined and summited to JAMB its minimum UTME score after analysing the UTME scores of its applicants against its available quota.

    He said decisions at the annual policy meeting on admission did not reduce minimum prescriptions emanating from the institutions except in few situations where these institutions had submitted minimum UTME scores that fell below what the policy meeting considered as the acceptable minimum score.

    “It should, therefore, be noted that UTME score is just one of the two or three scores that are generally cumulated to obtain the eventual aggregate score and ranking of the candidates by most institutions.

    “Other parameters are Post-UTME/Post-A/L qualifications screening test score; O/L grade score; and in some cases, physical test (such as applicable in the Nigerian Defence Academy/Police Academy).

    “Therefore, it is the score from all these segments that are added together to have an eventual ranking table or “cut-off” score,” it said.

  • YABATECH approves cut-off marks for 2021/2022 admission

    YABATECH approves cut-off marks for 2021/2022 admission

    The Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH) has approved the cut-off marks for the 2021/2022 Post-Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (Post-UTME) for its National Diploma programme.

    The Deputy Registrar of the college, Mr Joe Ejiofor, disclosed this in an interview on Friday in Lagos.

    Ejiofor said that the admission cut-off marks were released by the Admission Committee after its meeting on Thursday.

    He said that about 9,000 candidates took part in the Post-UTME held online in February.

    “The Admission Committee had a meeting and the outcome is the release of the cut-off marks for those who sat for the Post-UTME in February for ND programme in the college.

    According to him, the cut-off marks have been uploaded to the college portal.

    Ejiofor explained that the cut-off marks superseded the different cut-off marks which had been circulating online purported to be those of the college.

    He, therefore, advised candidates who sat for the Post-UTME to visit the college portal to check their scores.

    Ejiofor said that ND Science Laboratory Technology had the highest score of 62.62 followed by Computer Science with 60.87.

    He also listed some of the departments and their cut-off marks as; Electrical Electronics Engineering, 60.67, Public Administration 60.65 and Accountancy 60.62, among others.

    NAN

  • JUST IN: JAMB adopts new cut-off marks

    JUST IN: JAMB adopts new cut-off marks

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has adopted a minimum cut-off mark for 2021 admissions.

    JAMB Registrar Prof Is-haq Oloyede displayed the minimum cut-off marks adopted by tertiary institutions at the 2021 policy meeting on Tuesday in Abuja.

    According to the new arrangement, universities are not allowed to go below 120 while polytechnics and Colleges of Education, are not allowed to go below 100 for admission.

    This means that there will be no uniform cut-off marks for the 2021/2022 admissions.

    On the deadline for the closure of admissions, the meeting resolved to allow the education ministry to reach a decision as they could not agree on the December 31, deadline for all public institutions and January 31, 2022, for all private institutions.

    The next meeting is scheduled for October.

  • 2020/2021 Session: Lagos mulls ‘very high’ cut-off marks into model colleges, gives reasons

    2020/2021 Session: Lagos mulls ‘very high’ cut-off marks into model colleges, gives reasons

    The Lagos State Education Commissioner, Mrs. Folasade Adefisayo, has said the cut-off mark for the Entrance Examination into the JSS 1 classes in its 16 junior model colleges and upgraded secondary schools for the 2020/2021 academic session would be very high as the state would have to admit fewer pupils to maintain COVID-19 protocols.
    To this end she charged the candidates who took the Computer Based Test (CBT) option of the examination on Saturday to put their best into the examination.
    Mrs. Adefisayo, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Lagos State Ministry of Education, Mrs. Abosede Adelaja, at the flag-off of the entrance examination, also said the state would migrate fully to CBT by next year.
    Addressing the first batch of the 47 candidates scheduled for the CBT examination on Saturday, Mrs. Adefisayo said: “This year is peculiar so the cut-off mark is going to be very high because space for few. Try to put your best in this examination,” she said.
    Regarding migrating the Examination fully to CBT Mrs. Adefisayo said Lagos was the first state to conduct CBT at primary School level, starting from 2015 with 17 candidates. With the number growing to 210 this year, the Commissioner said it was evidence of the growing popularity of CBT.
    She challenged officials of the state-owned examining body, the Lagos State Examinations Board led by Mr. Olasupo Gbadegesin to begin working towards 100 per cent CBT by next year.
    She said: “The maiden edition of the CBT started in 2015 with 17 candidates, 54 candidates in 2016, 76 candidates in 2017, 78 candidates in 2018, 125 in 2019 while in 2020 I, a total of 210 candidates opted for Computer Based Testing.

    “This shows there is a steady progress in CBT registration and participation in Lagos State which is the first state in Nigeria to conduct CBT at that level of examination.
    “I want to challenge the Director and other officials to start working on the possibility that next year it will be CBT only. JAMB did it and we can too.”
    Mrs. Adefisayo said Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu had provided the board with more funds to procure generators and scanners towards meeting the goal.
    Director of the board, Mr. Gbadegesin said the CBT examination would end on Wednesday, September 30, 2020 – with two batches taking the examination daily.
    He said candidates who chose the Paper Pencil Test (PPT) option for the examination would write in 56 centres across the state’s six education districts on October 3, 2020.
    He said the centres had been increased from to ensure the candidates maintain physical and social distancing.
    “In the past we used to have 41 centres but for physical and social distancing this year we will have 56 centres,” he said.
    Speaking on efforts towards migrating to CBT next year, Gbadegesin said: “We have been visiting schools with facilities; we have also been to JKK. By the grace of God we will continue and come next year there would be great improvement,” he said.

  • 2017 UTME: No cut-off marks announced yet – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it has yet to release cut-off marks for placements into tertiary institutions for 2017 academic year, contrary to speculation by some Nigerians.

    The Head, Media and Information, JAMB, Dr Fabian Benjamin, made the clarification in a statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos on Tuesday.

    He said that the policy committee meeting responsible for the determination of cut-off marks had not met.

    According to him, it is in the best interest of candidates and other critical stakeholders to jettison cut-off marks for the various courses that are currently being paraded.

    `”We want to appeal to all candidates to jettison such speculations and engage themselves in more meaningful ventures that would add value to their future,’’ he said.

    Benjamin said results of the just concluded 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) had since been released, with a few others still being previewed.

    “”We want to appeal to Nigerians to understand that such candidates whose results are being previewed may not necessarily have participated in any malpractice.

    “But rather, centres where they sat for the examination had issues during the conduct of examination.

    “”These issues were reflected on the CCTV footage and this suggests why they must be carefully investigated before releasing such results,” he said.

    According to him, a very disturbing and unfortunate case is that of a school in Abia where cables were seen to have been connected secretly to a distant hall for hired mercenaries to write for candidates.

    “This is very unfortunate given the fact that the school is a missionary school and supposed to be a leading light against such vices.

    “But, rather, it was conniving, supporting and indeed championing the evil course of examination malpractice,’’ Benjamin said in the statement.

    He said such results would be treated in accordance with the provision of the law.

    According to him, a task force has been inaugurated by the Registrar of the board, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, to look into all such issues and has since concluded the review of the CCTV footages and other evidences presented.

    He said that the task force would forward its reports to the appropriate quarters for the scrutiny and onward release of all remaining results.

    “We urge candidates to note that no result will be withheld without a cogent reason as this explains why we are taking time to ensure that those who are innocent are exonerated.

    “Again, candidates are advised not to patronise any centre, office or shop for any service; please visit our offices in all the 36 states of the Federation and FCT for any complaint, enquiry or assistance.

    “This is also because our attention has also been drawn to an illegal centre being operated near our Ikoyi Office in Lagos with the aim of defrauding innocent candidates.

    “This centre collects all kinds of fees in cash for services that are even free. The general public should note that payments for any of our services are done via our TSA account with CBN and not cash.

    “Anybody or group of persons requesting for cash from you is not from us,’’ the statement read.

     

     

     

    NAN