Tag: Is-haq Oloyede

  • JAMB sets new guidelines for UTME, other operations

    JAMB sets new guidelines for UTME, other operations

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) said it has come out with new guidelines to ensure seamless conduct of future operational processes, including the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    The board made this known in its Weekly Bulletin of the Office of the Registrar on Monday in Abuja.

    The board said the development was released in a communiqué issued at the end of a five-day brainstorming retreat for management staff held from Sept. 19 to Sept. 23 in Abuja.

    It added that the modifications included new ways to further strengthen the conduct of the UTME accreditation centres, registration of candidates, examination process, results management and general administration.

    “It became necessary for the board to modify its operations towards achieving far-reaching improvements on various issues emanating from the registration process and biometric challenges, among other operational procedures.

    “Hence, no new Computer-Based Test (CBT) centre would be accredited without meeting the new requirements.

    “To this end, new CBT centres must use laptop computer systems as clients, zero thin-dients or Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) would no longer be accepted.”

    The communiqué, JAMB added, further reiterated that no CBT centre must install any clients with less than 2 gigabyte (2GB) RAM.

    “It is now mandatory that Autobot system should be used for the accreditation of CBT centres; there should be three Autobot tests: Pre-accreditation during Mock – UTME and the dummy examination.”

    This, JAMB said, would be held a day before the UTME to confirm the readiness of the centre.

    The board noted that another key reason for the decision was to prevent IP address duplication and abuse.

    It also said that one of the resolutions at the retreat was the decision to widen the scope of accredited CBT centres.

    Each of the centres, the board said, would now have two additional registration outlets within their state of operation.

    Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, Registrar, JAMB was quoted in the statement to have warned that, cybercafes and tutorial centres had been prohibited from participating in any of the board’s exercises.

    Oloyede said that no CBT centre would be allowed to collaborate with the prohibited group, adding that any violation of the directive, whether in part or whole, would lead to the revocation of the licence of the erring CBT centre.

    The registrar was further quoted as saying that biometrics of all accredited CBT centre registration officers would be captured ahead of the exercise.

    This, he explained, was because the board as a proactive agency must move with the tide to stay ahead of the machinations of cheats and safeguard the integrity of the system.

    On registration and biometrics, the registrar said that, at the registration point, candidates with bad fingerprints would be scheduled for the examination as “Exemption Candidates”.

    “Their registration slips would be colour-coded and visually different from those for other candidates.

    “Such candidates would sit their examination in Abuja on the last date of the national examination calendar and their results would not be released until after being subjected to proper scrutiny.

    “Furthermore, as a requirement for printing registration slips, a candidate must use at least two fingers and any of the two fingers taken would be used for biometric verification prior to entering the examination hall on the day of the examination.”

    He further directed that the two verifiable fingers of all candidates must be consecutively indicated on the candidates’ registration and examination slips.

    The Registrar also said that to further consolidate its data collection efforts, the board would consider separating UTME registration from that of Direct Entry (DE) beginning from 2023.

    He added that to further condone illegal admissions and printing of indemnity forms, all candidates’ registrations, including UTME, DE and others, must be completed with fingerprint authentication.

    He said: “The same must be used for the printing of registration slips and indemnity forms while Institutions must declare and provide the list of candidates admitted behind closed doors before the affected candidates could apply for condonement of Undisclosed Illegal Institutional Admissions (CUIIA).”

  • March 26 deadline for registration of 2022 UTME and Direct Entry ll’ not be extended- JAMB

    March 26 deadline for registration of 2022 UTME and Direct Entry ll’ not be extended- JAMB

    Registrar of Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, has said the March 26 deadline for the registration of the 2022 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and Direct Entry (DE) would not be extended.

     

    Oloyede made the announcement during the monitoring of the registration at Global Distance Learning Computer-Based Centre yesterday in Abuja.

     

    According to him, the deadline would not be extended because the board was working on a “tight schedule”.

     

    Oloyede expressed displeasure at the turnout of candidates at the centre, saying only one candidate turned up for registration, instead of the usual 200 or more candidates per day.

     

    He said: “Today is March 21, 2022. We still have five days to go and you can see how vacant the CBT centres are. So, we are telling you so that nobody, on March 26, will have the guts to tell us to extend. Now, we have registered about 1.5 million to 1.6 million candidates. So, we are good to go.

     

    “You can see how vacant the registration centres are. As big and as efficient as this centre is, you have only one candidate. And look at your time. So, it shows clearly that candidates are not coming out, or we may have exhausted the number of candidates that are eligible for registration.

     

    “We are working on a very tight schedule because of the other examination bodies that have their slots. We cannot encroach into the slots of the National Examination Council (NECO), the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), and the National Business and Technical Examinations Board (NABTEB).

     

    “We have a very tight schedule. That is why we continue to say yes, we have the capacity to register 100,000 in a day.”

     

    Oloyede said the board was taking the campaign to the public to call attention to the fact that students were not registering.

     

    He also said the cost of buying diesel to run the CBT centres was becoming unbearable.

     

    JAMB Registrar noted that the board had opened discussion with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC), saying after due consultation, the problems would be addressed.

     

    Also, JAMB said it had suspended two financial institutions for vending the e-PINs above N4,700 in the ongoing registration for the UTME and DE. But the board did not name the financial institutions involved in the infraction.

     

    Oloyede, at a meeting with financial institutions (vendors) engaged in the vending of the 2022 UTME/DE e-PINs, announced the immediate suspension and blacklisting of the two vendors for allowing their agents to vend the e-PINs above the stipulated price.

     

    He said besides blacklisting the vendors, the board would also retrieve the details of the agents for prosecution.

     

    JAMB stated these in its weekly bulletin released by its Head of Media, Dr. Fabian Benjamin, yesterday in Abuja.

     

    The board said it would also report their illicit act to the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission, to ensure that extorted candidates get refunded.