Tag: JAMB

  • Malpractice, indiscipline remain our major challenge- JAMB Registrar

    Malpractice, indiscipline remain our major challenge- JAMB Registrar

    Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board (JAMB) says malpractice and indiscipline are some of the board’s major challenges yet to be fully addressed.

    The Registrar made this known when members of the Senate Committee on Basic and Secondary Education visited the board’s headquarters in Bwari, Abuja on Monday.

    Oloyede said that the challenges, unfortunately, were mostly with regards to parents trying to bend the system by all means and get their wards or children into schools, irrespective of their performance.

    “Our challenge remain examination malpractice, especially with regards to parents who keep calling me to favour their wards or children wether they meet the requirements of the system or not.

    “There’s also indiscipline from the tertiary institutions who admit against the Federal Government’s policy guidelines as mandated by the Ministry of Education.

    “At the end of the day, after admitting outside these policies, they put pressure on students at the final moments towards graduation to come back to us for what they call regularisation.

    “We also have same challenge from some private sectors and dubious Computer Based Test (CBT) centres too and we are really putting efforts to curb this.”

    The Registrar said that the number of registered candidates for 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculations Examination (UTME) was not up to 1.4 million, a low figure, when compared to 2.2 million in 2020.

    He noted, however that the mandatory use of National Identity Number (NIN) helped the board to curb some of the malpractices usually encountered during the UTME registration.

    Oloyede said the malpractices included multiple and fraudulent registration by candidates with irregular credentials.

    He said that during the 2021 examination, the board’s challenge shifted to security operatives attached to some of the centres, whom he said allegedly smuggled fraudulent candidates into the examination hall.

    “Even after they dodge the verification process where of course the system would have identified them through their pictures, the cameras at the centres immediately picked them and we were able to apprehend them.

    “That was when some of them said either their parents gave the security operatives money to let them in or the candidates themselves bribed their way in.

    ” So whether we like it or not, NIN helped us curb some of these challenges at both the registration and examination exercise.”

    On JAMB’S budget performance for 2020, the Registrar noted that the board remitted N4.1 billion to the Federal Government confers, stating that staff welfare was paramount and they were adequately taken care of.

    He said that the board adopted some secondary schools in its host community, alongside other pet projects in some schools to enable it make the desired impact in Bwari communities.

    A monitoring committee, he added, had been set up by the board to ensure that the monies disbursed for the projects was properly used.

    Oloyedesaid that plans were underway to complete a 2,500 capacity centre with global standard that would give room to CBT or process of exercises like the NIN registration and other exercises from across board.

    Speaking on behalf of the committee, Sen. Akon Eyakenyi, Vice Chairman of the committee said that the members were on an oversight visit to check on the board’s appropriation as approved by the National Assembly.

    Eyakenyi said the committee was also at the board to assess the just concluded UTME and find out what was behind the performance with regards to results of the candidates.

    “The interaction with the registrar today revealed alot of truth that Nigerians do not know as it relates to conduct of the UTME.

    “I appreciate the registrar and his management team , indeed, he is a round peg in a round hole who knows what it takes to run an institution like this.

    “Most of the revelations we saw are not what is to be exposed to the public interms of conduct of the examination.

    ”JAMB stands as a bridge between the secondary and the tertiary and if it continues with what we have seen so far, definitely, the education sector in the nation will be improved.”

    Eyakenyi said that the committee had identified two major areas that mightbneed to go into the process of amending the Act establishing JAMB, which would be the committee’s support to the board.

    She said that the committee would also look into and advise the way forward on the issue of appropriate age for candidates to enroll for tertiary education.

    Eyakenyi, while commending the efforts of the board, also urged it to from time to time, go public in educating Nigerians on what was expected of them generally, especially parents of candidates.

  • BREAKING: Senate considers amending JAMB Act to limit age of writing UTME

    BREAKING: Senate considers amending JAMB Act to limit age of writing UTME

    The Senate Committee on Basic Education has said it will pursue the amendment of the law establishing the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, to enable it limit the age of candidates writing the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, UTME, to 16 years and above.

    Vice Chairman of the committee, Senator Akon Eyakenyi gave the indication during the committee’s oversight visit to JAMB.

    According to him, the committee had identified two major areas to be addressed in the proposed amendment for the exam body to function better.

    Eyakenyi said “Our own work is that of making laws, to legislate; we have identified two major areas that we need to go into the process of amending the act establishing JAMB. That’s the area of support we will give.

    “Other than that, we also intend to pass on what we have seen today to the appropriate MDAs, the Federal Ministry of Education to ensure the support that JAMB needs is given to them.”

    Details shortly…

     

  • Court admits ex-JAMB Registrar, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde to N200m bail

    Court admits ex-JAMB Registrar, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde to N200m bail

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Thursday, admitted Prof. Dibu Ojerinde, former Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), to a bail in the sum of N200 million with two sureties.

    Justice Obiora Egwuatu, who granted Ojerinde’s prayer after taking the arguments of counsel to the parties in the matter, said one of the sureties must be a professor in a federal university.

    He said the other surety must own a landed property in Abuja worth the bail sum.

    The judge, who ruled that the sureties must produce the evidence of three years tax payment, ordered that the certified true copy of the travel documents of the defendant which were in the custody of a court in Minna, Niger, should be obtained.

    He adjourned the matter until July 22 and 23 for hearing.

    The ICPC in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/97/21, said that the former chief executive officer allegedly committed multiple frauds, while heading JAMB and the National Examination Council (NECO).

    The court had, on July 6, rejected the defendant’s bail plea after taking his plea on the 18-count charge preferred against him by the anti-corruption commission.

    The rejection followed the argument of counsel to the prosecution, Ebenezer Shogunle, that his application for a “temporary bail” was unknown to the law.

  • Alleged N5.2b fraud: Court remands ex-JAMB Registrar, Ojerinde

    Alleged N5.2b fraud: Court remands ex-JAMB Registrar, Ojerinde

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered that a former Registrar of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Professor Adedibu Ojerinde be remanded in prison custody.

    Justice Obiora Egwuatu, in a ruling on Tuesday, ordered that Ojerinde be kept in a correctional facility pending the hearing of his bail application, scheduled for July 8.

    Justice Egwuatu gave the ruling after Ojerinde, dressed in white native attire, was arraigned on an 18-count charge, marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/97/2021, in which he was accused, among others, of complicity in the diversion of public funds estimated at over N5.2billion.

    The prosecuting agency – the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission(ICPC) – said Ojerinde committed the alleged offences, contained in the charge, from 2003 when he served as the Registrar of the National Examination Council (NECO) till 2021.

    Ojerinde pleaded not guilty when the charge was read to him.

    His lawyer, Peter Olorunnishola (SAN), subsequently informed the court about a bail application he filed and served on the prosecution.

    Olorunnishola however sought time to react to the counter-affidavit filed by lawyer to the prosecution, Ebenezer Shogunle, which the defence lawyer said was served on him late.

    Shogunle, who did not object to Olorunnishola’s request for time, opposed the defence lawyer’s application that his client be allowed to remain on the administrative bail, earlier granted him by the ICPC, pending the hearing of his bail application.

  • UTME: We didn’t reschedule another exam for candidates – JAMB

    UTME: We didn’t reschedule another exam for candidates – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it has not fix another examination for any category of candidates on July 3 as being peddled in some quarters.

    The board’s Head of Media and Protocol, Dr Fabian Benjamin made this known on Wednesday in Lagos, saying the report “is not correct’’.

    Benjamin noted that almost all results of candidates, who sat for the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), have since been released.

    According to him, JAMB has at no point thereafter, announced any form of another examination for any category of candidates.

    “No examination has been fixed for any category of candidates.

    “The attention of the board was drawn to a twitter message credited to it that it had fixed another examination for candidates who scored lower than 170 in its examination and should come for a re-sit on July 3,’’ he said.

  • ‘Wrong syllabus’ not responsible for mass failure in 2021 UTME – JAMB

    ‘Wrong syllabus’ not responsible for mass failure in 2021 UTME – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has denied that the use of ‘wrong syllabus’ for the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) was responsible for the poor results so far released by the board.

    The board, in a statement issued by its Head, Public Affairs and Protocol, Dr Fabian Benjamin, noted that the rumour of mass failure in the examination was “a fluke and a campaign by those whose source of illicit income has been further blocked.”

    “The rumour of mass failure is a fluke and a campaign by those whose source of illicit income has been further blocked. It is our belief that based on facts on the ground, every right-thinking Nigerian would question the 6,944,368 figure on which the 14% “pass” is based,” the board said in the statement.

    Some candidates who wrote the UTME examination had alleged that they were given old syllabus of 2015-2020 for Literature – in English text as against the one of 2020 – 2025.

    The candidates said the mix-up in the syllabus was responsible for their failure in the examination.

    But JAMB in the statement argued that all UTME questions are based on texts prescribed for the UTME in its syllabus.

    “To ensure that its syllabus is accessible to all candidates sitting its examination, the Board has made the material available on three platforms. The syllabus was issued to candidates through:

    i. The Board’s Integrated Brochure and Syllabus System (IBASS)
    ii. The CD which is given to candidates after completion of registration
    iii. The link https://www.ibass.jamb.gov.ng. as provided with the candidates’ profile code.
    It is not automatic that the NECO/WAEC syllabus should transform into JAMB’s otherwise there would not have been a need for a separate syllabus for the UTME.

    “The UTME is not school-based and not an achievement test but a selection or ranking test which ordinarily does not require a syllabus and does not have room for fail or pass as in achievement tests,” JAMB said.

    It added that this year’s performance was not significantly different from those of previous years.

    “For instance, in the 2021 UTME, 1, 415,501 registered for both UTME/DE. Out of this figure, 1,340,003 candidates registered for UTME and 75, 498 registered for DE.

    “The total number of candidates who took the UTME are 1, 300,722 with 78 389 candidates absent.

    “You can then imagine the spuriousness of the figure of 6, 944,368 on which 14% is based. The truth is that this year’s performance is not significantly different from those of previous years,” the statement added.

  • How to check 2021 UTME result

    How to check 2021 UTME result

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) recently announced the release of 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) results.

    Given glitches, the examination board suspended results checking by Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) code using 55019.

    Here we bring you alternative means to check 2021 UTME results.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Dr. Fabian Benjamin, Head of Media, JAMB announced the alternative following the glitches experienced with the USSD code.

    JAMB directed all candidates to visit JAMB portal to check for their 2021 UTME result.

    Each candidate is to follow these simple steps.

    • Visit https://www.jamb.gov.ng
    • On the menu bar, click on efacility
    • On the page that shows up, click on UTME 2021 Main Results Notification Slip
    • Enter your registration number and click the button Check My Result

    Candidates can check their results from anywhere there is internet access.

  • 2021 UTME results: JAMB suspends USSD code, issues new directives

    2021 UTME results: JAMB suspends USSD code, issues new directives

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has directed candidates who sat for the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME), to check their results through its portal as the USSD code 55019 has some challenges.

    Dr Fabian Benjamin, Head, Protocol and Public Affairs of the board, stated this in a statement made available to newsmen in Abuja on Saturday.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the board had on June 25, directed candidates to check their results by sending UTMERESULT to 55019 through the GSM number used to obtain profile code.

    Benjamin, however, said that USSD method had been suspended because of the challenges.

    According to him, “Candidates can check their results from anywhere there is internet access, checking by USSD code 55019 is suspended.

    “It has come to the attention of the Board that the result checking on USSD code 55019 is saddled with some challenges.

    “Consequently, the Board hereby directs all candidates to visit JAMB portal to check for their 2021 UTME result.

    “Each candidate is to follow this simple steps: Visit https://www.jamb.gov.ng, on the menu bar, click on efacility, on the page that shows up, click on UTME 2021 Main Results Notification Slip.

    “Enter your registration number and click the button Check My Result,” he said.

  • 2021 UTME: JAMB releases results

    2021 UTME: JAMB releases results

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has released the results of candidates who sat in more than 720 CBT centres for the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination conducted between June 19 and June 22.

    Dr Fabian Benjamin, JAMB Spokesperson made this known in a statement made available to newsmen in Abuja on Friday.

    Benjamin advised each concerned candidate to check his/her result by sending UTMERESULT to 55019 through the GSM number used by each candidate to obtain profile code and UTME registration with the board.

    He said that their results would be relayed to them immediately after following the instructions given to check results.

    He added that the results for subsequent days would however be released daily.

    “ The Board notes with satisfaction that the utilisation of NIN (National Identification Number) has helped in curbing examination malpractices as the 2021 UTME has recorded the least incidence of irregularities since the inception of the CBT examinations.

    “ Nevertheless, the Board would still review all the CCTV footages and other technical gadgets for detection of possible examination misconducts.

    “Extremely comparatively few results are being withheld for further investigation,” he said.

    He, therefore, said that the Board would not hesitate to withdraw the results of any candidate subsequently found to have committed any form of examination misconduct.

  • 2021 UTME: NIN helps in checking multiple malpractices, restores credibility – JAMB

    2021 UTME: NIN helps in checking multiple malpractices, restores credibility – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has lauded the introduction of the National Identification Number (NIN) in its examination exercise.

    This, the board said, it helped in eliminating multiple registrations, impersonation and other malpractices associated with examinations.

    The JAMB Spokesperon, Dr Fabian Benjamin, disclosed this in a statement in Abuja on Wednesday.

    He said that the partnership with the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), which mandated the use of NIN in the registration process, made it virtually impossible for hired examination takers to register multiple times.

    He, however, refuted a media report that claimed that the introduction of NIN affected the revenue of JAMB and caused it to drop to N5.8 billion.

    Benjamin maintained that JAMB was neither a revenue generation agency nor aspired to be one.

    “JAMB is not a revenue generation entity and, as such, is not interested in the ever-ballooning number of candidates.

    “Rather, JAMB is concerned with how to address loopholes being used by fraudsters to distort national data in a bid to compromise public examinations.

    “As far as the board is concerned, having a realistic number of candidates sitting for its examination is a major achievement which only the partnership with NIMC has made possible.

    “It is our resolve not to ever compromise on the integrity of its processes on account of generating fat operating surpluses,”he said.

    Benjamin noted that NIN was a good initiative because it had helped to clean the system and restored its credibility.

    According to him, it is an error of fact to denigrate the wonderful contribution of NIN to UTME registration process by insinuating that it had deleterious effect on the financial base of the board.

    “On the contrary, JAMB greatly appreciates the partnership with NIMC which has led to the inadvertent benefit of revealing the actual number of candidates registered annually.

    “Consequently, it is the board’s firm belief that the introduction of NIN has helped in addressing one of the fundamental channels of perpetrating examination malpractice by way of multiple applications, among others.”