Tag: JAMB

  • How to pass UTME easily – JAMB Registrar

    How to pass UTME easily – JAMB Registrar

    Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), has reiterated that only studying hard allowed candidates to pass examinations and not cheating.

    The registrar gave the advice while speaking with newsmen during an assessment of the 2025 mock Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) on Thursday, at the Board Headquarters in Bwari, Abuja.

    Oloyede said that no fewer than 211, 000 candidates sat for the mock examination nationwide on Thursday and the board was working relentlessly to ensure the process prepared the system for the main examination.

    He said the exercise, which gave candidates an opportunity to test their ability to sit for the examination proper, also gave the board the time to test and try new methods that could address infraction.

    ”We are trying new things, new experiments that can reveal other things and also to test the system, which is the purpose of the mock, so that we take lessons from the mock to the examination proper.

    ”One thing is essential, we need to let the students know that the best way to pass examination, UTME in particular, is  to study; any other way will not work, people are just making money out of them.

    ”We are aware of some rogue websites asking people to pay up to N30,000 for assistance and that they can help, it cannot work and that is cheating,” he said.

    “We have also opened our own rogue websites and as at this morning, about 180 students have paid into the account for assistance.

    ”This attempt to cheat is already an infraction and those who paid into those accounts, looking for questions, would be firmly dealt with,” he said.

    He also recalled urging candidates not to register for the examination by proxy or share their registration number with anybody.

    This, he added, was to avoid falling victim to the unscrupulous mischief makers, as well as all types of malpractice and fraudulent activities.

    ”We are abreast of all these methods used to cut corners and we are doing everything possible to handle it.

    ”We will cancel the results of all those we find wanting, both for UTME and the ones you give your registration number to anybody and they have submitted it to a rogue station, you are culpable,” Oloyede said.

    The registrar also noted that so far, the exercise had been smooth and results of candidates who sat for the mock examination would be ready and released on Friday.

    The 2025 UTME is scheduled to begin April 25.

  • 2025 Direct Entry not closing on Monday, JAMB clarifies

    2025 Direct Entry not closing on Monday, JAMB clarifies

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board(JAMB) would like to clarify that the 2025 Direct Entry (DE) Registration will not be closing on Monday, April 7, 2025, as being speculated.

    The registration process, which began on Wednesday, March 12, 2025, will continue until a closing date is announced. Therefore, candidates who wish to register can do so at any of the Board’s designated Professional Registration Centres (PRCs) on Monday and continuing until the official closing date is revealed.

    This liberalization of the registration period allows the Board to complete ongoing investigations into candidates who have been arrested or are under scrutiny for attempting to use fraudulent A-Level results for registration.

    We strongly advise candidates with questionable credentials to refrain from participating in the registration process, as the Board has implemented measures to identify individuals with such credentials, both now and in the future.

    If you have previously used fraudulent results, we urge you to withdraw voluntarily, as the Board is expanding its investigations to include students who have already been admitted.

  • JAMB advises candidates to print slip for mock exam

    JAMB advises candidates to print slip for mock exam

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has advised candidates sitting for the 2025 optional UTME-mock examinations to print their notification slip to enable them participate in the examination.

    The Public Communication Advisor of JAMB, Dr Fabian Benjamin, disclosed this in a statement made available to newsmen in Abuja on Thursday.

    Benjamin said the notification slip includes crucial information such as the examination date, venue (centre), time, and other essential details needed to successfully sit for the examination.

    “Candidates are encouraged to print their notification slip starting from Thursday, April 3, 2025.

    “This will allow ample time to make necessary logistical arrangements to access their assigned centres within the chosen examination towns,” he said.

    Explaining how to print the slip, he urged candidates to visit www.jamb.gov.ng, click on “2025 Mock Slip Printing”, enter the registration number and click on “Print Examination Slip.”

    Benjamin urged candidates to print their slips and familiarise themselves with their examination centres at least one or two days prior to the examination date.

    According to him, this preparation will ensure a smooth experience on the day of the examination.

    NAN reports that 2025 UTME-Mock examination will hold on Thursday, April 10 while the main UTME examination will commence from Friday, April 25, 2025.

  • UTME: JAMB reschedules 2025 mock

    UTME: JAMB reschedules 2025 mock

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has rescheduled the date for the 2025 Mock Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) from April 5 to April 10.

    This is contained in a weekly bulletin of the board made available to newsmen in Abuja on Monday.

    According to the bulletin, the adjustment aimed to ensure all necessary preparations were completed, incorporating a variety of innovations and enhancements designed to make the examination one of the best in history.

    It said the rescheduling was also to accommodate the increased number of examination centres for the exercise.

    “Originally set for Saturday, April 5, 2025, the Mock UTME will now take place on Thursday, April 10, 2025 while the main UTME would start from April 25, 2025.

    “In line with global best practices and recent research on examination methodologies in our region, the board recognises the need for innovative measures to optimise the mock exercise’s intended purpose.

    “Candidates are advised to stay tuned for the announcement regarding the printing of their Mock Notification Slip, which will provide details about the location of their examination centre,” it said.

  • JAMB begins sales of Direct Entry forms

    JAMB begins sales of Direct Entry forms

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has officially announced the commencement of sales for the 2025 Direct Entry (DE) application documents, set to begin on Wednesday, March 12, 2025.

    The board in statement released by Fabian Benjamin, JAMB’s Public Communications Advisor, the registration process is crucial for individuals who possess degrees, diplomas, or A-level certificates and wish to advance their education at their preferred universities.

    “The initiation of the DE sales follows the successful conclusion of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) application sales, which ended on Saturday, March 8, 2025.

    “During this period, JAMB recorded a total of 2,030,627 registrations for the 2025 UTME, along with 200,115 for the Mock-UTME and 630 applications for the trial mock.

    “JAMB has emphasized the importance of adhering to all entry requirements, warning that serious penalties will be imposed on applications containing false declarations.

    “A special committee will verify all submitted Advanced A’Level Qualifications, and any fraudulent results will lead to prosecution. Additionally, institutions are encouraged to directly verify certificates before considering admissions.

    “Registration can only be done at JAMB Professional Registration Centres (PRC),” the statement reads.

  • JAMB sets date to begin sales of direct entry forms

    JAMB sets date to begin sales of direct entry forms

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has said it would begin sales of Direct Entry forms to candidates seeking direct entry admissions into higher institutions on Wednesday, March 12.

    This is contained in a statement made available to newsmen in Abuja on Monday by the board’s Communications Advisor, Dr Fabian Benjamin, in Abuja on Monday.

    Benjamin said the registration process was crucial for individuals who possess degrees, diplomas, or A-level certificates and wish to advance their education at their preferred universities.

    According to him, the initiation of the DE sales follows the successful conclusion of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) application sales, which ended on Saturday, March 8, 2025.

    “During this period, JAMB recorded a total of 2,030,627 registrations for the 2025 UTME, along with 200,115 for the Mock-UTME and 630 applications for the trial mock,” he said.

    Benjamin explained that JAMB had emphasised the importance of adhering to all entry requirements, warning that serious penalties would be imposed on applications containing false declarations.

    “A special committee will verify all submitted Advanced A Level Qualifications, and any fraudulent results will lead to prosecution.

    “Additionally, institutions are encouraged to directly verify certificates before considering admissions,” he said.

    He added that registration for DE could only be done at JAMB Professional Registration Centres(PRC).

  • No extension of UTME registration after March 8 – JAMB

    No extension of UTME registration after March 8 – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it will not extend registration for the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) after March 8.

    This is contained in statement to newsmen in Abuja on Tuesday by the Boards Spokesperson, Dr Fabian Benjamin.

    Benjamin said the registration period which began on Feb. 3, would end on March 8, 2025.

    According to him, this deadline has been clearly communicated in all advertisements and the official calendar for the 2025 UTME exercise.

    “We wish to inform all prospective candidates that there will be no extension of the registration period.

    “This notice is particularly important given the recent decline in the number of candidates registering for the examination.

    ” We urge all individuals who wish to participate to register promptly and avoid waiting until the last minute,” he said.

    He added that currently, over 1.5 million candidates had successfully registered, which aligned closely with the Board’s projections for the 2025 examination cycle.

    “It is essential to note that the Board’s calendar is fixed, with numerous subsequent programmes scheduled after registration, including examinations, results management, and admissions exercise.

    “These timelines are coordinated with other agencies whose operations rely on the completion of our processes. Therefore, extending the registration period would disrupt not only the Board’s plans but also those of our partners,” he explained.

    Benjamin encouraged candidates to complete their registration as soon as possible, while also adhering to the established timeline for the 2025 UTME.

  • Teachers vs students – By Francis Ewherido

    Teachers vs students – By Francis Ewherido

    I wanted to write on this topic more than a year ago, but each time, there was twist. I gave up because I did not know who to speak for or against. At some point, it was a parent who flogged a teacher to death for daring to discipline his delinquent son. At another time, a teacher was arrested for beating a student to coma. There was also the case of a teacher who kept hitting the head of a three-year-old child times due his inability to write correctly. In my time, three year olds had no business in school. What do they want to learn that cannot wait? These days, children are shipped to crèches or day care centres as early as three months because daddy and mummy have to go to work. In my opinion, a child who can’t talk is safer in a crèche or school than hiring a nanny or “house girl” to take care of her at home.

    The most annoying thing of this three-year-old child was that the mother works in the school as a cleaner. It was partly a case of a frustrated a teacher of average means oppressing a poor cleaner because she “can’t do anything.” I have always said it that some people are oppressors. It’s just that they don’t have the leverage. If they have any opportunity and the means, they will abuse or oppress others. These days, when I see ordinary Nigerians abuse people in authority, I laugh. They will do worse if they have the opportunity.

    Anyway, what made me to revisit this topic is the trending video from the Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka. From what I have seen so far, the young lady was doing a Tiktok video and a lecturer who was passing tapped her on the shoulder. From there, all hell was let loose. This is my take. If I were the lecturer, I would simply have said, “excuse me.” I would not have touched her. May be the lecturer was pissed off with what she was doing. If I were a lecturer, I will also be pissed off, but this generation is a different breed. You tread carefully with them. Even “excuse me” might sometimes not be enough.

    In my time, there was no social media, but if you were caught by a lecturer doing something during school hours which had nothing to do with your studies, you apologised immediately or/and scampered away, praying it does not count against you ultimately. The Gen Z are different. Okay, let me not generalise because some students dare not do this. All things being equal, they know that they are on their own if any action is taken against them.  My father never went to school to beg on my behalf for any infractions. I have maintained that policy for my children. But where the school was at fault, my wife especially fought ferociously for our children.

    Some Gen Z are different. They were brought up with zero manners. I hear stories of secondary school students who insult their teachers. Some even gang up and beat up teachers. I highest that took place in my secondary school days was a junior student who ambushed a senior student and gave him the beating of his life in Warri during holiday. When we resumed for the new term, one front tooth of the senior student was missing, the outcome of the beating. The matter never came up either because it happened during holiday, or he was too ashamed to report to the school authority that a junior student beat him up during holiday, or he was scared of further reprisals.

    In the case of this girl, I was shocked but not surprised. This is very typical of Gen Z who were badly brought up. I saw the video starting from when the lecturer tapped her on the shoulder. Her countenance was like “what effrontery? How dare you?” I was not surprised when she went after the lecturer and grabbed his top. In my time, how dare you? Where will you even see a lecturer to exchange words with. We tip toed in the front of a lecturer’s office and walked passed a professor’s office with trepidation. As simple as he was, the only time I went to Prof Humphrey Nwosu’s (former National Electoral Commission chairman) office when he was at UNN was at his instance to submit an assignment. I can’t recall going to Prof Okwudili Nnoli’s office. Prof Sylvanus Ekwelie was my head of department in mass communication. He was a demigod. We went to his house once to pay a condolence visit. It was tough for us to feel at home. It was in his house I drank a cocktail of whiskey and Fanta for the first time. Lecturers were revered.

    By the 90s when my younger ones were in the university, I started hearing of students “sorting” out lecturers to pass exams. Somewhere else, I heard about a student who graduated but never wrote degree exams. The fault is not in the Gen Z alone, but lecturers who have cheapened themselves by collecting bribes and demanding sex for marks. These two maladies, more than other factors, brought this “see finish” of university lecturers. At least one professor is serving a jail term for sexual harassment. A couple of others are still in court. Some lecturers have been dismissed. As for the Unizik case, the matter should be thoroughly investigated and justice should be served.

    JAMB Scores another Goal

    The Registrar of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, is a man I have tremendous respect for. I do not know him personally, but in a society where the word “integrity” is used flippantly, he has proven to be a man of integrity. When he became the registrar of JAMB, the body which government used to subsidise all of a sudden started generating more money than it was spending. Recently, his integrity was called to question during budget defence in the House of Representatives. Prof gave very satisfactory explanation. I also recall that sometime ago, he was uncomfortable with the amount of collection being declared at the Abuja Mosque. He got involved and it became obvious that some itchy fingers were pilfering the mosque’s commonwealth.

    But I am talking about Prof for a different reason today. You will recall that the former Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir Mamman, announced that from 2025, the entry age for university students will be 18. There was an uproar. I was one of those who was seriously against it. Later the government backtracked and left it at 16 years. But there was still a lacuna which I pointed out then: “In the US and the UK, they waive the age requirements for ‘geniuses’ and specially gifted children.” That is exactly what JAMB has addressed:

    “JAMB has stated that candidates below the age of 16 can gain admission into universities on the condition they score at least 320 out of 400 in the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME). JAMB Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, clarified that while 16 remains the general admission requirement, exceptional candidates who demonstrate outstanding academic abilities will be considered under strict conditions. These students must excel in multiple assessments, including the UTME, West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE), Post-UTME, and General Certificate Examination (GCE O/Level).”

    Case closed. My only admonition is that JAMB and other exam bodies should watch out for dubious parents who want to beat the system by making their wards meet these requirements through the back door. I don’t know what their problem is.

  • 11,000 underage registered to write 2025 UTME – JAMB

    11,000 underage registered to write 2025 UTME – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has disclosed that over 700,000 candidates have so far registered to participate in its upcoming Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    JAMB Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, revealed this on Friday while speaking with journalists after inspecting some registered Computer-Based Test (CBT) centres in Lagos.

    Oloyede stated that over 700,000 candidates had been registered, including more than 11,000 underage applicants.

    “As of today, we have registered 779,714 candidates. This is the second week and the tenth day of registration,” he said.

    He added, “At this moment, the figure stands at 780,202, with 11,512 underage applicants. Today alone, 443 underage candidates were registered.”

    According to him, JAMB introduced a policy this year to accommodate exceptionally gifted underage candidates.

    “The policy maintains the minimum age of 16, as in 2024, but allows exceptions for highly gifted underage candidates.

    “Underage candidates are those below 16 but exceptionally brilliant, typically aged 13 to 14,” he added.

    He noted that Nigeria has misused this concept, but truly exceptional candidates should not be excluded.

    “We identify a few such individuals, perhaps 30 to 50 across the country,” he said.

    He encouraged exceptionally gifted underage candidates to register.

    “If you believe you have something exceptional, you should register,” he stated.

    JAMB also created an avenue for those who are underage or overage but want to experience the CBT format.

    He clarified that underage candidates taking the CBT were not yet considered full candidates.

    “Those under 16 are applicants, not candidates. Only those 16 and above are regarded as candidates,” he said.

    Applicants must prove they meet the criteria, or penalties may apply.

    “It would be better for them to wait, as they risk wasting their money,” he warned.

    He also confirmed that some candidates were registered for free under the trial testing category.

    “Trial testing candidates do not pay JAMB any fees,” he explained.

    “They pay N1,000 for a book, N700 to the CBT centre, N1,500 for the exam venue, and N300 to banks as a commission.

    “This totals N3,500, with JAMB taking nothing from them,” he clarified.

    So far, 523 candidates nationwide have registered for the trial testing programme.

    “These are realists who acknowledge they are underage, which is why we made it free for them,” he said.

    The registrar also visited several CBT centres on the Lagos Mainland.

  • Blank registration: JAMB sanctions 6 CBT centres

    Blank registration: JAMB sanctions 6 CBT centres

    Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, Registrar, Joint Admissions Matriculation Board (JAMB), says six Computer Based Test (CBT) Centres have been sanctioned for engaging in blank registration.

    Oloyede, however, did not give the location or details of the sanctioned CBT centres.

    The registrar disclosed this on Monday in Ilorin while speaking with newsmen during a tour of some CBT Centres in Kwara.

    He said that the six affected centres were engaging in blank registration in preparation for examination malpractices.

    “We identified six CBT centres engaged in blank registration, shortly after we began the online JAMB registration, so we sanctioned them and put them on suspension for this week.

    “We called them into a meeting where they all apologised for what they did.

    “Initially, we wanted to give them two weeks suspension, but realised that the candidates will suffer more, instead of the CBT centres.

    “JAMB decided to identify the staff of the institutions that committed the offence and blacklist them.

    “Those blacklisted will never, at any time, be involved in JAMB activities, either at CBT centres or when they become lecturers or vice-chancellors.

    “This means that the six people who did the act are under punishment directly, because all their details have been known and put down in the black list,” he said.

    According to Oloyede, when someone works at a CBT centre, such a person should be conscious of his doings.

    “Once a student is involved in malpractice during examination organised by any of the examination bodies, such a person is no longer in good standing with JAMB,” he said.

    The registrar, however, thanked the JAMB staff, CBT centres, those on the field and the security operatives for doing excellently well.

    Five CBT centres visited in Ilorin are: Kwara College of Education; Al-Hikma University; Socrates College; University of Ilorin; and Matrix CBT Centre.