Tag: UTME

  • Whenever universities commit criminality, the country dies a little – By Owei Lakemfa

    Whenever universities commit criminality, the country dies a little – By Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa

    It was a sobering moment for me. Processing the fact that a number of tertiary institutions in the country, from the oldest to the newest generation, are engaged in conscious criminality, especifically, admission racketeering.

    I had been part of a January 29, 2022 Stakeholders Meeting between the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board, JAMB and Media Executives. It was billed to be a social event where there was to be exchange of ideas between JAMB and its guests, but the information provided by the former was more a wakeup call for the country because whenever universities commit criminality, the country dies a little.

    JAMB, the entrance examination board for all tertiary-level institutions in the country, is empowered to administer admission into all such institutions. For this, it conducts a Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, UTME for all candidates seeking admission.

    But what happens when about a million and half youths are made to undergo such standard entrance examinations, and a privileged handful do not need to meet the minimum scores, or even take the examinations, before being admitted? What happens when some of the institutions apparently sell admission spaces or are actively involved in massive admission racketeering?

    JAMB Registrar, Professor Is-haq Olarenwaju Oloyede stood before the media executives reeling out figures of such criminal acts. They showed that in the three-year period between 2017 and 2020, there were 812,570 illegal ‘under-the-table’ admissions. This means that on the average, these educational institutions carry out 270,856 illegal admissions annually. While in the period, the polytechnics engaged in 533,494 illegal admissions and the Colleges of Education involved in 175,349, the universities fraudulently admitted 94,802 students to pursue degree programmes.

    Tertiary institutions are not just places students study for degrees, diplomas and certificates and engage in academic research, but are also where people are groomed and characters sculpted or polished to enable them play transformational roles in the society. They are designed to be where students fully appreciate being respectable, trustworthy, responsible, caring and having a sense of social justice and dedication to the universe. Yes, to the universe; that is partially why the university carries the name, universe. Each university is designed as a universe; the sum total of everything that exists in the worlds . So anybody passing through it, is expected to develop his inner and outer personality enabling the graduate play positive roles in society.

    Educational institutions are expected to also play moral roles and inculcate values. If a student is expelled for being a member of a cult gang, the message being sent is that it the institution does not encourage cultism in the bigger society or in the politics of the country. So, educational institutions are not just places to learn concepts but also build the human being to his fullest potentials. That is why the ethologist, Sathya Sai Baba cautioned that: “Politics without principles, Education without character, Science without humanity, and Commerce without morality are not only useless, but also positively dangerous.”

    The university of Ife (Now, Obafemi Awolowo University) which I attended, was not so much about passing examinations, it tried to inculcate in its students, the motto: “For Learning and Culture” Yes, it is for learning, but also, for African and universal culture; a culture that rejects oppression and stresses social justice. So a university like that cannot afford to be involved in criminality.

    But then, some other leading universities in the country according to JAMB, are implicated in such practices. The University of Nigeria, Nsukka, UNN which was established in 1960, the year the country got its flag independence, has a motto: ‘To Restore The Dignity Of Man’ This is quite noble. JAMB however discovered that while UNN had an admission quota of 200 for its Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery, MBBS programme, it admitted only 106 legally, and rather than fill the balance vacancies from amongst the 342 other qualified candidates, it admitted an additional 448 other candidates. Also, while UNN has 250 official slots for law, JAMB claims it admitted 125 candidates and: “Released another 240 on University’s portal”

    The Mashood Abiola Polytechnic, MAPOLY, Abeokuta had an admission quota of 12,587, but JAMB said: “ Not a single candidate was admitted…” legally. Rather it: “Admitted’ over 10,795 and went on to receive acceptance fee from 5,950 candidates not yet proposed to JAMB.”

    The Nigeria Police Academy, POLAC, Wudil in Kano State was established in 1988 with the motto: “ knowledge for Service.” JAMB discovered that POLAC changed the: “… programme of candidates… through (the) Academy portal without the consent of the candidates; ‘Admitted’ candidates who were already admitted genuinely into other institutions (and) ‘Admitted’ candidates who did not choose the Academy as first choice.”

    In the case of the premier University of Ibadan established in 1948 with the motto: “Recte Sapere Fons” (To think straight is the fount of knowledge) JAMB discovered a number of discrepancies in its admission system. This included denying a qualified candidate with a high Aggregate Score of 66.25 admission to read Human Nutrition, rather offering her Agricultural Extension, while admitting candidates with lower aggregate scores. In another case, a student qualified to read Economics, was denied the course and forced to read Adult Education while another who was qualified to read Cyber Security was denied and forced to move to Physics.

    However, these admission rackets appear to be less scandalous than the admission fraud committed through the Interim Joint Matriculation Board Examination, IJMB and Joint Universities Preliminary Examination, JUPEB Programmes which are equivalent to an Advanced Level Certificate qualification

    In one uncovered case, a private coaching-centre operated from the bowels of the Kwara State Polytechnic, Ilorin without the institution’s officers being the wiser. The centre then began: “exporting candidates to Kabba, Kogi State for IJMB.” Such a centre is nothing but a ‘miracle centre’ where for fees, students are given certificates that enable them get Direct Admission into universities.

    JAMB revealed for instance that when a tertiary institution verified the IJMB examination results of 148 candidates admitted between 2019 and 2020, it found that only 6 results were genuine, the other 142, were fake. The Bayero University, Kano expelled 178 students for faking IJMB results. The response of the Education Minister was to establish an A/Level Task Force, to sanitise the process.

    However, given the serious damage admission racketeering does to the psyche of the country and its development, we need to take more drastic measures. Beyond getting the tertiary institutions involved in admission racketeering to account for their criminality, Vice Chancellors, Registrars and Admission officers of such institutions should be held individually liable even after leaving office. A few of them spending ‘sabbatical’ in jail will go a long way to sanitized the system.

  • JAMB introduces Computer Studies and Physical Health Education to UTME

    JAMB introduces Computer Studies and Physical Health Education to UTME

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has introduced Computer Studies and Physical and Health Education as part of its UTME subjects.

    The board disclosed this in its weekly bulletin released by the Director of Public Relations, Dr Fabian Benjamin, and made available to newsmen in Abuja on Monday.

    It said that candidates sitting for the UTME could now pick Computer Studies or Physical and Health Education as part of the four required UTME subjects, if they so desire or as dictated by their programme preferences.

    The board said that the addition of the two subjects to the existing 23 UTME subjects would commence from the 2022 UTME exercise.

    According to the board, the move is to enhance career prospect of students transiting to tertiary institutions.

    Newsmen reports that with the addition, there are now 25 UTME subjects to be written by candidates.

    Others are: Agricultural Science, Arabic, Art, Biology, Chemistry, Christian Religious Studies, Commerce, Economics, French, Geography, Government, Hausa, History and Home Economics.

    Others are: Igbo, Islamic Studies, Literature in English, Mathematics, Music, Physics, Principles of Accounts, Use of English and Yoruba.

  • Incomplete UTME registration: JAMB to refund candidates, explains procedure

    Incomplete UTME registration: JAMB to refund candidates, explains procedure

    The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has announced the refund of N4,000 deposit to the candidates who could not complete their 2021Unified Tertiary

    Matriculation Examination (UTME) registration.

    The board disclosed this in its weekly bulletin released by its Director of Public Relations, Dr Fabian Benjamin, and made available to newsmen in Abuja on Monday.

    The bulletin directed candidates concerned to visit the board’s Website, https://www.jamb.gov.ng, and complete a form for the refund of the value of the draft they submitted to the board.

    “The above candidates are to click on the link 2021 UTME/DE Unregistered Candidates Bank Draft Recapture and fill the spaces after which they would key in the token sent to the phone numbers they had submitted during the submission of their drafts.

    ” It is this token that would be used to access a form on which they will fill in their account details for the refund of the value of the draft.

    ”Candidates are to provide these details within the next two weeks from the date of this publication.

    ” A text message containing OTP has been sent to the affected candidates besides this notification,” it said.

  • Sale of 2022 UTME forms yet to commence – JAMB

    Sale of 2022 UTME forms yet to commence – JAMB

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it has not commenced the sale of 2022 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and Direct Entry (DE) application forms.

    The board, in a statement by its Spokesperson, Dr Fabian Benjamin, on Thursday in Abuja, dismissed speculation and misinformation in some quarters that the examination forms were now on sale.

    Benjamin said that the attention of the board had been drawn to the activities of unwholesome elements misleading the general public on the purported commencement of the sale of the 2022 UTME and DE application documents.

    ”For the avoidance of doubt, any information in circulation purporting to have emanated from the board that the sale of the 2022 UTME and DE forms has commenced is not only fraudulent but a calculated attempt by mischief makers to create unnecessary panic among prospective candidates for their own selfish ends.

    “It should be noted that the commencement of the sale of the application documents in any given year has never been shrouded in mystery rather it is always a well-publicised undertaking in the print media, online and electronic platforms.

    “Although, the board has concluded all arrangements to commence the sale of the 2022 UTME/DE Application Documents in due course but it is yet to fix any date for its commencement.

    “The general public is therefore, by this notice urged to be mindful of speculators who are in the habit of second-guessing the board’s on certain procedural issues with the aim of defrauding hapless candidates,” he said.

    The spokesperson further said that the public would be sufficiently informed of the commencement of the sale of E-Pins once approval had been granted by relevant authorities.

    He added that the board would announce a suitable date to commence the sale, accompanied by well-defined information on the procedures for the purchase of the e-pins, create a profile, and where to go for biometric capturing, among other essential details.

  • BREAKING: DELSU releases first batch 2021/2022 admission list

    BREAKING: DELSU releases first batch 2021/2022 admission list

    Delta State University (DELSU), Abraka has released the first batch provisional admission list for the 2021/2022 academic session.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the first batch 2021/2022 provisional admission list can be accessed online via a portal provided by DELSU.

    Candidates who partook in the admission exercise are only required to enter their Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) registration number on the portal to check if they made the list.

    The first batch provisional admission list is for both Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and Direct Entry (DE) candidates.

    Click here to access the admission list portal. This admission list will be followed by another shortly.

  • 2022 UTME: JAMB sends important message to prospective candidates

    2022 UTME: JAMB sends important message to prospective candidates

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has asked all prospective candidates for the 2022 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME) to acquire their National Identification Numbers (NIN) ahead of the exercise.

    The board stated this on Monday in its weekly bulletin released by the Office of the Registrar in Abuja.

    JAMB said that it would soon start the sale of application documents and registration for the 2022 UTME and Direct Entry (DE).

    “The board, is at the moment, engaging its core functionaries in a series of intensive training to ensure that once the date is announced, the stage would have been set for yet another hitch-free exercise.

    “The release of this information is in line with the board’s firm determination to ensure that candidates who are desirous of enrolling are ready and prepared.

    “Similarly, it is expected to serve as a wake-up call to all who may want to register, to first obtain their NIN, a major prerequisite for the UTME registration.

    “For those who may want to obtain any of the two application documents, they are advised to get their NIN and also familiarise themselves with the board’s Integrated Brochure and Syllabus System (IBASS).

    “It will give them an idea of the course requirements and the syllabus they are expected to cover for the examination,” the board said.

    According to JAMB, IBASS is on the board’s website and can also be downloaded on Google Playstore and other similar platforms.

    The board said that the next step was for candidates to create their profiles by sending their NIN to 55019 to create a profile for registration.

    JAMB added that it had put adequate measures in place to checkmate those who might want to cheat.

    It said that it had also strengthened all administrative procedures for the smooth prosecution of any candidate, centre or staff of JAMB found to have been involved in an infraction.

  • 2022 UTME: JAMB goes cashless with CBT fee

    2022 UTME: JAMB goes cashless with CBT fee

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) is set to go totally cashless in its registration process beginning with the 2022 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

    This was contained in the JAMB’s weekly news magazine, JAMBULLETIN published on Monday.

    With the adoption of a new system, JAMB would be collecting the approved N700 registration fee on behalf of the various Computer-Based Test (CBT) centres along with its UTME registration fees.

    In its weekly bulletin, issued on Monday and obtained, the examination body said the money due to each registration centre would be remitted to relevant bank accounts on a weekly basis or any timeframe acceptable to the centre owners.

    JAMB said its decision to go cashless in the UTME registration exercise would put an end to some of the fraudulent activities of some CBT centres, who charge candidates above stipulated fee.

    “This laudable step was borne out of a painstaking review of the entire UTME registration process which has revealed some unethical and unacceptable practices by many Computer-Based Testing (CBT) centres,” the bulletin reads in part.

    JAMB had said it has remitted the sum of N3.51b to the national treasury, as part of its 2021 operating surplus. Fabian Benjamin, JAMB Spokesperson made this disclosure on Tuesday, November 2, in Abuja.

    The 2021 remittance was part of Prof. Ishaq Oloyede’s avowed commitment to prudent management of public resources. The Board as led by Prof Ishaq Oloyede would continue to prune down the cost of governance and release resources for other needy national prioritized areas.

    Similarly, the examination body on Monday, November 8, defended the remittance of its operating surplus to the federal government accounts.

    The board said it will continue to remit its excesses in line with global best practices to the federal government. JAMB in a statement signed by its head of public affairs, Fabian Benjamin, said its action to remit proportion of its operational surplus is also line with the extant government’s directive on the remittances.

  • JAMB defends remittance of operating surplus

    JAMB defends remittance of operating surplus

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has vowed to continue its practice of remitting its operating surpluses to government, saying that the remittances were in line with global best practice, Dr Fabian Benjamin, Head, Public Affairs of JAMB has said.

    In a statement to newsmen in Abuja, on Monday, Benjamin said that the board would continue its practice of remitting the constitutionally-mandated proportion of its operational surpluses, in line with extant government’s directive on the remittances.

    According to him, it is a known fact that all unutilised funds by Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) should be returned to the public treasury.

    He said that the board and public-spirited Nigerians were, therefore, at a loss as to the reasons for the various campaigns of calumny mounted by some individuals who feel that these remittances should not be made.

    “The board reiterates that it is not within the powers of MDAs to determine the uses for which the remitted funds are put to.

    “Theirs is to comply with extant directive while those given the mandate to manage the national treasury have the responsibility of appropriating and channelling such remittances.

    “ This is in the overall interest of the public, to identify areas of need or rather whichever area of the national economy that they perceive to be in most need of resources,” he said.

    He added: “ It would be recalled that the humongous remittances are the first in the history of the four-decade-old agency.

    “The first landmark remittance was made in 2017 and the feat was repeated in subsequent years, in line with its belief that rules are made to be obeyed and, at any rate, the Board does not believe it should hold onto money that does not belong to it.

    “It might interest these armchair critics that a direct fallout of the remittances was the decision of the Federal Government to reduce the cost of the purchase of the e-pin from N5,000 to N3,500, the cheapest globally.

    “ It is a truism in policy making that certain trends should be observed over a period of time before policy pronouncements are made.”

    He explained that the decision to reduce the price of application documents was contingent upon the observation that even if the price were to be slashed, the board would be able to conduct its examination unhindered.

    “In addition, it might also interest the public to know that never in the history of tertiary institutions in Nigeria have the institutions benefited from the Board’s operations as they now do.

    “For instance, a huge chunk of these surpluses are ploughed back to the tertiary institutions through the National Tertiary Admissions Performance Merit Award and other platforms.

    “ Furthermore, many critical segments of the society, the intellectual community, the civil society groups, among others, have all been included in the management of the Board’s operational processes not only to add value to its service delivery but also to make for inclusiveness.

    “All these, which were hitherto impossible, had been made possible as a result of the prudent management of resources which has enabled the Board to prosecute these aspirations,” he added .

    He maintained that the cost of obtaining the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination( UTME) or the Direct Entry (DE) e-pin today is the lowest globally, saying that the comparison was not even with developed countries but rather with countries with less per capital income than Nigeria.

    Benjamin added that the low cost of obtaining the board’s application documents would be manifest if a comparison was made with similar examinations like IELTS where Nigerians pay as high as N80,000 to enrol.

    The public affairs manager said that the present management of the board was determined to continue on the path of giving value for money, even as it continued to seek ways of further pruning down the cost of conducting the Board’s flagship examination.

    He said once these innovative measures which had led to these surpluses were institutionalised, the Board would further look at how to enhance the registration process to benefit the candidates and the general public.

    “ In as much as the Board is desirous of charging rock-bottom prices for its services, it is also mindful of the fact that a non-existent fee regime would only give room for abuses and confusion.

    “ This is as unscrupulous or other unserious elements, who had ulterior motives for obtaining the forms, would want to obtain them to explore opportunities for prosecuting unacceptable acts.

    “As an illustration, the huge number of candidates registering for the examination multiple times before the introduction of NIN was partly owing to the fact that it costs them almost nothing, financial or punitive, to register many times.” Benjamin said.

    He, therefore, urged the citizens to be mindful of lightweights parading as educational experts who are hell-bent on propagating falsehood to further their miscellaneous ends.

  • Drama as police arrest 19-year-old boy who sued JAMB for N1bn

    Drama as police arrest 19-year-old boy who sued JAMB for N1bn

    There was mild drama at the headquarters of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Bwari, FCT as a 19-year-old candidate in the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, Chinedu Ifesinachi John, who accused the board of altering his original score of 380 was handed over to the Police for investigation.

    John had claimed he scored 380 in the examination conducted in June and was surprised to receive 265 from the board after the results were released.
    After several enquiries, 265 kept appearing as his score as against the 380 score.

    Following the alleged “alteration” of the UTME score, his father, John Ifenkpam approached an Enugu – based lawyer, Ikeazor Akaiwe, who wrote to JAMB for another opportunity for the boy to retake the examination and demanded N1 billion as damages.

    The lawyer said in an official letter addressed to the board that the N1 billion was to cover for the physical and emotional trauma the boy had been through from being offered “two separate scores from 2019 – 2021.”

    Master John claimed that his UTME scores from 2019 till 2021 had been “altered” by the board, thereby denying him the opportunity to study his desired course – medicine.

    On Friday, the candidate, his father and lawyers traveled down to Abuja from Enugu state following an invitation from the management of the board led by the Registrar of JAMB, Prof Is – haq Oloyede.

    Initially, the boy was given few minutes to “come clean” in a closed session with his father and lawyers about the results he was parading but insisted that his original score from the examination was 380.

    After going back and forth, the board tendered evidence to counter the claim by John and his legal representatives.

    At the Friday meeting, documentary evidence tendered by the board showed that John actually scored 265 not the 380 he had claimed.

    Oloyede accused the candidate of result tempering, adding that he will be handed over to the police for investigation and subsequently prosecuted.

    The registrar said John was among 11 eleven other candidates who allegedly forged their results that the board would prosecute.

    He said the original result issued to John would be withdrawn pending the end of the investigation.

    The registrar said: “We will give you five minutes for your child to tell you the truth. If he doesn’t tell you the truth and come back we will show you what your son has done and hand him over to the police.

    “Who is helping you to do it? How much did he pay; if you don’t tell your father the truth we will hand you over to the police and you must be prosecuted.

    “We have 11 of them who tampered with their results. Two of them are already being prosecuted.

    “The remaining ones we are going to withdraw their results and prosecute them. The main purpose is to sanitise the system, including our own staff.

    “There was never any communication of 380 with this boy. Because this boy has accused JAMB, we are going to withhold his result until the investigation is concluded. We are going to request that our interactions with him be subjected to the public.

    “As far as I am concerned I am reporting you to the IG now except you tell me who helped you to commit this crime.”

    The registrar said the boy needed redemption with the crimes he had allegedly “committed.”

    He also said a team of security agents would visit Enugu state to arrest members of a tutorial group the boy confessed to belong to.

    According to Oloyede, tutorial owners are at the heart of examination malpractice in the country, saying the board would not relent in fighting them.

    His lawyer, Ikeazor, appealed to the board to give room for further investigation.

    He said: “I will not stand against investigation. Let there be investigation but what I will not agree to is to prejudge him.”

    John had said: “The result I have been receiving is not the result I am entitled to. I wrote the first JAMB in 2019.

    “The first time they sent 328 later I saw 278 score when I checked it. I printed it. I couldn’t meet up for admission that year. I wanted to study medicine and surgery at the University of Ibadan.

    “In 2020 the same thing happened. I scored 343 by the time I went to the portal to print I saw 306. I used the 306 and it gave me admission in UI. But because I didn’t have further mathematics I had to forfeit it.

    “I decided to leave medicine and surgery for them in 2021 so I picked petroleum engineering. In 2021, JAMB issued me two results

  • BREAKING: JAMB announces mop up UTME exams

    BREAKING: JAMB announces mop up UTME exams

    The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has scheduled a mop up UTME for 18,000 candidates for Aug. 6 in some selected locations in Nigeria.

    JAMB’s Head, Media and Publicity, Dr Fabian Benjamin, made the announcement in a statement on Thursday in Abuja.

    Benjamin said that no candidate, whose result had been duly released, would be rescheduled for another examination, contrary to the sponsored fake news being circulated on the social media.

    “Following a detailed investigation and careful analysis of the highly-successful 2021 UTME, and with due consultation (resulting in gracious concession) with NECO, concerning the timetable of the council’s ongoing SSCE, JAMB has scheduled a Mop up UTME for Aug. 6, 2021, in some selected locations across the nation.

    “No fewer than 18,000 candidates slated for the examination are being notified through both text messages on their designated phone numbers and their JAMB profiles.

    “In addition, the candidates can check using their registration number on http://www.jamb.gov.ng/2021mopup,” he said.

    He listed the rescheduled categories as: Candidates who could not be initially scheduled for examination owing to their inability to timely procure and supply their mandatory NINs or profile codes until after the close of the registration.

    The official noted that those candidates were, therefore, had to purchase Bank Drafts (as against the usual vending of PINs) after the scheduled period for the examination, and were later registered.

    Also on the list are few candidates who encountered peculiar biometric verification problem, or who failed biometric verification on the examination date (and were recaptured) but were not allowed to partake in the examination.

    He noted that adequate screening arrangements had been made to reverify such claims and any candidate found to be involved in any form of impersonation would be identified for prosecution.

    Benjamin also listed candidates who were unable to sit for the UTME, owing to the clash of timetables of the examination and the ongoing NABTEB examinations, and whose particulars had been verified and supplied directly to JAMB by NABTEB.

    He said that candidates who had been ascertained by JAMB to have experienced genuine rescheduling/technical problems, as was the case in 30 of the 760 centres used for the examination, were included on the list.

    According to him, the rescheduled candidates are to print fresh examination notification slips containing the venue and time of the examination.

    “The slips are to be printed from the JAMB website https://www.jamb.gov.ng using the candidates’ registration number from Aug. 1.

    “The Board strongly advises candidates to avoid supplying their vital information including registration number to fraudsters, who are abound especially in cybercafe(s), tutorial centres springing up almost everywhere in the nation, as a result of the illicit activities of examination syndicates.

    “CBT centres approved by JAMB, which are consistently monitored, are relatively more secured for printing examination notification slips by candidates who cannot print such on their own,” Benjamin stated.