”At the post-examination analysis held to conduct a post mortem of the examination, the Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, disclosed that the mock- examination, conducted in 757 centres across the nation, was held with little or no hitches.  He stated that the board was primed to deliver the most seamless examination ever, come May 6.     The statement also quoted the Registrar as advising proprietors of Computer-Based Tests (CBT) centres nationwide, not to rest on their oars, but consolidate on the success recorded in the mock exercise.  Oloyede added that the centres must deliver a better outcome in the main examination in May.  He reiterated that the mock examination was instituted to principally test its facilities and ascertain its readiness for the main UTME.  It was also instituted, he explained, to provide candidates with the opportunity to experience the testing system and how to apply it in the main examination.  ” Taking the mock examination had proved to be one of the most effective tests of readiness for the main examination, ” Oloyede said.  NAN reports that a total of 1.8 million candidates had been registered for this year’s main UTME The Informant247

We not decider of cut-off mark – JAMB discloses

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB, has said it is not the decider of the cut-off mark for the national Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, UTME.

The examination board has said the cut-off marks are arrived at during a policy meeting instituted by all the Heads of the Institutions attended and chaired by the Hon. Minister of Education.

Fabian Benjamin, the Head, Public Affairs and Protocol of JAMB, revealed that tertiary institutions do deliberate upon the guidelines of admission from individual institutions and their preferred minimum admission scores.

Benjamin made this revelation in reaction to a comment on the cut-off mark by a former President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities, Prof. Nasir Fagge.

He revealed that JAMB supervises the examination and gives the result to the tertiary institutions to decide the cut-off mark.

Benjamin also revealed that tertiary institutions rely on the Central Admissions Processing System in its decision of cut-off marks.

The statement reads partly: “There is nothing like a uniform minimum national Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) score for any of the tiers of tertiary institutions and neither does the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board decide any such requirement for any institution.

“The Board does not and has never determined any uniform national UTME scores otherwise known as cut-off mark by the general public for any tertiary institution because, in actual sense, there are no uniform national UTME scores.

“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 in the country.

“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).”

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