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Ikpa Isaac: JAMB – leading the trail


Federal Government finally affirmed the supremacy of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) conducted Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) by scrapping the Post-UTME test usually conducted by tertiary institutions.

The decision announced by the Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu at the June 2 meeting called by JAMB to fix cut-off points for UTME, explained that the examination body has done a lot and now has the credibility that implies that the result from its entrance examination should be acceptable to all.

This development is a confirmation that JAMB’s Registrar, Professor Dibu Ojerinde got it right all along.

Confidence in the examination body was finally restored with the level of fidelity assured by the Computer Based Test (CBT) introduced by the board.

As opposed to the era of Pencil and Paper Test (PPT) when candidates were able to cheat, CBT has ruled out incidents of examination fraud. The quality of the examination now conducted by JAMB is such that some of theinstitutions’ heads were already aligned with scrapping thePost-UMTE because it was an unnecessary duplication and exploitative of candidates who had already paid substantial amount to sit the unified examination.

Professor Ojerinde and the management team at JAMB must however not be lulled by the institution’s series of success into thinking that those who benefit under the previous arrangement would not put up some form of resistance. With more than one million candidates seeking tertiary institution admissions each year, the Post-UMTE test was an overN2billion annual business since intending students pay N2000 each on the average. The tricks up the sleeves of those who want to continue earning this illegal revenue are many: they will resort to mudslinging and blackmail as well as try to repackage their extortion under new names and processes likeUMTE result verification fee.

Since JAMB has the full backing of its parent ministry and has the mandate over admissions into tertiary institutions, Professor Ojerinde must follow up by monitoring compliance with the scrap of Post-UMTE test and ensure the extortion is not reintroduced under a new name. The Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu must on his part give the necessary backing to JAMB as the issue of using the now outlawed test had been a controversial one. Parents and guardians in addition to the candidates themselves have roles to play too. They must appreciate the efforts that JAMB has made in their interest – many promising youths had died in road accidents in the course of traveling to write the needless test. These stakeholders must therefore be willing to tell on any school that secretly tries to conduct any kind of test for the purposes of admission.

Also of concern are Vice-Chancellors, Rectors, Provost, Registrars. They attended the June 2 meeting and were reported to have endorsed the decision on the understanding and recognition of the progress that JAMB.

They must therefore resist the admission syndicates in their various institutions that are likely to attempt finding new ways of fleecing prospective students. Their consenting to the end ofPost-UMTE is an endorsement of CBT, which is clearly the way to go.

Their endorsement of CBT did now however come as a surprise given the magnitude of efforts that the board has made in response to the teething problems encountered when it held the first all-CBT examination. Agreed, some of the hitches were blown out of proportion ostensibly to further the interest of owners of ‘miracle’ examination centres, whose lazy clients can no longer cheat. There were however genuine glitches that should not reoccur in the next examination going by the assurances given by JAMB and the actions it has taken to date since the last examination.

This is why the call by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Federal Capital Territory, Senator Dino Melaye,for the federal government to provide adequate funding for JAMB to allow it improve on CBT is one that many Nigerians should echo. Coming from a federal lawmaker, the call showed that Nigerians are finally catching up with the foresight of ProfessorOjerinde.

That the call was made at the CBT advocacy exercise to sensitize secondary school students, who are prospective candidates of JAMB, is confirmation that the examination body and its management have listening ears that are sensitive to public mood and opinion. Those who had become critical of the board in the aftermath of the last examination, which was fully CBT, can now be rest assured that their concerns are being addressed. This is a path other organisations should thread by promptly dealing with identified lapses in service delivery.

At a time when the nation is hungry for reforms that work, JAMB has proven itself to be a benchmark that other agencies, including those outside of the education sector can emulate to deliver on the expectations of Nigerians. Its proactive approach, like the sensitization of 500 secondary school students on CBT is a model that governmentorganisations seeking stakeholders’ adoption of their policy can use as it will help to identify potential problem areas and proffer solutions.

Hopefully, additional hitches flagged by the mock examination would be resolved alongside the issues recorded from the last CBT examination so that its next outing would be a resounding success. It must also take steps on the infrastructure side as poor internet connectivity was a major issue from the last examination. As an innovative organisation, it would not be surprising if JAMB pulls a surprise that addresses the connectivity issue before the next examination date.

Those who think JAMB was archaic and no longer relevant must have changed their perception by now. The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board remains the leveler that ensures our best brains do not lose out on tertiary institution placement because they are not children of moneybags.

Ikpa is the Executive Secretary, Centre for Social Justice, Equity and Transparency and contributed this piece from Karshi, Abuja.

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