The Minister of Education, Professor Rukayyatu Rufai has been summoned by the House of Representatives over the planned conduct of computer based test for the 2013 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) by the Joint Admission Matriculation and Examination Board (JAMB).
Prof. Rufai’s led Ministry of Education was directed to suspend the computer-based test planned for April this year and revert to the use of old existing centres and the new secondary schools constructed by various arms of government, to give more time to equip these schools with necessary infrastructure to conduct computer test.
This motion was sponsored by Hon. Ali Madaki, from Kano State.
Rukayyatu is expected to appear before the House Committee on Education, alongside the JAMB Registrar in other to explain the “reason behind the policy somersault that led to change in takes off of the policy from 2015 to 2013; the law that empowers JAMB to contract out the conduct of examination to private firms? And who the firms are.”
Hon. Madaki in his motion said that JAMB had fixed the year 2015 as the terminal year to end its paper and pencil based examination as stated by the Minister, Professor Rukayyatu Rufai in November 2012 but “JAMB has now somersaulted and resolves to start computer based test on 27th April 2013.”
He argued that “the vexed question is how many secondary schools are equipped with computers. Alarmed there is no clear cut modus operandi for the computer based test method because JAMB itself lacks the competence and facilities to conduct the examinations, hence JAMB has contracted private firm to conduct the computer based test (CBT)?
Madaki said, “the ripples effect has led massive reduction of examination centres despite increased in schools, closure of several registration centres in states like Bauchi, Bayelsa, Kano, Benue, Cross Rivers, FCT, Kaduna, Katsina thereby leading to the disfranchisement of many candidates that would have take the exams.”
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