JAMB Gives School Ultimatum To Disclose Illegal Admissions
Posted by Admin
On August 05, 2024
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has given all tertiary
institutions in the country one month to disclose all admissions conducted
outside its Central Admissions Processing System before 2017.
The Public Communication Advisor for JAMB, Dr Fabian Benjamin, who
disclosed this at a press briefing in Abuja, on behalf of the board’s
registrar, Prof Ishaq Oloyede, on Sunday, said the directive was aimed at
enhancing transparency and fairness in the admissions process.
“The attention of the board has been drawn to the predilection of some
institutions to admit candidates outside the approved Central Admissions
Processing System platform and process such through the condonement of illegal
admissions window to accord legitimacy.
“To close this abused window, the board has decided that all institutions
should now (or never) disclose all candidates illegally admitted prior to 2017,
whose records are in their system within the next one month, beginning from 1st
August 2024.
“And any admission purportedly given
prior to 2017 will no longer be recognised or condoned unless disclosed within
this one-month window.
“Institutions are advised to comply with this directive as there will not
be any further condonement of hitherto unrecorded candidates who did not even
register with JAMB, not to talk of sitting for any entrance examination.
“This move is aimed at curbing illegal admissions and falsification of
records while ensuring compliance with the provisions of CAPS,” the statement
read.
He said the decision marked the end of the condonement of illegal
admissions window, which previously allowed institutions to incorporate
unauthorised admissions into the system.
Benjamin highlighted concerns over institutions colluding with candidates
to falsify details for illegal admissions; a development he said had led to
fraudulent participation in the National Youth Service Corps scheme.
He said despite warnings, some institutions continued to admit candidates
outside CAPS and seek Condonement of Undisclosed Illegal Institutional
Admission.
“Consequently, the board is terminating the aspect of the CUIIA process
which allows completely unregistered candidates (without registration) to be
introduced to the system.
“CAPS is the only authorised platform for admissions. Those who even have
registration but were illegally admitted between the period (2017-2020) would
soon be denied the opportunity of the waiver unless they are disclosed within
the next one month.
“Therefore, all institutions are
hereby directed to disclose, for the final time, all candidates admitted
illegally within their systems. Moving forward, the board will not tolerate any
undisclosed admission by any institution,” he said.
On the issue of the minimum age for admission into tertiary institutions
for the 2024/2025 session, the board maintained that the minimum age for
admission remained 16 years.
“For the 2024 admission cycle, candidates who will be at least 16 years old
at the time of admission will be considered eligible.
“This decision follows the directive from the chairman of the 2024 tertiary
admission policy meeting, who is also the Minister of Education, Prof. Tahir
Mamman, that the extant policy of 6-3-3-4 be enforced only from the 2025
session.
“The alarming avalanche of obviously false affidavits and upsurge of
doctored upward age adjustments on NIN slips being submitted to JAMB to upgrade
recorded age is dangerous, inimical and unnecessary. Those below 16 would not
and should not be admitted in accordance with the decision of the 2024 Policy
Meeting,” he said.
Benjamin further expressed concern over the new trend of a strange
admissions practice labelled “Daily-Part-Time” by certain polytechnics and “Top
Up” by some universities.
According to him, a recent and particularly egregious example of this was
the advertisement placed by Adeseun Ogundoyin Polytechnic, Eruwa, in Oyo State,
published in the Nigerian Tribune on Wednesday, July 31, 2024, inviting
candidates to apply for its two-year Daily-Part-Time programme.
“It is crucial to clarify that no such programmes are approved by the
National Board for Technical Education nor by the National Universities
Commission. Both are also alien to the education system in Nigeria.
“They are fraudulent devices to side-line quality, approved quota for
full-time admission, falsify records and consequently, rake illegitimate income
and derail the ambition and career of innocent (and some equally crooked)
candidates.
“The candidates with zero or
abysmally low UTME scores are rationally attracted to such contraption which
would lead to nowhere.
“Part-time programmes are strictly regulated, allowing institutions to
admit only up to 150 per cent of the approved full-time capacity. However, some
institutions have been found to admit an excessive number of candidates through
this unrecognised DPT programme, merging them with full-time students in
classrooms and purporting to graduate them at the same time as full-time
students,” he noted.
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