JAMB releases admission cutoff marks
The Federal Government, in consultation with the Joint Admissions and
Matriculation Board, has pegged the cutoff marks for 2014 admissions
into universities at 180, while polytechnics and colleges of education were put at 150, respectively.
The cutoff points were arrived at on Tuesday, after the 5th Combined
Policy meeting on admissions to tertiary institutions, held at the
National Universities Commission, Abuja.
The Supervising
Minister of Education, Nyesom Wike, who declared the meeting open,
frowned on the inability of most tertiary institutions to utilise their
admission quota.
Wike, however, said in view of efforts to
boost access, institutions which failed to utilise their admission quota
for 2014 would be sanctioned.
He reiterated the Federal
Government’s commitment to the development of ICT training, which he
said, had already been inculcated into the standard curriculum at the
secondary school level.
He said, “I have been briefed that
despite the rising demand for higher education vis-a-vis the
availability of a large number of qualified candidates, some
institutions did not fully utilise the admissions quota approved for
them by relevant regulatory agencies in 2013.
“This disservice
to the Nigerian child is totally unacceptable. In line with efforts of
the Federal Government to improve access, let me urge you all to with
effect from today, work assiduously to ensure that all admission spaces
in your institutions for the current year are fully utilised within the
approved time frame.”
The Registrar and Chief Executive of
JAMB, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde, in his presentation gave a statistical run
down of candidates’ preference for tertiary education.
He said
after the conduct of the 2014 Unified Tertiary Matriculation
Examination, candidates who applied for degree awarding institutions
totalled 1,584,348, representing 70 per cent; National Certificate in
Education applicants totalled 25,767 representing 1.6 per cent; National
Diploma, a paltry 22,072, representing 1.3 per cent while National
Innovation Diploma had just 46, representing 0.003 per cent.
Ojerinde wondered why Nigeria’s educational system has consistently
failed to embrace technical education in its quest for
industrialisation, noting that the British system which Nigeria copied
now award degree in all its polytechnics.
7/02/2014
JAMB releases admission cutoff marks
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