•CBT administrator in Lagos seeks extension of deadline •Board
faults publication on dumping use of computer
Prospective candidates in
the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) yesterday protested in
Makurdi against their inability to register for the examination.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
The
candidates blocked some major roads with bonfire as they marched to the JAMB
office located along Inner Ring Road. They also took their protest to the
governor’s office at Benue People’s House.
The
protesters threw stones at the JAMB office before mobile policemen dispersed
them. The Guardian learnt that they resorted to the protest because they could
not process their registration at the Computer Based Test centres (CBTs) due to
insufficient facilities.
The
protesters urged the Federal Government to revert to the old system of
registration due to the stress associated with the new method. The state
Commissioner for Education, Prof. Dennis Ityavyar, who addressed them at the
Government House, urged the JAMB Registrar to open more centres to enable them
to register for the examination.
Also,
the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Prof. Anthony Ijor appealed to
them to be calm and promised to address their grievances. But, a senior JAMB
official, Samuel Umoro, who admitted that there were some hitches, advised them
to be patient, as all prospective candidates would be registered.
Meanwhile,
12 days into the registration, a CBT centre administrator, Adekunle Banjo, has
appealed to the JAMB to extend the deadline for registration. Banjo, who owns,
Bafuto Institute of Management and Information Technology, Egbe, Lagos, said
the call became necessary due to the initial hitches associated with pin
vending and the fact that some prospective candidates were currently writing
the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).
Investigations
by The Guardian in Lagos revealed that it takes three to seven days for a
candidate to be fully registered, depending on the efficiency of the server and
the internet.
However,
the board has described the report titled “JAMB Dump CBT, adopt eight keys,”
published in one of the national dailies (and GRAPHITTI NEWS) as a misinterpretation of information
presented by the Board’s registrar.
The
Director of Information, Dr. Fabian Benjamin, in a statement made available to
The Guardian said the board “would continue all its examinations with the CBT
mode, as it was already consolidating on the gains earlier recorded.
According to Benjamin, the headline was not only misleading, but capable of causing panic, distortion and confusion in the minds of Nigerians, particularly the candidates planning to take the UTME examination of a well-conceived CBT examination, which the board was consolidating on the gains and feat recorded.
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