The Joint Admission and
Matriculation Board, JAMB, has announced its resolve to abolish Computer Based
Test (CBT) method for Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination, UTME, due to
low computer literacy level of candidates.
Daily
Post report continues:
The
board said it has in collaboration with a private institute resolved to set up
dedicated UTME centres for visually impaired candidates in Abuja, Lagos and
Kano in 2018.
Registrar
of the board, Professor Is-haq Olanrewaju Oloyede, disclosed this in Kaduna on
Wednesday, saying the board would not revert to the old paper and pencil mode,
but an eight-keys device.
Speaking
at the opening ceremony of Strategic Planning Retreat on Monitoring and
Supervision of 2017 UTME in Kaduna, Professor Oloyede said the 8-Keys
device would eradicate the challenge of computer illiteracy and phobia for
mouse by some candidates.
According
to him, “From the general feedback on the adoption of the Computer Based Test
mode, we have noted the challenge of computer low level literacy of some
candidates, especially with the phobia for the mouse. This has been responsible
partly for the call by some people for reversal to the Paper and Pencil Test
mode.
“In
order to ensure equity and level playground for all candidates taking Unified
Tertiary Matriculation Examination, the Board has designed a system that will
allow candidates use only eight keys without the use of mouse.
“All
the candidates need to do is to press the letters A,B,C,D for responses to
questions and keys: P, N, S and R representing; previous question, next
question, submit and reverse, respectively.”
Speaking
on the new arrangements for the visually impaired candidates, the JAMB
Registrar said, Digital Bridge Institute in partnership with the board had
agreed to set up three dedicated centres in Abuja, Lagos and Kano in 2018,
adding that, the board will support the centres with necessary inputs.
He
explained that ahead of 2018, when the project of dedicated centres would come
to fruition, the board has reached an understanding with the association for
the blind persons in Nigeria and blind students in Lagos that an abridged
approach would be used for the 2017 UTME.
He
added that all prospective blind candidates would be invited to three centres
in the country for special assessment in their subjects of choice and relevance
to their desired courses and programmes.
Professor
Oloyede while addressing the participants, most of whom are external Supervisors
and other stakeholders drawn from various tertiary institutions and education
sector, said all concerned stakeholders must take UTME as their own and make it
a project.
The JAMB boss said, “It is not enough for Politically Exposed Persons (PEP) to visit examination centres with sirens and large entourage of government functionaries with very little impact to show for their participation, other than to be under television camera lights and beamed same to the whole world, yet, the outcome of the examination is laced with stories of examination malpractice. This time around, the major players with requisite integrity, intelligence and appropriate knowledge of the assessment would be fully engaged to actively participate in the supervision of the examination.”
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