The Senate on Tuesday mandated its
committee on
Education to invite the leadership of the
Joint Admissions
and Matriculation Board (JAMB) over its
controversial
admission policy.
The upper chamber also asked JAMB to
increase the
validity of its results from one to three
years to reduce the
number of yearly applicants.
Senate asked its committee on Education
to inquire into
the circumstances surrounding the new
policy including
allegations of favouritism and to review
the power of JAMB
in relation to admission.
It urged the body to consult widely with
Parents Teachers
Association, Academic Staff Union of
Universities and other
stakeholders in the education sector
with a view to coming
up with a friendlier, holistic,
comprehensive and sustainable
admission policy.
This followed the adoption of a motion
on “JAMB’s new
admission policy” sponsored by Senator
Joshua Lidani
(Gombe South) and seven others.
Lidani in his lead debate reminded the
Senate that JAMB is
a Board created by an Act of the
National Assembly in
1989 to administer a centralized
admission system for
universities, polytechnics and colleges of
education in the
country.
He noted that by Section 5(1)(C)111 of
the JAMB’s Act
2004, the functions of the Board among
other things, is the
general control of the conduct of
matriculation
examinations for admission into all
universities,
polytechnics and colleges of education
and also include the
placement of suitably qualified
candidates in the tertiary
institutions having taken into account,
the preferences
expressed of otherwise indicated by
candidates for certain
tertiary institutions and courses.
The lawmaker said he is aware that
JAMB at its Combined
Policy Meeting held on July 14, 2015 in
Abuja, announced
the adoption of a policy whereby
candidates of universities
with surplus applicants for the Unified
Tertiary
Matriculation Examination (UTME) are
reassigned to other
universities with lower number of
candidates than their
capacities.
Lidani said he is concerned that
following the
announcement of the new policy, the
Board was faced with
a series of protests by parents,
candidates and some
Organizations of Tutorial School
Operators of Nigeria over
the new admission policy.
The lawmaker also said that the new
policy runs contrary
to the letters and spirit of Section 5(1)
©111 of the JAMB
Act which requires the Board to take
into account
preferences of the candidates in their
choice of schools.
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