JAMB Excludes Unverified Candidates From Mop-Up Exams

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The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has excluded candidates of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) who are not bio-metrically verified. from its mop-up examination.

“No candidate of the UTME will be allowed to sit for its examination without first being biometrically verified. All 10 fingers of the candidate must be captured at the point of registration.

“To combat the menace of examination malpractice, the board has taken full advantage of technology by introducing, among others, biometric capturing of a candidate’s 10 fingers during UTME registration.

“This is to ensure that there is a convincing match between the fingerprints captured and those presented by the candidate at the examination venue,” it said.

The board said that any scenario other than the above was an invitation to examination security breach.

The decision that is contained in the weekly bulletin of the office of the Registrar on Monday is to further tighten the noose on examination malpractice.

This decision and others are likely to come up at the board’s five-day annual retreat scheduled for Sept.18 to Sept. 23 to review and assess its performance in all facets of its operational processes, including the 2022 UTME and fashion strategies to addressing them, while charting a way forward.

The board has decided that the era whereby some candidates will present themselves at the examination venue and claim difficulty to be biometrically verified and expect the system to allow them to sit for the examination is gone for good.

It will be recalled that the board, out of magnanimity has allowed such candidates to be rescheduled for the mop-up UTME introduced in 2017.

Of late, however, the board has realised the futility of such an arrangement after assessing the process and its impact on the entire examination value chain.

“Consequently, the management of the board has regrettably resolved that all candidates must be verified to sit for their examination as there will be no more mop-ups UTME for whatever reason according to the bulletin.

To cater for the few that may have genuine cases of inability to be captured, the board will require such candidates to clearly indicate such difficulty from the point of registration.

“This is so that they can be assigned to a centre situated within the National headquarters of the board for close monitoring,” it said.

The bulletin noted that the measure was not only to sanitise the examination process but also to ensure that the hard-earned reputation of the board was not impugned.

“Examination malpractice remained one of the major obstacles faced by all public examination bodies globally, hence, the need for it to consistently take steps to confront the monster.

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