Federal Government has concluded
arrangements to scrap the National Examination Council.
Plans have also been concluded to
cancel the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination being conducted by the
Joint Admission and Matriculation Board for applicants into the nation’s
tertiary institutions.
JAMB will however not be scrapped.
The government’s decisions, which
would be made public soon via a White Paper, are based on the recommendations
of the Stephen Oronsaye-led Presidential Committee on the Rationalisation and
Restructuring of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies.
A government source told our
correspondent that the decisions were part of the recommendations made by a
White Paper Committee set up by the government on the Oronsaye report.
The source added that upon receipt of
the latest report, President Goodluck Jonathan has been meeting with
Vice-President Namadi Sambo and a few top government officials to take final
decisions on it.
It was in one of such meetings held
on Tuesday that the final decision was taken.
Under the new arrangement, the source
said in place of UTME, authorities of all tertiary institutions would now be at
liberty to conduct their entrance examinations as they had been doing for
post-UTME.
JAMB will however serve as a clearing
house.
“JAMB will now be a clearing house
like Universities and Colleges Admissions Service in the UK. If somebody gains
admission into three universities and holds down space, immediately such person
picks his first choice, JAMB’s system will automatically free the remaining two
slots for other applicants.
“JAMB will no longer conduct
examinations but it will be setting the standard alongside the schools
authorities,” the source said.
UCAS, which was established in
1993, is the British admission service for students applying to university and
college, including post-16 education as of 2012. UCAS is primarily funded by
students who pay a fee when they apply and a capitation fee from universities
for each student they accept.
On NECO, the source said in arriving
at the decision to scrap the examination body, the committee took into
cognizance its huge facilities across the country.
But it was resolved that the West
African Examination Council would absorb NECO’s members of staff and its
facilities.
WAEC will also be empowered to
conduct two Senior Secondary School Certificate Examinations per year, one in
January and the other probably in December.
Hitherto, only one November/December
SSCE Examination is being conducted.
The May/June Senior Secondary
Certificate Examination being organized by the examination body once in a year
still stands.
The government source also said
arrangements had been concluded to scrap the Public Complaint Commission, the
National Poverty Eradication Programme and the Institute of Peace and Conflict
Resolution among others.
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If d report of oransonye is strictly follow It wil go a long way helping us to reduce excessive spending on recurrent expenditure n nigeria will have enough to spend on infrastructure And scraping of upper house of representative n if d govt seriously deal with thievies Nigeria will be a beter place to be
ReplyDeleteWe shall support this, bcus this wil reduce d amount we spend on getin there: we pray that the Lord will put his merciful hand on this make it possible
ReplyDeleteThen what happens to NECO Certificate holders?
ReplyDeleteAll these are nonsense. Before all these scrabing this and scrabing that the country was in good shape. They have never being a time we experience hardship like what we are facing now. Even all the money recovered, where are they going to. We've not seen any development even the east west road for how many years has not been completed.
ReplyDeleteThis plan will end being an avenue Fø̲̣̣я̅ unversity staff τ̲̅☺ enrich their porsh illegally
ReplyDeleteNigeria na wa o
ReplyDelete