The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB, has fixed minimum cut off marks for Nigeria’s tertiary institutions.


In a decision taken at the 2017 Combined Policy Meetings on
Admissions into Tertiary Institutions in Nigeria which ended on Tuesday,
the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), said it has fixed
minimum cut off marks for Nigeria’s tertiary institutions.
According to Premium Times, the minimum cut off marks for
admissions into universities in Nigeria was set for 120, polytechnics
and colleges of education pegged at 100, while that of innovative
enterprising institutes was pegged at 110.
The board who disclosed that Institutions are at liberty to raise
their cut off marks for admission above the minimum set by JAMB, also
said that admissions into public degree awarding institutions for the
2017 UTME examination will end on January 15, 2018 while for private
institutions, it ends on January 31, 2018.
Also, decisions on first choice candidates by universities will end
on October 15, and second choice candidates will end on December 15;
after which the remaining students will be available in the market place
for other institutions till the January closing dates.
The Registrar of JAMB, Ishaq Oloyede, said a Central Admission
Processing System, CAPS, will be used to streamline admission processes
among institutions, as it addresses challenges associated with the
former approach, adding that Institutions could conduct dual mode system
which involves both manual and the newly introduced CAPS.
He advocated a dynamic educational policy as related to admissions. “All
over the world, there is agitation for dynamic educational policy. JAMB
only admits for National Diploma, not Higher National Diploma; so why
should we use the same requirement for ND and BSC, that is unreasonable
parity,” he said.
“We should not be sentimental in fixing our cut off mark; we need not over-dramatise issue of cut off mark,” he
said, adding that candidates’ applications to study agriculture was
very low while applications to study medicine and health sciences
increased.
The Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, also formerly announced a
lift of the ban on the conduct of Post-UTME examination as a
prerequisite for admission into tertiary institutions. “Cancellation of Post- UTME is a mistake,” he said, noting that banning of post-UTME led to a lot of irregularities by candidates and some institutions.
The minister explained that with the lifting of the ban on the
conduct of the examination, institutions are now at liberty to conduct,
while adding that fee for the examination should not exceed N2000.
He explained that the 2016 admission process was a huge success,
while expressing optimism that government is working assiduously to make
that of 2017 better.
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