THE
Joint Admission and Matriculations Board (JAMB) has released the
cut-off marks for the 2014 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination
(UTME), retaining the existing 180 cut-off mark for admission into
universities in Nigeria.
The board has also pegged the cut-off marks for admission into Polytechnics and Colleges of Education (COE) at 150.
These
were arrived at on Tuesday, after debate by stakeholders, including
vice chancellors, Rectors and Provosts at the fifth combined policy
meeting on admissions to tertiary institutions held at the National
Universities Commission (NUC).
JAMB
Registrar and Chief Executive, Professor ‘Dibu Ojerinde, who made this
known while speaking with newsmen, said the decisions were unanimously
accepted by all stakeholders at the meeting.
Chairman
of the Board, Mr Eze, however, urged the institutions to strictly
adhere to 60:40 Science to Arts ratio for conventional institutions and
the 70:30 Technology to non-Technology ratio for specialised
institutions, which were aimed at entrenching the technical advancement
of the country.
Eze
equally urged both federal and state-owned institutions to abide by the
guidelines approved by their proprietors to promote unity, integration,
geographical spread and equity.
“Accordingly,
the 45:35:20 admissions quota for the merit, catchment area and
educationally-less-developed states criteria should be complied with by
federal institutions,” he said.
Supervising
Minister of Education, Mr Nyesom Wike, who declared the meeting open,
frowned at the inability of most tertiary institutions to utilise their
admission quota.
He,
however, said in view of efforts to boost access, institutions which
failed to utilise their admission quota for 2014 would be sanctioned.
He
reiterated the Federal Government’s commitment to the development of
ICT training, which he said had already been inculcated as part of the
standard curriculum at the secondary school level.
He
said: “I have been briefed that despite the rising demand for higher
education vis-a-vis the availability of a large number of qualified
candidates, some institutions did not fully utilise the admissions quota
approved for them by relevant regulatory agencies in 2013.
“This
disservice to the Nigeria child is totally unacceptable, in line with
efforts of the Federal Government to improve access, let me urge you all
to with effect from today, work assiduously to ensure that all
admission spaces in your institutions for the current year are fully
utilised within the approved time frame,” he stated.
Meanwhile,
Professor Ojerinde, in his presentation, gave a statistical run down of
candidates’ preference for tertiary education.
He
said after the conduct of the 2014 UTME candidates who applied for
degree awarding institutions or universities were 1,584,348,
representing 97.07 per cent, NCE applicants totalled 25,767,
representing 1.579 per cent, National Diploma and a paltry 22,072,
representing 1.349 per cent, while NID had just 46, representing 0.003
per cent.
Ojerinde
wondered why Nigeria’s educational system had consistently failed to
embrace technical education in its quest for industrialisation, saying
the British which Nigeria copied the polytechnic education from awarded
degree in all its polytechnics.
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