The reason why Waec and Jamb examination dates clash affecting student
Fresh facts have emerged on the reasons behind the clash in the
dates set by both the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB)
and the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), for their examinations
slated to commence this week.
While the Senior School
Certificate Examination (SSCE) conducted by WAEC is slated to commence
with practical exercises on Monday, April 8, and end on Friday, June 7,
the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) by JAMB, is
scheduled to commence on Thursday, April 11.
Unlike the SSCE that is scheduled to span two months, the UTME is billed to take place within a week, between April 11 and 17.
But
SSCE candidates who are billed to take subjects like Plumbing and Pipe
Fitting, Animal Husbandry, Printing Craft Practice, Auto Mechanical
Work, Health Education, Foods and Nutrition, Arabic and French, among
others, may not be able to sit the UTME.
More than 25 subjects
will be affected by the clash. Hundreds of students across Nigeria are
expected to be affected by the clash in dates.
For instance,
candidates who may be sitting for Animal Husbandry as a SSCE subject,
which holds between 9:30 a.m. and 12:10 p.m. on April 11, may have also
been scheduled to sit for the UTME at the same period.
Similar
scenarios would play out for other SSCE candidates who would be sitting
the other subjects including Physical Education, Home Management,
Health Education, Foods and Nutrition, among others which fall between
April 11 and 17, when the UTME examination will hold.
To
avoid such clashes, especially since JAMB introduced the computer-based
test mode which changed UTME from being conducted in one day to spanning
more days, JAMB had initiated the inter-examination-bodies’ meeting to
compare notes among the leadership of all the examination bodies.
The
other concerned examination bodies apart from JAMB and WAEC include the
National Examinations Council (NECO) and National Business and
Technical Examinations Board (NBTEB). The latter is responsible for the
conduct of the National Business and Technical Examination accepted for
admission into polytechnics, colleges of education and monotechnics.
However,
investigations by PREMIUM TIMES have shown that the head of Nigeria’s
Office of WAEC, Isaac Adenipekun, did not attend the meetings but sent
in representatives who could not make critical decisions.
According
to a source who attended, at this year’s meeting which held in January
in Abuja, the WAEC representative could hardly make any meaningful
contribution to discussions “simply because such decisions are bigger
than the representative and he would need to get back to the HNO in
Lagos on every issue.”
The source, who does not want her name
in print, said; “When others have their CEOs in attendance, only WAEC
would be represented by a very junior staff. In fact, you would see the
annoyance on the faces of the other CEOs because there has been no
commitment from WAEC.
“The HNO would not come to meeting and
wouldn’t even bother to know what the outcome of the meeting was. The
man seems to be acting as if WAEC is bigger than Nigeria. Maybe because
it is a regional examination body, but the interest of Nigeria should be
larger than that of any other nation,” the source told PREMIUM TIMES.
“WAEC
would tell you it is a regional examination body and cannot take
decision alone. Yet, more than 60 per cent of its candidates are
Nigerians. Both the Registrar and the HNO are Nigerians but they cannot
protect the interest of Nigerians.”
The source added that JAMB had initially considered reviewing its timetable for the sake of the students but apart from the fact the examination body had
“rescheduled
too many things this year because of the general elections, WAEC has
also not shown any concern since the matter was raised. The arrogance is
something we cannot tolerate any longer.”
“What WAEC does not
know is that it has an alternative. When candidates notice frequent
clashes they will opt for NECO that will not clash with UTME. Maybe by
then, the ego of WAEC management would have been deflated,” the source
added.
When PREMIUM TIMES called the attention of the head of
Public Affairs Unit of WAEC, Demianus Ojijeogu, to the clash in the
dates, he said it was not unusual and that it is a school-based
examination and not private-candidate examination like its
November/December option.
He, however, disagreed that the HNO
had not been attending the meetings, deliberately, saying he was sure
he had also attended such a meeting alongside other staffers of WAEC to
represent the examination body.
He said; “No one can blame
WAEC for the clash because we cannot singlehandedly change timetable in
Nigeria. WAEC is a regional examination and requires the input of all
the five-member states.
“And I won’t also agree that we are
not in talk with JAMB to resolve this. I want to believe talks are on
but until it is concluded, we cannot say anything.”
On his
part, the Head of Media and Public Relations of JAMB, Fabian Benjamin,
said JAMB tried to carry everyone along to ensure that the candidates
are not affected negatively in any way.
Mr Benjamin said, “The
2019 general election was actually responsible for the dates we chose,
but even at that, we ensured that the window period created during the
inter-agencies meeting was respected. We did this because we knew that
many of our candidates may have registered using “awaiting results”
status.
“We knew many would be taking part in 2019 SSCE either the one conducted by WAEC or NECO.”
He
added that even during admission processes, JAMB had ensured that
everyone was carried along so that all SSCE results are released before
admission processes start.
Reacting to the clash in dates, an
Islamic group – Muslim Rights Concern – in a recent statement appealed
to the two examination bodies to reconcile their timetables for the
benefit of the students.