JAMB bars 262 Institutions from Admitting Students
The JOINT Admissions and Matriculation Board, JAMB on Tuesday said
it had barred 262 institutions of higher learning from participating in
next year’s admission exercise for non-compliance with admission
guidelines.
JAMB Registrar, Professor Dibu Ojerinde who spoke at the Michael
Okpara University of Agriculture, Umudike, Abia state, at the opening
ceremony of the 3rd Combined Policy Committee meeting on
Admission to degrees, National Diploma, NEC and National Innovation
Diploma-Awarding institutions for 2012/2013, however, said 14 of the
institutions affected had complied with the laid down guidelines.
According to Ojerinde, the meeting would consider first choice of most preferred institutions of candidates and noted that the affected universities were sanctioned because they refused to abide by the board’s admission laid down guidelines, saying that in JAMB, it was no longer business as usual.
According to him, “From our exercise of verifying admission
compliance for 2011/2012, about 262 institutions were penciled for
delisting from next year’s admission exercise. However, about 14 have so
far complied with the laid down guidelines and regulations. We are
going ahead as directed by the Government to de-list the institutions
with effect from 2013 admission exercise.”
The Registrar charged participants in the meeting to “follow the guidelines which stipulate a 70:30 technology/non-technology ratio for National Diploma programmes and 60:40 Science/Arts ratio for the universities and colleges of education.”
Ojerinde urged them to adhere strictly to the Federal Government
guidelines on 45% merit, 35% catchment and 20% educationally less
developed, saying “All stakeholders are to adhere strictly to these
guidelines as the Federal Government is desirous of giving all Nigerians
equal opportunity to mix and educate in every part of the country.”
He also told them that the board expected every university to include
in the admission print-out, the criteria used in admitting the
candidates and that all admissions must come to an end by the end of
October 2012.
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