Daily Trust Sunday

Candidates’ lateness: JAMB will not reschedule exam, says Oloyede

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The Joint Admissions and Matriculat­ion Board (JAMB) said yesterday that there would be no rescheduli­ng of examinatio­n for candidates who reported late for the mop-up examinatio­n.

JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, said this while reacting to complaints by candidates sitting for the mop-up examinatio­n at the board’s Computer-Based Centre (CBT) in Bwari, FCT.

Oloyede, who led some staff members on the supervisio­n of the exercise, said the exam was a supplement­ary Unified Tertiary Matriculat­ion Examinatio­n (UTME) being conducted in 170 centres across the country.

He said 85,000 candidates slated for the mop-up exam were notified through text messages.

“There is nothing you can do … we placed adverts in newspapers, sent e-mails and text messages and if you did not get it, it means that you were not invited for the exam.

“A bulk Short Message Service (SMS) was equally sent to your telephone numbers that you provided during the registrati­on.

“We will not reschedule the exam for people who came late,” Oloyede said.

On complaints about system failure, Oloyede explained that the computers had been programmed to work under a specific time frame and urged candidates to engage the computers regularly to avoid disruption.

According to him, if a candidate sits down in the exam hall doing nothing, the computer is likely to shut down because there is a time frame for its usage.

“If you do not use it, it will go off. When you sit and you are not doing anything within that time frame, we also monitor from our system to ensure that candidates are not cheating,” he said.

Eighty five thousand of the 1.7 million candidates enrolled for the 2017 UTME had registered late for the exam and also had some challenges.

The mop-up examinatio­n which held in two sessions lasted for two hours from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. (NAN)

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