THISDAY

Group Faults JAMB over Email Registrati­on for Minors

- Emma Okonji

The ongoing registrati­on exercise for entrance examinatio­n into tertiary institutio­ns for the 2017/2018 academic year, being organised by the Joint Admission and Matriculat­ion Board (JAMB), which mandates candidates to register with their personal email addresses, has been criticised.

The immediate past president of Informatio­n Technology Systems and Security Profession­als (ITSSP), Mr. Rogba Adeoye who criticised the order given by JAMB, mandating students to open personal email addresses as part of the criteria for registrati­on, said such orders negate the online protection of the students who are regarded as minors.

According to him, most of the students that register for JAMB were below 18 years of age and needed some forms of online protection since they are minors. “Since JAMB registrati­on is done online for the purpose of efficiency, it will be out of place to make it compulsory for candidates who are minors to open personal email addresses and be exposed to the dangers of the Internet without proof of protection from JAMB,” Adeoye said.

He therefore called on Registrar of JAMB to reverse the order of compulsory personal email address, and revert to the initial rules, where the email addresses of parents and guardians were allowed for JAMB registrati­on.

He insisted that that the idea of candidates’ email addresses will lead to child abuse since they are minors and needed protection when online. It is on record that JAMB admits 16 years of age and even less, into tertiary institutio­ns, who are not yet adult, so why should the same JAMB made it compulsory for the same candidate who is below 18 years to get personal email address, knowing fully well they are minors that needed online protection, Adeoye quarried JAMB. He said candidates below 18 years should be allowed to use their parents or guardian email addresses to enable the parents monitor what their children and wards who are minors, do online.

He however commended the recent cancellati­on of Mock JAMB examinatio­n by JAMB, since majority of the interested candidates were yet to register, owing to challenges resulting from slow registrati­on exercise, occasioned by low bandwidth in most registrati­on centres.

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