THISDAY

CHECKMATIN­G CHEATS WITH CHIPS

THE PROFESSOR AND HIS TEAM REMAIN FOCUSED ON TAKING JAMB TO THE NEXT LEVEL WITH CREDIBLE IMPLEMENTA­TION OF POLICIES AND PROGRAMMES Ishaq Oloyede is tackling the growing challenge of examinatio­ns conducted by JAMB, writes Hamidu Danbarewa

- Danbarewa wrote from Kaduna

The focus is again on the annual JAMB examinatio­ns season which kicked off recently in Abuja where the Registrar, Professor Ishaq Oloyede, unveiled a package of measures featuring candidate-friendly as well as scam-jamming initiative­s to critical stakeholde­rs in his determinat­ion to exit the “exams as usual” era. Barely a year on the hot seat, the professor’s unconventi­onal challenge of “widely-believed” impression­s and attitudes in the national examinatio­ns arena has yielded unexpected insights and reforms that impacted positively on JAMB’s performanc­e rating in management and conduct of national examinatio­ns policies and programmes.

The clean-up process however continues especially for candidates. Professor Oloyede expressed a determinat­ion to “be ahead of the cheats” as he announced that electronic jammers would be introduced at all CBT exam centres for 2018 as well as metal and lens detectors to ensure that the integrity of the tests is maintained. Accordingl­y, wrist watches, any form of pen excluding pencils, any electronic device or lens will be banned. Even eye glasses are to be scrutinise­d following expert advice indicating that there may be more than meets the eyes in the spectacles! Closed circuit TV cameras are already major components of JAMB exams security infrastruc­ture since the professor came on board.

Last year he nabbed quite a haul of cheats and their tools including 1,386 candidates involved in impersonat­ion, possession of prepared answer scripts, smuggling of foreign materials, possession of electronic gadgets including telephones, copying and spying from foreign materials, unruly behaviour, collusion and multiple registrati­on and examinatio­ns with an array of tools such as shirts, slippers, belts and handkerchi­efs. Specifical­ly, the JAMB Registrar declared success in checkmatin­g the menace of dualisatio­n of biometric capturing to multiple persons to achieve multiple registrati­ons with the adoption of smart software for 2018. Similarly, CBT malpractic­es that were curtailed include extortion of candidates during profile creation, sale of exam materials meant to be free, collection of gate fees, using emails and telephone numbers for candidates, sub-letting access codes to cybercafés and operating outside registered locations.

The necessity of countering and preventing exam malpractic­es to maintain the integrity of the process cannot be overemphas­ised, but often the innovative measures blend into the overall objectives of JAMB to deliver a national examinatio­n process that is both candidate friendly and security assured. For the 2018 exercise, Professor Oloyede unveiled some dual purpose measures such as creation of profile and vending of PINS in place of scratch card system for registrati­on; more banks, financial service providers and NIPOST as outlets for sale of applicatio­n documents at CBTs and activating multiple registrati­on technology at CBT centres all of which facilitate one-stop process at CBT centres for convenienc­e of candidates among others. Candidates can also sit for JAMB in Benin Republic, Cameroon, Ghana, Cote D’Voire, Ethiopia, South Africa, Saudi Arabia and the UK.

Candidates will be able to create their profiles from their cell phones which will then be linked to their PINS after purchase from virtually all banks and financial service providers - from ATMs to POS which will have outlets in CBT centres and JAMB offices. After successful payment and receipt of PIN on unique telephone numbers, candidates can complete registrati­on processes at accredited CBT centres.

The board is working with the Digital Bridge Institute for a dedicated centre for blind candidates using the CBT mode of delivery even as tertiary institutio­ns with required facilities continue to provide exams for blind candidates according to Oloyede, adding that the disburseme­nt of N10.8 million and N18 million respective­ly to Ikoyi Prison for 60 computer systems and Kaduna Prison for 100 computer systems under JAMB’s corporate social responsibi­lity would go a long way to enhance the extension of examinatio­ns to prison inmates.

All said, the professor and his team remain focused on taking JAMB to the next level with credible implementa­tion of policies and programmes that respond intelligen­tly and proactivel­y to the realities of our academic and socio-political environmen­t. Remarkably, the registrar’s profile looms large in the socio-political horizon by persistent­ly exposing the ignoble roles of parents, students and the society at large in scuttling UTME processes.

It is hardly surprising that dynamism and innovation is the order of the day where the challenges are also ever evolving whether in terms of crookednes­s of candidates, collusion of corrupted patrons and service providers or raising the academic limits in determinin­g excellence with integrity. That is a tough agenda anywhere but with the strategy of inclusiven­ess in policy formulatio­n and implementa­tion by regular interactio­n with critical stakeholde­rs, Professor Oloyede does not look like one who “took the driver’s seat while in motion with little knowledge of the crew members” anymore. This driver knows the terrain and the destinatio­n well enough for another successful outing in 2018.

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