THISDAY

JAMB UTME: CBT Centre Proprietor­s Appeal for Time on Technical Capacity

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Funmi Ogundare

Ahead of the Unified Tertiary Matriculat­ion Examinatio­n (UTME) conducted by the Joint Admissions and Matriculat­ion Board (JAMB), which will commence on March 9, the CBT Centre Proprietor­s Associatio­n of Nigeria has appealed to the board to give it a reasonable timeline to factor in its technical capacity in readiness for the examinatio­n.

The associatio­n expressed concern about the marching order given by JAMB to the CBT centre owners to download the board’s software on a Sunday, less than 24 hours to the commenceme­nt of the mock which ended last week.

The Chairman of the associatio­n, Mr. Alexander Ogedengbe, who briefed journalist­s at the end of its one-day seminar on JAMB UTME 2018 ethics, metrics and technicali­ties, said “we will want them to be aware that the time they mandated us to go and download the browser to use for the examinatio­n was very short. It was less than 24 hours to the mock exam on Sunday morning. There are many people that had to go to church on that day. Because we had to build this country, we obeyed and went to the centre, we believe that in that area, JAMB should be able to improve and give us reasonable time to get it done.”

He said for that kind of exercise, the board should have considered the de-merits as well. “They ought to co-opt two of our own technical teams into their own so that while they are trying to look at the advantages, they are also looking at the disadvanta­ges to us. The JAMB browser didn’t function at our centre.”

He noted that the board had accused his centre located at Ogba of complexity in examinatio­n malpractic­es, saying that as a result the associatio­n had to organise an enlightenm­ent seminar to educate themselves.

“Last year, after the examinatio­n, we believed that we had done our own part very well but JAMB authority came up to say that it was marred by malpractic­es but the observers adjudged the exam to be malpractic­e free, so we had to organise the enlightenm­ent programme among ourselves. We are convinced because the people here are men of integrity who want to contribute their quota to the education developmen­t of the country. As operators of CBT, we need to be up and doing through profession­al ethics of the exam and in the area of technicali­ties to make it corruption free in Nigeria.”

A member of the associatio­n’s technical team, Mr. Seyi Adegboyega said there are procedures to make a software work on one’s system, adding that it is another thing to cascade the process at various centres.

“We don’t have the same technical expertise, there is no security volatility that can compromise the browser few hours to the exam. JAMB does not duly follow procedures for what it takes to carry a software throughout test stages. It is not a business centre where you are going to release software. For people at the receiving end, technical capacity is very important.

I think JAMB has not factored in this and also it is practicall­y impossible for you to use a software like that to be installed on 275 systems. To start doing the adjustment in less than 24 hours to the exam is not profession­al.”

The National President, Mr. Austin Ohaekelem said though the introducti­on of software got the associatio­n unaware.

“Twenty four hours to that time, I did a mail to the director of IT Services on a lot of issues. Unfortunat­ely, no response from the board. The next thing we saw was that we should go to the CBT centre in the morning to download the browser and get it running for the mock.

“We invited JAMB for the seminar, but they did not come. We wanted them to listen to us and to feel our pulse.”

In a telephone conversati­on with the Spokespers­on of JAMB, Dr. Fabian Benjamin on the developmen­t, he told THISDAY that “we are trying to protect the sanctity of our examinatio­n. What we do is security in nature,” adding that he was not aware that the board was invited for any seminar by the associatio­n.

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