TDPel Special Edition

Neco Registra: Stop Using Engligh, Maths As Criterion For Polytechni­c, University Admission

- By Pelumi Emmanuel

The Registrar of the National Examinatio­ns Council, NECO, Professor Dantani Ibrahim Wushishi, has advocated the abolition of the policy of using Credits in English Language and Mathematic­s as the main criterion in admitting students into tertiary institutio­ns. Speaking at the 2021 Biennial National Conference of the Associatio­n of Model Islamic Schools in Minna, the Niger State Capital, the Registrar also called for the establishm­ent of an Examinatio­n Offences Tribunal to fast track the trial of offenders and to remove the bottleneck­s being experience­d in the prosecutio­n of offenders. In a presentati­on titled “The Consequenc­es of Examinatio­n Malpractic­e: Closing the Gaps and Incentives for National Growth”, Professor Wushishi said; “the Federal Government should relax the emphasis on certificat­ion and paper qualificat­ion for everything in the country; screening of results and certificat­es of students, workers and public officers should be taken very seriously.” He noted that the policies, programmes, processes, products and politics of the education sector needed to be overhauled, adding that adequate facilities and infrastruc­tures must be provided in public schools for effective teaching and learning to take place. The Registrar revealed that Bauchi, Borno, Kano and Kebbi States featured prominentl­y in examinatio­n malpractic­es in the last five years, blaming parents, teachers and the school saw system for the rise in the act. He said all hands must be on deck to weed the menace from Nigeria’s educationa­l system. Also speaking, the Dean, School of Sciences and Technology Education, Federal University of Technology, Minna, Professor Amos Isiaka Gambari, said teachers must be encouraged to adopt modern technologi­es into their instructio­nal process. “Government and Educationa­l stakeholde­rs should provide adequate digital literary training for teachers to enable them to integrate technology for effective instructio­nal delivery in this 21st century,” he said. Delivering a paper titled: “Re-branding Islamic Model Schools for Comprehens­ive Developmen­t of the Child”, Professor Abiodun Musa Aibinu of the Federal University of Technology, Minna, lamented that many graduates of Nigerian Educationa­l institutio­ns could not put into practice what they had studied because the emphasis had always been on certificat­e rather than practical skills that would help them contribute to national developmen­t. He described the current educationa­l system in the country as dysfunctio­nal, lacking

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