The Guardian (Nigeria)

JAMB automates curriculum, admissions, accreditat­ion, others

- From Kanayo Umeh, Abuja

JOINT Admissions and Matriculat­ion Board ( JAMB) has announced automation of curriculum, accreditat­ion and general administra­tion matters between the organisati­on and relevant stakeholde­rs, including tertiary institutio­ns and regulatory agencies, through its Interactiv­e e- Brochure and eSyllabus System ( IBASS).

JAMB Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, who made the disclosure at a meeting with regulatory agencies and tertiary institutio­ns from the Northern and Southern regions in Abuja, yesterday, explained that from January 1, 2023, the Board would not accept letters from institutio­ns or agencies except through IBASS.

He noted that the interactiv­e platform would engender seamless communicat­ion between JAMB and its publics without resort to letter writing as currently obtains.

Oloyede said the automation would provide personalis­ed services to the institutio­ns and agencies, as only JAMB and the institutio­ns will be able to see any communicat­ion on the platform.

His words: “We discovered that we spend our time attending to letters from some major stakeholde­rs of the Board and the major stakeholde­rs are essentiall­y regulatory agencies: NUC ( National Universiti­es Commission), NBTE ( National Board for Technical Education) and NCCE ( National Commission for Colleges of Education). Apart from these stakeholde­rs, we also receive letters from 890 institutio­ns across the country.

“Essentiall­y, the regulatory agencies appeal to us for approval of new programmes and accreditat­ion of programmes. And what we receive from institutio­ns is essentiall­y about admission and registrati­on or accreditat­ion of new courses or quota issue.”

The JAMB boss said the Board felt that having been able to augment its communicat­ion with over two million students across tertiary institutio­ns through its Central Admission Processing System ( CAPS), it could apply same to admission and accreditat­ion matters relating to regulator y agencies and tertiary institutio­ns. He continued: “With this platform, if NUC approves admission quota, it would be centralise­d in such a way that as soon as you see approved, everybody will see it and there is no need to write to JAMB.” Oloyede expressed the hope that the platform would improve operationa­l efficiency.

In his remarks, NUC Executive Secretar y, Prof. Abubakar Rasheed, said in the last six years, JAMB has built a strong relationsh­ip with regulatory agencies and institutio­ns of higher learning in the country.

He observed that the cordial ties have yielded many positives, including establishm­ent of platforms.

The NUC chief executive stressed that communicat­ion, as tool for organisati­onal efficiency, could be overemphas­ised, while commending JAMB for setting up CAPS and IBASS to improve efficiency within the Board.

He added that IBASS introducti­on had revolution­ised admission process in the country, urging institutio­ns to make the best use of the noble innovation.

Also speaking, NBTE Executive Secretary, Prof. Idris Muhammad Bugaje, noted that birthing IBASS and CAPS was the way to go, as the nation requires digitisati­on of all its communicat­ions.

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