The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has announced the release of its guidelines for the 2016 admissions’ process.
The method, described as the point
system option, was adopted after an extensive one-week meeting JAMB had
with universities and other tertiary institutions’ administrators in
the country.
According to the guidelines contained in
a statement placed on its website on Monday night, JAMB said that the
modalities were going to be based on point system.
While explaining how the admission
process would work for Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination
candidates and direct entry students, the organisation stated that
universities were going to charge fees for screening of candidates at
the end of the process for admission.
According to JAMB, the new method uses a point system to offer provisional admission to candidates.
“Before a candidate can be considered
for screening, he/she must have been offered a provisional admission by
JAMB. The JAMB admission checker portal is going to be opened soon for
this process, so praying is all you can do now,” JAMB said.
The second process, it said, was the point system where admission would depend on the point tally of the candidate.
The statement said, “JAMB’s provisional
admission no longer makes much sense this year, your points tally will
decide your faith. The points are evenly spread out between your O’
Level and JAMB results to provide a level-playing field for all.
“In the first case, any candidate who
submits only one result which contains his/her relevant subjects already
has 10 points. The exam could be NECO, WASSCE, November/December WASSCE
etc, but any candidate who has two sittings only gets 2 points. So this
means that candidates with only one result are at an advantage but only
just.”
The organisation added that the “next
point grades fell into the O’ Level grades where each grade would have
it equivalent point; A=6 marks, B=4 marks, C=3 marks, so the better the
candidates’ grades, the better his or her chances of securing
admission this year.
“The next point is the UTME scores where
each score range has its equivalent point which can be summarised thus,
180-200=20-23 marks, 200-250=24-33 points, 251-300=34-43, 300-400=44-60
points,” JAMB explained.
Giving a breakdown, JAMB explained that each category would contain five JAMB results per point added.
For example a candidate with 180-185 gets 20 points, while a candidate with 186-190 gets 21 points.
JAMB added that the point system for direct entry would be released soon.
JAMB stated that fees would still be charged for screening which would replace the Post UTME test.
JAMB also emphasised that catchment and
educationally less-developed state would still be used for admission
into the nation’s tertiary institutions.
JAMB said, “Merit contains 45 per cent
of the total candidates for a particular course, Catchment contains 35
per cent and ELDS and staff lists contains the rest. Cut off marks will
be released by the institutions this year in the form of points and not
marks.
“If a school declares its cut off mark
for Medicine as 90 points and JAMB grants a candidate with 250 a
provisional admission but his/her total points falls short of the 90
points, then he/she will lose the admission. So the provisional
admission is just a means to an end, not the end in itself.”
No comments:
Post a Comment