Nigerian Universities and the Bastardization of Admission Processes
Nigerian Universities and the Bastardization of Admission Processes
The
processes of gaining admission into Nigerian universities have been
bastardized by the trio of JAMB, respective universities and desperate
parents. The once transparent admission process into Nigerian
universities has degenerated into a cash and carry fraudulent system
devoid of fairness, where the highest bidder carries the day. During our
own time, there was so much anxiety over Joint Admissions and
Matriculations Board (JAMB) examinations that students attended all
manners of extra-mural studies to pass. With the passage of time,
especially in the early nineties, graft entered into the JAMB admission
processes. Some special centres and villages became centres of ‘expo’
and malpractices. This led JAMB to continue to cancel centres where it
is suspected that malpractice took place. In the process, a lot of
innocent students were lumped for punishment with the guilty. Years
later schools started employing the services of policemen and other law
officers to stem the tide of malpractice. Two years into using the
policemen, they too became conduit pipes for the distribution of leaked
answer scripts and their usefulness was destroyed.
The situation degenerated so much that answer scripts were leaked
from either JAMB office in Lagos or respective zonal centres. In 1995
particularly, I remembered students hawking JAMB question papers
eighteen hours to the examinations. Those who felt the papers were fake
got the shockers of their lives when they discovered that their honesty
and patriotic home training was mocked on the exams hall. Few years ago,
I heard that some students distributed solved probable JAMB answers A,
B, C, D, E, etc on facebook to their friends.
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Speaking on the level of compromise associated with the examination, the Registrar of JAMB, Prof Dibu Ojerinde said that “In
2012 UTME, we had some disturbing news of extortion of money from
innocent candidates by greedy proprietors and supervisors all these
persons will be brought to book,” Earlier in that 2011 he told news men that “JAMB
is currently investigating some results of 7, 504 candidates, from some
centres which are suspicious…the results must undergo further screening
because of the unusual performances recorded by candidates from those
centre”.
Constant malpractice coupled with incessant demands for university
autonomy by lecturers under the aegis of Academic Staff of Nigerian
Universities (ASUU), Committee of Vice Chancellors and other university
pressure groups led to the acceding of the request for individual
universities to set exams for prospective students. This led to the
introduction of Post-University Tertiary Matriculation Examinations
(Post-UTME) exams. This Post-UTME examination is yet to solve the
problems associated with the earlier UTME, UME AND JAMB exams.
In the first instances, parents have to send or travel with their
wards to different universities to write Post-UTME exams. A student may
travel from Enugu to Abuja to write Post-UTME for University of Abuja,
and then travels again to Lagos to write for University of Lagos, then
moves to Port Harcourt to write that of University of Port Harcourt and
back to base to sit for Enugu State University of Science and
Technology’s exams, criss-crossing thousands of kilometers across
dangerous countryside to write exams. The students usually purchases
exorbitant exams forms from all these schools, travel to these
locations, and lodge in hotels or with boyfriends, girl friends and
sugar mummies in places if the cost of hotel accommodation is
unaffordable. I inquired of a girl in Abuja some time in 2009 from her
brother and was told that the girl traveled to Lagos to write Post-UTME
exams and never returned back again. Whether defilers, robbers or
ritualists caught hold of her and cut her br**sts, eyes etc for rituals,
nobody could tell.
In 2012 three prospective students traveling to UNN, Nsukka for
Post-UTME got involved in auto crash. I do not know whether they died
after being rushed to the hospital. During the same phased examinations,
the process was cancelled midway because the university discovered that
the papers actually leaked the night before. Some students told me that
they had the answers in their phones and distributed such through text
messages hours before the exams. The authorities told the students to go
home and come back later to rewrite the papers at the expense of
parents and sponsors. It was later discovered that some university staff
leaked the papers to their wards who in turn sold same to the highest
bidders. The embarrassed authorities with the aid of the police arrested
the erring staffers for prosecution.
Despite all these Post-UTME exams, some parents still pay for their
ward’s admission. Last year, a family told me that they paid N400.000
for their ward to read medicine in a university in Lagos, while another
family confided that they paid N240, 000 to help their ward secure
admission to read law in Port-Harcourt. This process disenfranchises
those who are supposed to be on the merit list because highest bidders
have taken over their chances. This is because some university staffers
reserve lots of chances for themselves which they can sell or dispense
as they deem fit.
This non-transparent process have made many parents to sell family
land, properties and life savings to send their frustrated wards to
schools in Ukraine, Belarus, Poland, Russia while few buoyant ones send
theirs to UK for admission. I have unenthusiastically assisted some
frustrated families with finance to send their wards to some of these
East-European schools and I kept on pondering at how Nigeria is
enriching other people’s economy due to moronic and educational
policies. This results in capital flight and the enrichment of other
nation’s education industry. Those who are not buoyant for overseas
enrollment litter the streets of Nigeria and constitutes nuisance to the
society. Many have joined robbery, kidnapping and prostitution gangs
because idle minds are devils workshops.
Nigeria’s Minister of Education Professor Ruqayyatu Rufai recently told a news conference that “out of the over 1.7million students that sat for the examinations in 2013, only 500,000 will gain admission”.
This means that 1.2 million students will be disappointed. In 2012,
1,503, 931 students sat for the exams and about 450,000 was admitted. In
2011 it was 1,493,603 with about 420,000 getting admitted. In 2010
according to JAMB about 1,375,642 sat for the exams with spaces for less
than 400,000. From the JAMB statistics, it is obvious that about
900,000 applicants were disappointed in 2010; 1 million applicants in
2011, 1.1 million others in 2012, 1.2 million ‘disappointed’ in 2013 and
probably 1.4 million come 2014.
Two years ago the Nigerian Senate made attempts to scrap Post-UTME
exams citing corruption and duplication of functions. The process failed
because the lawmakers couldn’t find a common ground of
acceptance. Around my residence in Abuja lots of brilliant students
have been writing JAMB and Post- UTME exams for many years and yet
cannot get admission. Some of them have gotten admitted only for their
names to disappear from the merit list. According to their frustrated
parents, the number on the merit list for some departments of their
choice are not up to 20% while the rest is admission by favoritism. In
the same neighborhood, some frustrated parents used political party
links and corrupt processes to get their wards admitted.
The solution to these anomalies is for NUC to relax processes for
establishment of universities. Their stringent condition is such that
only mega funded billionaire institutions and individuals can dare it.
How come Ghana is wooing Nigerian students to go there and study? They
have enough quality schools to contain their applicants and they
maintained qualitative small universities established at little cost.
Secondly JAMB should ensure that individual schools admit at least 50%
of those who write Post-UTME exams on the merit list. The amount of
money spent on these Post-UTME exams should be reduced and if the
universities cannot guarantee transparency, the process should be
scraped. Nigeria admission process have been compromised by individual
universities, JAMB, NUC, parents and applicants, and God will not leave
some people unpunished whose actions or inaction contributed to the
bastardization of the once transparent admission process.
Source:information nigeria
Source:information nigeria
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