A peaceful protest on Wednesday marred the commencement of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) registration for the 2015/2016 session screening of candidates for the JAMB’s Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination.
However, the Registrar of UNILAG, Dr Taiwo Ipaye, said that only 9,000 out of the 32,000 candidates that applied for admission into the university were eligible for screening.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some of the parents of the candidates, who brought their children to the campus for the exercise, expressed their disappointments over their children’s exclusion from the JAMB’s list of shortlisted candidates.
Dr Ben Emone, a medical practitioner and parent, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that his son made UNILAG his first choice, and scored 260 marks in the UTME.
According to him, it has been the tradition of the university to peg its cut-off mark, at least, at 200 for the post UTME.
Emone expressed dissatisfaction at whatever reasons both the university and JAMB were posting for the sudden change in procedure.
“I will not take this whole thing they are trying to explain because my son passed the UTME convincingly.
“If there was to be any change, we should have been sensitised well ahead of time, and not just waking-up one morning to change the rule of the game.
“All I am saying is that my son must write this Post UTME or nobody will,’’ he said.
Mr Sodunke Oludotun, the National President, Association of Tutorial School Operators, blamed the crisis on the Registrar of JAMB, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde.
He alleged that Ojerinde was insensitive to the plights of parents.
Oludotun said that the JAMB registrar was wrong to have introduced such last minute decision after he had announced to the public that the cut-off mark for admissions into the universities was 180.
He said that the issues would have turned out differently if the registrar had gone an extra mile, to carry the general public along, in board’s policy making.
Also, JAMB’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Fabian Benjamin, said that what the parents were agitating for was uncalled for.
According to him, universities are at liberty to go higher than 180, as cut off marks, based on their peculiarities.
He said, however, that whatever cut-off points they were adopting must be uniformly applied to all candidates.
“I do not see anything wrong with what UNILAG has done.
“This is because a time will come when some universities may have to peg their cut-off points at 300 marks, based on performance.
“Before we send candidates to the universities, we normally ensure that we know their carrying capacities; because we do not want a situation, whereby, they will present more than they can admit.
“There are private universities and other tertiary institutions that also need candidates, so, we try to distribute evenly,’’ he said.
The spokesman said that JAMB, in its magnanimity, had posted students that scored above 200 and above to private universities, to forestall them from staying at home for another year.