The major reason
accounting for the failure of candidates in the Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examination (UTME), conducted by the Joint Admissions and
Matriculation Board (JAMB) is the inability of many schools to make
e-learning a priority, thus making it extremely difficult for candidates
to manipulate computer in the exam hall.
This revelation came from the
Chief Learning Officer of Mandate Private Schools, Akesan, Igando,
Lagos, Rev. Sunday Attah. This, according to him, arose from the failure
of many schools to anticipate the introduction of computer- based exam
in the country. His words:
“The reason our students pass UTME
excellently well every year is because we were able, far back as 2008,
to predict the introduction of computer-based examination in Nigeria and
we immediately made e-learning from primary school to SS3 a top
priority.
At a forum in South Africa in 2008 which I attended and was organized by
the Nigeria based Accelerated Learning Group, we did a 5- year
projection on educational development where we predicted the adoption of
computer-based examination in Nigeria given our assessment of the
situation in other parts of the world.
There and then I decided to
introduce computer–based examination in my school which I implemented on
returning to Nigeria from South Africa .Thus, students of Mandate
Private Schools were already doing computer-based examination even
before JAMB introduced it.
The first step we took was to transform our SS1-SS3 classes to e-
learning classrooms. Each of the students has laptop and teachers’ notes
are transferred to students’ laptops through wireless devices. We have
given ourselves a time frame to introduce the intensive ICT education to
our primary section, which will make pupils/students from Primary 1 to
SS3 computer literate and internet friendly. These pupils and students
are taught by competent computer teachers in the use of word processing,
multimedia, internet, e-mail, desktop publishing, networking and
computer aided designs.
Their familiarity with computer gives them emotional and psychological
stability in the JAMB-conducted computer-examination.
This accounts for
the high figure of about 95% of our students who gain admissions to
various universities every year. I must quickly add that the reason for
the failure of many students across the country in the examination is
their lack of exposure to computer from their secondary schools.
Expectedly, such students will lose self-confidence in the examination
hall. Any student who is jittery in the examination hall as a result of
his or her inability to operate computer will fail woefully.’’
This claim of overwhelming success in the UTME, says the school
proprietor, is underscored by the large number of the school’s former
students who have graduated as well as those who are presently studying
in different universities around the world.
The list of these
undergraduate students, according to him, include Aminat Abolade who is
studying Medicine at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife; Bola Owate
also studying Medicine in the University of Lagos; Favour Attah is
reading Management Information System at Covenant University, Ota, Ogun
state, and Ashifor Oghene who is studying International Relations and
Diplomacy at the University of Benin.
The Chief Learning Officer continued: “We also have Jerry Ogwo and ‘Kemi
Omotade both of whom are studying Medicine in the University of
Ukraine.
Emmanuel Ichebi is reading Electrical Engineering at the
University of Agriculture, Makurdi while David Ogwo and Ebenezer Chiazor
are studying Computer Science and Electrical Engineering respectively
at Covenant University. On their part, Praise Attah and Laurel Chiazor
are students of International Relations and Economics respectively at
Benson Idahosa University, Benin City while Adnan Mojeed is reading
Aeronatic Engineering at the University of Ilorin.
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