JAMB Admission Deadlines For Public and Private Universities

JAMB Admission Deadlines For Public and Private Universities

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has disclosed that the first choice admission for public universities which commenced from August 21st, will end on November 16. While that of private universities which commenced August 21st, 2019, will end February 15, 2020.

In the same vein, the second choice admission for public universities will be from November 17 to December 17, 2019.

This was disclosed by the JAMB’s Head, Media and Information, Dr. Fabian Benjamin, in an interview with newsmen in Lagos.

According to him, the decision on admission deadline which was taken during the policy meeting with stakeholders on June 11, at Gbongan, Osun, remains sacrosanct.

He further stated that the Board's major focus for 2019 admission was to ensure that candidates fill up more of the available admission spaces which was not the case in 2018 where over 500,000 available spaces were not utilized in all the tiers of tertiary institutions.

Meanwhile, the JAMB CAPS portal for 2019 which will enable candidates to monitor their admission status has been enabled, Candidates are to check this link: JAMB CAPS For 2019/2020 Admission Exercise: How To Check Admission Status for details on how to access their admission status.

Dr Fabian equally stated that the attention of the board had been drawn to reports in some quarters against the principles of transformation of scores by the board.

According to him, in every selection examination, marks of candidates are obtained as raw scores and then processed into usable scores.

This means that if, for instance, JAMB examines about two million candidates in 23 subjects, it is only natural that you normalise these scores so that the candidates can be rated on the same scale.

“In the process of normalising these scores, candidates who have scored zero in a particular subject can also have a value of a mark which may not be up to 20.

“In doing this, the psychometric formula globally used by all examination bodies gives even zero a value.”

“If the raw score indicates that a candidate has come on top in an examination, after the normalisation process, the candidate’s position will remain intact," he said.

Benjamin added that score transformation was not peculiar to JAMB but is done in countries such as India, Kenya and United Kingdom.


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