FIRST, let me say that the efforts made by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to ensure the commencement of the 2017 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) registration are highly commendable. However, prospective candidates are facing some obstacles.
The UTME registrations forms were released on March 20, but only a few banks were allowed to give out the “vending PIN” to the prospective candidates. Although this is the normal procedure, students however have to wait for more than three or four days before they are given the PIN after payment has been made. This is very perplexing.
On many occasions, the banking officers informed prospective candidates that they were unable to connect to the JAMB network.
In addition, candidates spend up to four or six hours in the bank, jostling to pay for the UTME form and obtain the vending PIN. Till this moment, a large number of candidates are still in the front of a particular bank in Ilorin, Kwara State, struggling to register for the 2017 UTME. For how long do we continue like this?
This development in the UTME registration this year is alarming. I am aware that many prospective candidates travelled to Ilorin from other towns to do the registration. A person who had a conversation with me said he had travelled from Osi in Ekiti Local Government Area of Kwara State to Ilorin in order to do the registration.
It is now a must for prospective candidates in neighbouring towns like Eyenkorin, Ogbodonroko and other places to come to the state capital for the UTME registration. Unfortunately, they spend a lot of money on transport fare.
On April 1, I was at one of the accredited UTMEcentres at Tanke, Ilorin. Over 400 prospective candidates were waiting for registration. I arrived at the venue at 10:23 a.m and left the place around 3:45 p.m.
We struggled before we could be given the PIN and sat for five hours to ensure a successful registration.
Of course, we must endure. We all know that the facilities in the nation’s education sector are not commensurate with the number of students.
Still, we must not fold our arms and keep watching. This is the time to draw the attention of the concerned authorities to the problems facing prospective candidates so that lasting solutions can be found to them. If the truth must be told, the challenges currently confronting the prospective UTME candidates are enormous.
Therefore, the examining body must wake up to its responsibilities and put an end to these problems.
Adeyemi Daniel,
lionsden4dan@yahoo.com
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