Monday, September 3, 2012

Get Your Jamb Admission Letter

Get Your Official Jamb Admission Letter

The Original JAMB Admission letter is a document that officially certifies that your have been offered provisional admission into any degree programme in a Nigerian Higher Institution.

It contains information about the school you were offered admission, the faculty/school/college, department, the degree you are pursuing and the duration of the course.

Without this document, you cannot authentically prove to any body that you were offered admission into any higher institution in Nigeria. It is issued ONLY by JAMB, the official Educational board in Nigeria for Tertiary Institutions.

Uses Of this document


The JAMB Admission Letter is very important as it is usually required if;

1. you need to successfully complete your admission registration and clearance process.
2. You need to be approved and deployed for the National Youth Service Programme (NYSC).
3. you need to succesfully apply for a scholarship. Most Companies and Organizations will request for it.
4. you need to process your Travel Abroad documents.

As you can see, the document is exceptionally important hence the need to protect it and ensure that it is always available to you.

The Original JAMB Admission letters since 2006 till date are currently available

Sunday, July 22, 2012

EXTORTION OF NIGERIANS FOR UNIVERSITY ADMISSION

WHEN Nigerian universities were authorised to conduct their own Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) as part of undergraduate admission process, they also introduced into the scheme a sinister game known as hide-and-seek. Part of the illegal plot involves massive financial extortion of prospective students and their parents. On a scale of absurdity or infamy, this one takes the top prize in the league of fraudulent practices invented and nourished by corrupt university administration officials in their determination to rig their own undergraduate admission system.
Are Nigerian universities offering admission to the highest bidders? Many prospective students and their parents are likely to respond in the affirmative. They have valid reasons to do so. Undergraduate admission places are being traded as commodities or commercial products. Candidates with lower scores (who are more financially endowed) are snapping up limited opportunities that ought to have gone to other candidates who achieved impressively higher scores in the UTME examinations.
Listen to agonising stories narrated by parents whose children sat the recent UTME examinations and who were denied admission despite the high scores they received. Why should prospective undergraduate students who apply for places in Nigerian universities be given unnecessary run-around, a vague way of muddling a process that ought to be transparent in intent and execution? Merit ought to drive the admission process in our universities. Unfortunately, it is not the case.
When parents are regularly denied clear explanations why their children who achieved high scores in the UTME examinations have not been offered places in the universities, they succumb to illegal demands for payments as a backdoor means of securing admission for their children. The magnitude of this crime is disturbing. It is widespread. It ennobles corruption.
The increasing adoption of crooked processes for admitting students into Nigerian universities has sullied the image of universities and diminished the quality of higher education in the country. If senior university officials claim ignorance of this malpractice, it must be because they don't want to hear about it or because they are direct beneficiaries of the scheme. For now, they have chosen to adopt the role of the three monkeys that prefer to see nothing, hear nothing and say nothing.
Why should students and their parents be subjected to weeks and months of anguish in their efforts to make sense of university admission selection criteria that are deliberately mangled, complicated, unclear, unhelpful, unfriendly and unfathomable? When prospective students make simple requests for clarifications about the deliberately skewed and crooked admission process, the typical response is that selection is based on three key criteria. The first reason is that admission is based on merit, in particular a student's excellent performance in the UTME examination. This point has been contested vigorously by students and their parents, in light of the backroom deals that often result in admission being offered to students with very low scores.
The second explanation points to the so-called "catchment area" logic (that is, students are selected on the ground that they hail from states which are closely located to the university). The third underlying principle argues that selection decisions are based on the divine judgments of heads of departments. In some universities, heads of departments are automatically allocated a certain quota of the number of students to be admitted into their departments Other than merit-based selection, I have strong reservations about university admission procedures that privilege the selection of certain students over others, based chiefly on the proximity of the students' state of origin to their preferred university. If universities set minimum standards for admission, they must stick strictly to those criteria. Standards of selection should not be lowered deliberately in order to accommodate students whose home states and communities are geographically proximate to the universities. This particular principle makes nonsense of the philosophy that informs the use of examinations (UTME or post-UTME) to determine students who are academically qualified for admission. It is inappropriate for university admission to be decided on such a hollow argument.
Part of the reason why the nation has been overburdened with poor quality staff who occupy senior portfolios in the public service is because, for many years, federal ministries and departments were compelled to reflect "federal character" in the appointment of public servants. Rather than drive Nigeria's economic development, the "federal character" policy has driven the nation backwards.
The idea that heads of departments should be allocated a special quota of students to be admitted into their departments is an abuse of the admission process. It cannot be defended on sound logic. That rule gives heads of departments sweeping powers to decide who should be admitted and who should be denied admission. Owing to the open-ended nature of this privilege, it is often subject to gross abuses. Heads of departments can make selection decisions that are inherently biased, including decisions that are based on anecdotal assumptions rather than evidence tested through a fair examination process.
It is unthinkable that the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) which was instituted to check growing allegations of corruption among officials of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has now succeeded in cultivating at local university campuses the same evil that it was designed to eradicate. This is not evidence of progress but retrogression. It does not promote merit or excellence among students. It undermines rather than enhances the quality of students admitted into the universities, as well as the value of education offered to students.
Corruption breeds further sleazy practices. When students and their parents pay huge sums of money which are collected illegally by a clique that operates within the universities, the only guarantees given to parents and their wards are that receipts will not be issued and that payment does not constitute assurance that admission will be the final outcome. Parents and students who make illegal payments for which they receive no receipts are on their own. There is no evidence to uphold any claims they might make about payments they made. Corruption thrives in an environment in which payments are made but receipts are not issued by criminals who received the money.
The question must be asked why the Nigerian media, in particular privately owned and independent press, has kept silent in the face of the admission scandal in our universities. Editors and journalists cannot claim to be unaware of the magnitude of the fraud in the university admission system because parents and students have been complaining through letters addressed to the editors. If there is anything like investigative journalism in our society, the ongoing racket in university admission system should have been exposed. Investigative journalism in our system has collapsed owing to a range of factors such as lack of commitment by editors and media owners, inadequate financial resources to support public journalism projects, failure by news organisations to protect their journalists, as well as the culture of complacency in which journalists focus on one story today and abandon it tomorrow.
Why are men and women of integrity who manage university education in the country quiet on this disreputable conduct? The quality of teaching and learning in Nigerian universities has already deteriorated so badly that overseas institutions no longer consider the products of our universities as worthy of scholarly engagement. Now, a new form of fraud has been added to the execrable image of our universities. Vice-Chancellors of universities and the National Universities Commission (NUC) must lead in this house cleaning campaign. They have an obligation to act quickly, unless of course they have sanctioned the sleazy practice.
It is odd that this high level of deception and financial fraud are taking place in the university admission system in a country in which an anti-corruption agency – the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) – continues to delude the public that it is doing a fantastic job of catching corrupt officials at every level of society. If the EFCC wants to catch corrupt university officials, it should look no further than the victims of university undergraduate admission.
A rotten education system will always produce rotten outcomes. Nigerian universities are sowing today the seeds of poor graduate outcomes for the future. It is a dreadful experience that must concern everyone who has a stake in promoting quality in higher education. Many parents and prospective students have suffered incalculable emotional trauma caused by a system that promised fairness and transparency but has delivered discrimination, inequality, favouritism, and nightly anxiety. Undergraduate admission in Nigerian universities must be based on merit and nothing else.

Check UNIZIK 2012/2013 Post UTME

This is to officially inform you that the 2012/2013 post UTME result of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University (UNIZIK) Awka has been released.

In her bid to maintain her position as a strike-free university with the fastest academic calender in Nigeria, the school management has announced her readiness to complete the admission process in no time from now.

Result-checking is free and is free at my.unizik.edu.ng. Only candidate's JAMB registration number is required.

We will update you as soon as more event start rolling in from the school. Stay tuned with us, the UNIZIK admission list will be out any time from now.

Check Ebsu 2012/2013 post Utme result

We wish to inform all prospective student of Ebonyi State University (EBSU) that the ebsu 2012/2013 post utme result is out.
Checking of the EBSU post UTME result is already in progress, thus all prospective students should visit the University portal to check their results.
Steps to checking EBSU 2012/2013 Post UTME Result
Visit www.ebsu-edu.net
1. Log on to Supply your JAMB registration number and the result will display.

6 New Federal Universities in Nigeria to Commence Operation by 2012

The President, Goodluck Jonathan has recently announce that 6 new Federal Universities in Nigeria will commence operations by 2012. Although the present federal universities in Nigeria are not up to standard nevertheless the president wants to add more universities.
Some of us actually think the president of Nigeria should rather use the money to improve the presently operation federal universities in Nigeria rather than award new universities in Nigeria.
The president of Nigeria also assures that the sum of 10 billion naira will be made available to start the new federal Universities in Nigeria while the committee responsible will have 1billion naira available to make sure everything goes well.
I think this another medium for Nigerian Professors to embezzle money and claim they are about to start internationally standard federal universities in Nigeria but at the end of it all they will be poorer or rather worse than the present federal universities in Nigeria.
Let me know what you think if to add new federal universities in Nigeria or to maintain the available federal universities in Nigeria.

Monday, June 11, 2012

List of Nigerian Universities

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

UST First Choice Post-utme 2012/2013 Screening Exercise

Advertisement on 2012/2013 Post-UTME Screening Exercise
for 1st Choice Candidates


NOTICE TO ALL CANDIDATES SEEKING ADMISSION INTO THE RIVERS STATE UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FOR 2012/2013 ACADEMIC SESSION
 All candidates who choose the Rivers State University of Science and Technology as their 1st choice University during the 2012 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) are hereby requested to take note of the following:-
 i.    The screening exercise for admission of candidates will be administered only on candidates who chose RSUST as their first choice University. 
ii.   Candidates who chose RSUST as their second choice are not expected to apply.
iii   Candidates who scored 180 and above in the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) are qualified for the screening exercise in all the Faculties of the University.
iv.  Candidates must possess the basic five (5) O’ level credit passes in accordance with the University’s Entry Requirements (Faculty /Departmental) before applying for the screening Exercise.
v    Candidates are expected to register for the screening exercise On-line by logging onto www.ust.edu.ng and make e-payment of Two Thousand, Five Hundred Naira only (N2,500.00) by using Interswitch Verve enabled cards.   
vi   Candidates will be required to upload their O ‘Level results and a scanned copy of their passport  photograph.
vii  Candidates are to note that the mode of screening exercise is ELECTRONIC. It is important that candidates practice how to use the computer especially the use of mouse and keyboard before they turn up for the screening exercise. In addition, the Information Technology Centre (ITC) may be conducting a 1-week demonstration session prior to the examination date to candidates for the screening exercise.
vii  The closing date for the registration of the Post-UTME screening exercise is 8th  June, 2012

SCHEDULE FOR THE SCREENING EXERCISE
The Post-UTME screening exercise will take place from Monday 11th to Thursday 14th June, 2012 at the Information Technology Centre (ITC) of the University.  Candidates are requested to please note that the Post-UTME screening exercise is as scheduled in the screening exercise slip they printed out after their On-line registration.  The scheduled date, time and venue shall be indicated in the Post-UTME examination slip.

Consideration will not be given to candidates who fail to appear for the screening exercise on the scheduled date and time.  All candidates for the screening exercise are required to come to the examination venue with their Post-UTME exam slip printed out during the On-line Post-UTME registration.

Candidates should note that GSM phones will not be allowed into the Examination hall during the Post-UTME screening exercise.

Parents, Guardians and Well-wishers are advised to stay away from the venue of the screening exercise

Candidates must report at the examination venue one (1) hour before the scheduled exam time on their exam slip.

Further details about the screening exercise can be obtained on-line at www.ust.edu.ng

It is important to note that the names of successful candidates for admission shall be published on the same site (www.ust.edu.ng.).

HOW TO TRANSFORM NIGERIA'S EDUCATION SYSTEM

• Protesting students of Tai Solarin University of Education

A senior lawyer asked a junior lawyer in his chambers why an assignment he gave him was not executed. The junior lawyer replied, 'I forgetted'.

This is a true story and it is not an isolated event. Data from Nigerian Universities Commission (NUC) shows that only about 23per cent of students, who enter Nigerian universities have a credit pass in English language and Mathematics. With very poor foundation from the secondary schools nationwide, most of our university students are poorly equipped for focused and productive intellectual academic pursuits.

Many buy passing grades from unscrupulous lecturers with money and sex. Therefore, many university graduates in present day Nigeria are just like the junior lawyer who 'forgetted' to do the assignment that was given to him.

But our problems as a nation are even worse. Apart from an overwhelming number of adult illiterates, numbered at over 40 million, 90.8 per cent of eligible early childhood students, 30 per cent of primary school children, 65 per cent of Junior Secondary School children, and 61 per cent of senior Secondary School children are out of school, deprived of the benefits of education in a country where the Constitution demands free and compulsory basic education as a mandatory law of the land.

An illiterate population is a fertile breeding ground for terrorists, tribalists and dangerous, gullible, volatile superstitious miscreants in society who can be manipulated by disgruntled elements to ferment and ignite great havoc in society. Nigeria therefore direly needs to educate her citizens throughout the country as a matter of great priority. A revised education curriculum that includes the study of the Nigerian Constitution at all levels of education will be a potent tool for nation building. Great national values such as Democracy, Social Justice, Equality, Non-tribalism, Human Dignity, Accountability, Rule of Law, Respect for Diversity, and Tolerance, can be taught as part of the educational curriculum, and brought to life in the classroom in a manner that will transform each student into a valuable and decent citizen, permanently.

Specific problems and roadblocks in our current educational system have been highlighted and discussed briefly. A number of these problems and issues can be dissolved over the next four years to bring true sanity to our educational system, and to our national life and polity.

SOME SPECIFIC PROBLEMS WITH NIGERIAN EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM

1. THE PROBLEM OF MASS FAILURE IN WAEC
The following data from West African Examination Council (WAEC) on the performance of students nationwide in WASSCE over the past six years revealed that the percentage of students with five credits including English and Mathematics ranged from 13.76per cent (2008) to 27.53 per cent in 2005.

PERFORMANCE IN WASSCE, 2005-2010 (Source: WAEC)
YEAR NO OF CANDIDATES %WITH 5 CREDITS INCLUDING ENGLISH AND MATHEMATICS

2005 1,091,676 27.53
2006 1,184,348 15.56
2007 1,275,330 25.54
2008 1,369,142 13.76
2009 1,373,009 25.99
2010 1,351,557 24.94
The NUC and WAEC-reported percentages nationwide include data from private and exceptional schools where students generally do well. If you isolate private school excellent results from the above data, it should not be difficult to understand the tragedy in our public schools where most Nigerian students receive their education.

Education in Nigeria is structured in three tiers: Basic education, Secondary School education, and Tertiary education. Traditional Basic education offered to children between ages three and 14 in Nigeria consists of three years of early child care and development education, 6years of primary education and three years of Junior Secondary education. Non-traditional Basic education includes educational outreach to nomadic and migrant children, Almajirais, and mass literacy intervention. Traditional Basic education is followed by 3years of Senior Secondary School and then Tertiary education.

SOLUTION TO THE PROBLEM OF MASS FAILURE IN WAEC
The problem that shows up as mass failure in WAEC every year is only a symptom of a bad disease that was there all along which could have been diagnosed and treated by standardized and nationwide exam from Junior Secondary school (JS1). Academic weaknesses of the students will be detected earlier. Poor performing teachers whose students do poorly on the standardized exam will be warned and assisted to do better; but if the teacher continues to perform poorly, he/she will be replaced.

There will be no more automatic promotion. The performance of each student on the standardized national exam or a local repeat exam after remedial studies will be a factor in promotion to the next class. If, at every level of their educational experience, both teachers and students put in same level of effort that they expend every year in preparing for both Junior and Senior WASSCE, the outcome of their learning experience will be remarkably different. By the time a student gets to SS3 under this structure and discipline, the performance will be better and WAEC mass failures will be history. We will still work on teacher motivation and commitment, improvement of facilities and infrastructure where possible and necessary.

2. PROBLEM OF ACCESSIBILITY AND ENROLLMENT IN SCHOOLS

The Nigerian Constitution states that 'government shall strive to eradicate illiteracy, and to this end, government shall, as and when practicable, provide:

• Free, compulsory and universal primary education
• Free secondary education
• Free university education
• Free adult literacy programme
In spite of the constitutional mandate to eradicate illiteracy through free and compulsory education, the education ministry in Nigeria has not applied imaginative initiatives to enforce free and compulsory Universal Primary Education. Recent data from a 2009 report by the ministry show that of 22 million children expected in early childhood schools, only 2.02 million are enrolled, leaving a short fall of 19.98 million out of school.

For primary school, out of expected enrollment of 34.92 million, actual enrollment is only 24.42 million, leaving a short fall of 10.5 million children at home. For Junior Secondary school, expected enrollment is 9.27 million; actual enrollment is 3.27 million, leaving a short fall of 6.0 million children out of school. For non-formal adult education, out of 40 million illiterate adults, only 500,000 are enrolled, leaving a short fall of 39.5 million. The problem of accessibility and non-enrollment is even more severe in Senior Secondary schools. Out of a potential enrollment population of 7.2 million, only 2.8 million (28 per cent) are actually enrolled. At the university level, it is reported that only sixper cent of students who want university education are admitted nationwide. [to be continued]

•Nwangwu, a professor of pharmacology, toxicology and clinical pharmacy, presented this paper, titled 'How to Transform the Educational System in Nigeria for the Immediate Benefit of the Nation', at the 2011 National Youth Summit, held at International Conference Centre, Abuja.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO) 2012/2013 Post UME Screening

The management of the Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO) has at last cleared the confusion that kept her 2012/2013 prospective candidates worrying in a recent couple of weeks past.
The date of the 2012 post UTME has now been fixed to take event between Thursday, June 14 to Saturday, June 16, 2012.
Eligibility for FUTO 2012/2013 post UTME
The university has invited all candidates who chose FUTO either as first or second choice in the 2012 UTME. Such interested candidates must as well have obtained a minimum of 180 JAMB score as directed by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Examination Board, JAMB.
How to Register
The FUTO 2012/2013 post UTME registration form is sold at the rate of N1,000.00 (one thousand naira flat). And is obtainable at branches of the following banks nationwide: First Bank Plc, Diamond Bank Plc., UBA Plc. and First City Monument Bank.
What to do after depositing the money
1. Candidates should collect an e-transact slip from the bank for further use. Note: you must not lose this slip!
2. Proceed to complete the registration form with your e-transact receipt number and pin at: www.futo.edu.ng
3. Click on the Post-UTME Online form and follow the instructions.
4. Complete the application form carefully
5. Upload your passport photograph (photo size should not be more than 64kb in jpeg or gif format)
Preview the completed form and submit when you are sure of your entry
6. Print the completed on-line registration form
Required Documents: Applicants should come to the exam with the following:-
1. Original JAMB Result Slip and photocopy
2. HB pencil, eraser and sharpener
3. Two clear copies of the printout of the completed on-line registration form
4. UTME result slip and photocopy
5. Payment slip (e-transact slip) used for registration.

Examination Dates and Sitting Schedule for Federal University of Technology Owerri:

Thursday, June 14, 2012: Time 8.00am:
1. Electrical and Electronic Engineering (EEE)
2. Petroleum Engineering (PET)
3. Material and Metallurgical Engineering (MME)
4. Agricultural Engineering (AGE)
5. School of Agriculture and Agricultural Tech. (SAAT)
Friday, June 15, 2012: Time 8.00am:
1. Mechanical Engineering (MEE)
2. Civil Engineering (CIE)
3. Environmental Technology (EVT)
4. Chemical Engineering (CHE)
5. Polymer and Textile Engineering (PTE)
6. Food Science and Technology (FST)
7. School of Health Technology (SOHT)
Saturday, June 16, 2012: Time 8.00am:
All Departments in the following schools
1. School of Science (SOSC)
2. School of Management Technology (SMAT)
3. School of Environmental Technology (SOET)
How do I know my Exam hall and sit number?
The sitting schedule can be accessed online at www.futo.edu.ng
Helpdesk: For enquiries, send e-mails to: info@futo.edu.ng

ASUU threatens Mass Mobilization Against Oil Subsidy in Nigeria.

ASUU has threatened to mobilise Nigerians to the streets to protest against the proposed removal of oil subsidy by the Federal Government of Nigeria.
Dr Ademola Aremu, chairman of ASUU, while speaking at a symposium organised by ASUU on the proposed subsidy removal, which took place at the Institute of African Studies, on Friday, said the union rejected the proposal entirely.
DR. Aremu, who joined other discussants, including Professors Isaac Albert, Tam David West, Kassey Garba and Adeola Adenikinju, said Nigerians were fed up with the injustices in the government and would be forced to react in the best way they can.
“Is any refinery working in Nigeria despite all the monies spent and appropriated for turn around maintenance? I am not a prophet of doom but after Boko Haram, another group will still emerge because we are fed up with this system.
“The system is full of injustices and as long as injustices exist in the country, people will continue to react in the best way they can, through deep seated grievances,” he said
Professor Tam David-West, who described the proposed removal as sanctified falsehood, said Nigerians must go to the streets.
“They must not do it and if they do it, we must all go to the street. People should not stay at home. Oil subsidy is a sanctified falsehood, absolute lies,” he said.
While challenging President Goodluck Jonathan, Minister of Finance, Dr  (Mrs) Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala and her petroleum counterpart, Mrs Alison Maduekwe, to prove him wrong, the former minister wondered how Jonathan stood on the way of the people.
‘He is saying there is no going back on oil subsidy. I say no, he will go back. It is a lie to say Nigerians are paying the least oil price in the world. Going by their analysis, Nigerian workers should be earning about N184,000 to be at par with their mates in the United States.
“They have killed refineries through sabotage. You are asking the masses to pay for your inaction and to tighten their belt because their waist is loose, while you grow belly and cheeks in Abuja,” he said.
Professor Isaac Albert, Director of the Institute of African Studies, noted that Nigerian leaders were deceptive and living in self denial of reality, lamenting that the country was collapsing.
He wondered why leaders would want to make life more difficult for the downtrodden while government in Algeria had stopped taxing people for fear of revolution.

University of Ibadan (UI) 2012/2013 Post UTME Screening

University of Ibadan, UI is currently accepting application from her 2012/2013 prospective candidates for the admission into her various undergraduate programmes.
To be eligible to apply: you must satisfy the three under listed eligibility criteria:
1. Must have chosen UI either as first, or second or both choice in the 2012 UTME.
2. Must have obtained a minimum of 200 in the 2012 JAMB exams, to be proved by your Original JAMB Result Slip.
3. Must be at least sixteen (16) years of age by October 2012.
Examination date will be communicated soon after the University announce it.
How to Purchase UI Post UTME Access Code
Pay a sum of two thousand naira (N2000) into THE UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN Accounts (See the list below) at any of the branches of the following approved banks, nearest to you.
BANK ACCOUNT DETAILS
FIRSTBANK NIGERIA PLC, (Ac. No. available in banks)
MAINSTREET BANK (Ac. No. available in banks)
Note: A teller containing your name, amount paid , date of payment and the teller number is given at the bank.
How to fill UI post UTME form online
With information from the Bank teller, log into the online admission portal, to update your payment details. Supply your jamb registration number, teller number,bank and bank branch where the payment is made and the date of payment to generate user id and pin.
1st choice: For first choice candidates CLICK HERE
2nd choice: For Second choice candidates CLICK HERE
The online forms should be carefully filled following ALL necessary instructions, as mistake(s) may lead to disqualification. The form contains a total of four pages as listed below:
PAGE ONE: CANDIDATE’S BIO-DATA
- Complete the additional information required on this page. Note that some data have already been filled in for you.
- Kindly use functional e-mail addresses and telephone numbers to enable us reach you in the course of the admission exercise, whenever the need arises
- We need data of father,mother and or the guardian.
- Proceed to page two
- Before proceeding to the next page, check to ensure you have entered the correct information.
PAGE TWO: O LEVEL DETAILS
- Fill in your o level details.
- You can fill in a second sitting if there is a deficient in the first sitting o level result.
- Ensure correct and adequate information is provided.
- Proceed to page three
- Before proceeding to the next page, check to ensure you have entered the correct information.
PAGE THREE: CANDIDATE’S UME DETAILS
- Cross check the record displayed to ensure it is the same as what you scored in the UTME examinations.
- Proceed to page four.
PAGE FOUR: REVIEW
- Review all information supplied and ensure they are correct and accurate.
- You can go back and correct any mistake observed
- Click on “proceed to page 5″ to continue.
PAGE FIVE: REVIEW AND PRINT YOUR DETAILS
- The page contains a full detail of all your entries and payment information for confirmation and printing
- If you notice any error kindly click “Back to the previous page” to correct the error
- If you are satisfied with the information click “Final Submission”
- Please ensure that you check your entries properly before clicking on Final Submission as you may not be able to make any correction thereafter.
However, you can revisit the page to complete submission anytime provided the final submission has not been made.
All genuine inquiries should be directed to: admissions.ui.edu.ng/helpdesk
For further information on admissions, visit: http://www.ui.edu.ng/admissions.

UNN Post UTME 2012 /2013 Screening Exercise Date Is Out!

UNN Post UTME 2012 /2013 Exam Date is out. This examination is for those candidates who chose UNN either as their first or second choice of university and scored 200 and above in the 2012 JAMB UTME examination.

The UNN Post UTME 2012 /2013 Exam will begin on the 18th of June (Monday) till the 20th of June (Wednesday), 2012.

Qualified candidates are required to pay the sum of Two thousand naira (N2, 000.00) and obtain a scratch card from the following Banks all over the country:

Diamond Bank Plc
First Bank of Nigeria Plc
University of Nigeria Micro-Finance Banks at Enugu and Nsukka.

After the purchasing the scratch cards, potential candidates should go the school portal at www.portal.unn.edu.ng to complete the UNN Post UTME 2012/2013 Screening form online. Candidates are not to scan any passport photograph on their forms.

Make sure you print your acknowledgement slip after registering on the UNN Portal

Requirements for the Screening Examination

Candidates are to come to the examination hall with the following documents:

1. Original JAMB Result Slip.

2. A copy of the University of Nigeria Nsukka online Registration form duly completed

3. Writing Materials include: HB pencils and Erasers

Prohibited Items: Mobile Phones, Calculators, Organizers and Mathematical Tables



Examination Time Table



DAY ONE

DATE: June 18, 2012 (Monday)

FACULTIES:

Faculty of Medical Sciences

Faculty of Dentistry

Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences

Faculty of Health Sciences & Technology

Faculty of Veterinary Medicine



DAY TWO

DATE: June 19, 2012 (Tuesday)

FACULTIES:

Faculty of Law

Faculty of Education

Faculty of the Social Sciences

Faculty of Arts



DAY THREE

DATE: June 20, 2012 (Wednesday)

FACULTIES:

Faculty of Business Administration

Faculty of Engineering

Faculty of Physical Sciences

Faculty of Environmental Studies (including all candidates who applied for Surveying & Geoinformatics)

Faculty of Biological Sciences

Faculty of Agriculture

Venue

Information on the designated centers for the screening exercise will be made available at the campus and on the UNN official website on the 17th of June, 2012

Online Application Deadline

Registration begins on the 1st of June (Friday) and ends on the 12th of June (Tuesday)

NOTE

UNN Post UME/UTME Past Question and Answer for all faculties cost is N1000.

We only send the UNN Post UME past question and Answer to your Email. You will have to download and print it out. If interested in getting the past questions, Call Mr. Chibuzor on 07033378184.

TO GET YOUR UNN POST UME/UTME PAST QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Pay N1000 into the bank account below:

Bank name; Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB)

Account name; Chibuzor Tochi Onyemenam

Account number; 591 589195 1590

Send your names, email address, teller number, and bank location to 07033378184 after payment.

You will receive your past questions and answers in your email ONLY after your payment has been verified. It will be delivered into your email after 12-24 hours of confirmation of your payment.

UNIBEN 2012/2013 Post UTME Screening Exercise

The University of Benin UNIBEN Post-UTME Test Application process for 2012/2013 academic session will run between Monday, 28th May 2012 and end midnight of Sunday, 10th June 2012, while screening will take place on Friday, 15th June 2012 and Saturday, 16th June 2012 in designated Centres within Ugbowo Campus of UNIBEN. ALL candidates are expected to be seated latest one hour before the stipulated time for the screening exercise.
Note that, only candidates who chose UNIBEN as First Choice and scored 200 and above in the UTME are eligible to participate in the Screening Exercise.
Instructions
  • Click on ‘Register for application‘ to proceed.
  • Enter your FIRSTNAME as it appears on your JAMB REGISTRATION or RESULT SLIP, and a VALID email address (immediately your login authentication details will be sent to your mailbox).
  • Click on Button below titled “Get login credentials”.
  • Open your mail to get your login details (USERNAME and PASSWORD) that you will use for all your subsequent logins until you finally submit your application form.
  • Go to uniben-kofa.waeup.org and click on ‘Login’ (at the top right corner of the page).
  • Enter your username and the password to login.
  • To start the application process, please click on ‘Edit application record’ and provide all required information and upload your passport photograph.
  • Upload a clear 1” x 1” COLOURED passport photograph with red background in JPEG format only. NOTE that the photograph uploaded will be the only valid ID for all admitted candidates throughout their stay in the University of Benin.
  • To pay for the application, click on ‘Add online payment ticket’ at the bottom of the page. Then click on ‘College Pay’ on the top left corner of the page. Follow the instruction to pay with an ATM-enabled Verve or Master Cards only from any commercial bank.
  • Application fee is N2,000.00 and payment is through Interswitch payment gateway, consult your bank to ensure that your ATM card is enabled for web transactions. Only Verve & Master cards are allowed. You can also obtain enabled Verve Cashcard from any commercial bank for the payment of the application fee, if you do not have an ATM card.
  • Preview and confirm your information before submiting your application on-line and then print out an acknowledgement slip that contains your screening schedule.
  • You cannot edit your application after submission.
  • Application website closes by mid-night on Sunday, 10th June, 2012.
  • The grouping of courses, day and time of screening exercise are as indicated below.
S/N GROUP DATE TIME
1. Social sciences Saturday, 15th June, 2012 10am-11am

Management sciences

Education – Soc. sciences

Education -Mgt. sciences
2. Engineering Saturday, 15th June, 2012 2pm-3pm

Physical sciences

Education- physical sciences
3. Medicine Saturday,16th June ,2012 10am-11am

Dentistry

Basic medical sciences

Pharmacy

Dentistry

Life sciences

Agriculture
4. Law Saturday, 16th June,2012 2pm-3pm

Art

Education arts

Candidate are to come to the screening centres with the following:
  • Acknowledgement slip and bank teller for identification.
  • Four figure table (where applicable)
  • Writing materials (HB pencil and Eraser).
Note that GSM phones and calculators are not allowed.

ABIA STATE UNIVERSITY 2012/2013 POST UTME SCREENING

Abia State University(Uturu) 2012/2013 post-utme screening test would come up on the 13th of June, 2012 at the University Premises.
ELIGIBILITY FOR THE 2012/2013 ABSU POST-UTME
Candidate for the examination must have selected the University as their First and/or second choice most preferred Institution in the 2012/2013 JAMB UTME.

• Candidate must have obtained the UTME official cut-off of 180 and above in the JAMB UTME examination.
• Candidate must have a minimum of six(6) credits including mathematics and English.
APPLICATION PROCEDURE
Candidates for the screening examination, are to obtain the screening Forms at any of the following banks;
- Eco bank,
- Zenith Bank,
- Keystone Bank,
- First Bank and
- Union Bank plc.
SCREENING DATE AND VENUE
The absu post-utme examination, would take place on the 13th of June 2012 at the University premises(Uturu)

Thursday, May 31, 2012

JAMB UTME 2012/2013 Cut-Off Marks -University, Polytechnic, College Of Education

After the release of the 2012/2013 JAMB UTME Results, Candidates who have seen their scores are now patiently waiting for their fate to be decided by the Post UTME screening exercise by institutions they have applied for with fingers crossed, fasting and prayers.

The wait won't be for long as the Cut-Off Marks for admission into various institutions(University, Polytechnic, College of education) has been released.

Note: You can now buy a Change of Institution Scratch Card if your score does not meet the required mark for Post UTME - Hurry!

JAMB UTME 2012/2013 University Cut-Off Marks
University of Port Harcourt, UNIPORT:
200 and above for Dentistry, Pharmacy, Engineering (except Civil & Environmental Engineering), Management Sciences, Medicine, Nursing and Social Sciences;
180 and above for others are invited to a Screening Exercise First Choice and Second Choice

Nnamdi Azikiwe University, NAU/UNIZIK:
180 Arts (except Departments of English & History) and Education
200 for others

Federal University of Technology Owerri, FUTO:
180 First and Second Choice.

University of Ibadan UI:
200 First and Second Choice Most preferred

University of Lagos Unilag:
200 all courses, First Choice only

University of Nigeria, Nsukka, UNN:
200 all courses; first and second Choice.

Obafemi Awolowo University OAU:
200; first and second choice

Nnamdi Azikiwe University, NAU/UNIZIK:
180 Arts (except Departments of English & History) and Education and
200 for others; first choice only.

University of Ilorin, Unilorin:
(i) 200 UTME for courses other than those listed in (5) ‘O’ level Credits at not more than two sittings.
(ii) 220 UTME for Accounting, Biochemistry, Business Administration, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Computer Science, Common Law, Economics, English, Electrical Engineering, Finance, Geology, Industrial Chemistry, Mass Communication, Mechanical Engineering, Microbiology, Pharmacy and Veterinary Medicine & (5) ‘O’ level Credits at not more than two sittings.
(iii) MB;BS candidates who obtained: (a) 240 marks in the UTME and (b) Credit Passes at one sitting only in the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination or its equivalence in each of the following subjects: English Language, Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology.

University of Ado- Ekiti:
200; First and second choice

University of Benin, UNIBEN
200; first choice only

Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria:
180 for Science based courses
190 for Arts, Social Science, Law and Administration; first choice only

Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto: 180;
First and second choice

Federal University of Technology, Akure FUTA:
200; first and second choice

University of Uyo, Uniuyo:
180; first choice only

University of Calabar, Unical:
180 for some courses and 200 for others

University of Agriculture, Abeokuta UNAAB – 180

University of Jos UNIJOS:
180; first and second choice

Lagos State University LASU:
200; first and second choice

Niger Delta University NDU:
180; first choice only

TAI Solarin University of Education TASUED:
180 first choice only and change of course

Federal University of Technology (FUT), Minna:
(i) 220 for School of Engineering and Engineering Technology and Environmental Technology
(ii) 200 for School of Environmental Technology and School of Science and Science Education
(iii) 190 for School of Agriculture and Agricultural Technology and School of Science and Science Education.

Federal University Dutsin-Ma, Katsina: 180; first choice only

Federal University Oye-Ekiti: 180; first and second choice

Federal University of Wukari, Taraba State:
180 in the Sciences and 190 in the humanities and Social Sciences; first and second choice.

Federal University, Otuoke, Bayelsa State: 180; first and second choice.

Ebonyi State University EBSU: 180; first and second choice

Osun State University (UNIOSUN):
180 for Agriculture, Education and Arts (Humanities and Culture)
200 for the rest; First and second choice.

Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Effurun: 180; first and second choice

Michael Okpara University of Agriculture, Umudike; 180; first and second choice.

Anambra State University; 180; first and second choice.
Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma: 180; first choice only

Kwara State University KWASU: 200; first and second choice and changing of courses.

Afe Babalola University (ABUAD): No official cut-off mark.

Benson Idahosa University: No official cut-off mark.

Bells University of Technology, Ota: No cut-off mark, as long as you chose or wish to change course.

Kaduna State University, KASU: 180 UTME cutoff (first choice only)

Imo State University IMSU: now Evan Enwerem University EEU : 180

Enugu State University of Science Tech – 180

Adekunle Ajasin University: 200

Rivers State University of Science and Technology, RSUST: 180 (1st choice only)

Delta State University, Abraka, DELSU: 180

Abia State University, Uturu, ABSUU: 180

University of Maiduguri, UniMaid: 180

Kogi State University, KSU:

University of Agriculture Makurdi, UAM:


Polytechnic and College of Education 2012/2013 JAMB-UTME Cut-off mark List
Yaba College of Technology, YabaTech: 160

Auchi Polytechnic, Auchi: 180; most preferred, more preferred or preferred

Polytechnic Ibadan:No cut-off mark as long as you chose them as Most Preferred, More Preferred, Preferred and you can also do change of course.

Federal Polytechnic, Ilaro: No post-utme screening – UTME is used for selection.

Federal College of Education (Special) Oyo: 160 and first and second choice.

Lagos State Polytechnic, LASPOTECH: 160 cutoff

Institute of Management & Technology, IMT: 160

Federal Polytechnic, Ede: 160

Federal Polytechnic Oko: 160

UNIPORT 2012/2013 POST UTME SCREENING EXERCISE

Candidates who chose University of Port Harcourt as their 1st and/or 2nd choice in the 2012 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) with a score of 200 and above for Dentistry, Pharmacy, Engineering (except Civil & Environmental Engineering), management Sciences, Medicine, Nursing and Social Sciences; 180 and above for others are invited to a Screening Exercise. Candidates who chose Medicine as their programme of study are hereby informed that they could be admitted into Biochemistry, Microbiology or Animal & Environmental Biology subject to acceptable performance. Alternatively, they should contact other universities for admission into Medicine and contact Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board. Also, there will be no admission into the department of Geography & Environmental Management. The schedule for the Screening exercise is as follows:
Day/Date of Exercise                             Time                       College/Faculties/Disciplines
Thursday, 14th June                                 7.00 am                  Science/Agriculture
Friday, 15th June, 2012                            7.00 am                  Humanities/Education
Saturday, 16th June, 2012                        7.00 am                  Social Sciences
Monday, 18th June, 2012                          7.00 am                  College of Health (Dentistry/Physiology/Anatomy/Pharmacy/Nursing)
Tuesday, 19th June, 2012                         7.00 am                  Management Sciences
Wednesday, 20th June, 2012                    7.00 am                  Engineering
IMPORTANT DATES
                    1st – 13th June, 2012  -     Registration
  • First Choice Candidates: Input UTME Registration Number and confirm preloaded UTME details.
  • Second Choice Candidates should enter personal and UTME details.
  • Print slip for payment at www.uniport.edu.ng
  • Proceed to any of the Bank Branches listed on the Registration Procedure and make payment of N1,000.00 (excluding bank and access charges to an online practice test). The Screening Exercise will be computer-based. The online Practice Test is to enable candidates familiarize themselves with the actual test environment.
  • Login with your UTME Registration Number and the Access Code on the payment slip  and upload your recent (not more than six months) full-faced passport photograph.
  • Click on submit button and print Photo-card.
                   14th – 20th June, 2012        -  Screening Exercise
Login to www.uniport.edu.ng to read the detailed Registration Procedure for Post UTME Screening Exercis 2012/2013.
MATERIALS NEEDED FOR POST-UTME SCREENING EXERCISE
Candidates are required to come with the following:
·         A clear copy of Photo-card printed online.
·         Writting materials and non-programmable calculator.
NOTE:
·         Candidates’ names on their O’Level certificates and JAMB results must be same with what is filled on the Post-UTME form.
·         Mobile phones, walkman, ipod, ipad and similar gadgets are not allowed into the screening venue.
·         Candidates must apply within the registration period as the link for the Application Forms will be disabled at mid-night; 12th June     
·         Candidates must report to Screening Venues by 7.00am each day.
·         Parents and guardians, as well as uninvited security agents, will not be allowed into the Campus on the days of the Screening
          Exercise.

Post UTME Screening Exercise For 2012/2013

We are officially ushering in the beginning of the 2012/2013 Post-UTME period. Henceforth, we will be streaming information from across schools in Nigeria concerning their various Post UTME screening exercise as we get them.


What you should do now


For those intending to go to private universities (Covenant, Babcock and Redeemer's Universities), the time to start preparing is now because you'll be the first to do every thing; write Post-UTME 2012/2013, release results, admission list, register in school etc. It's just natural.
We advise you to subscribe to our SMS alerts and Past Questions Booklet to help you prepare for the exams and keep you informed when further information from your school of choice is released.

For candidates of other Federal and State Universities and Polytechnics, there is no definite date for when the 2012/2013 Post-UTME will hold. The dates for these schools come unexpectedly and registration will usually last for 1 week or 2. Chances are that if you don't get the information on time, you may miss registration and subsequently, you wont write the exam. Hence you should subscribe to our 1 year SMS alerts and past questions for your school of choice. The past questions will equip you with patterns of how university type questions are set for your school of choice.

We are already in the 2012/2013 Post-UTME period. Don't wait until the last minute. Subscribe today and you will start receiving SMS from today. When your 2012/2013 Post UTME registration form comes out or when results or admission list are released, or any information at all, you will be the 1st to know. Besides we will provide you with past questions to study for your coming exam. If you want to subscribe now, click here