No admission for underage children from next year – FG

JAMB speaks on sales of forms for 2021 UTME

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The federal government (FG) has instructed the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) not to allow underage children to write the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) to seek admission in any university in the country. Minister of Education, Tahir Mamman disclosed this on Sunday.

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TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the FG has also instructed the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) and the National Examinations Council (NECO) not to allow underage children sit for the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) and the the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE), respectively.

According to Mamman, the age limit for any candidate to gain admission into any university in the country remained 18 years, while insisting that underage candidates will no longer be allowed to sit for secondary school leaving examinations.

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The Minister, who made these disclosures when he featured on Channels TV’s Sunday Politics programme, said: “It is 18 (years). What we did at the meeting that we had with JAMB (in July) was to allow this year and for it to serve as a kind of notice for parents that this year, JAMB will admit students who are below that age but from next year, JAMB is going to insist that anybody applying to go to university in Nigeria meets the required age which is 18. For the avoidance of doubt, this is not a new policy; this is a policy that has been there for a long time.

“Even basically if you compute the number of years pupils, and learners are supposed to be in school, the number you will end up with is 17 and a half – from early child care to primary school to junior secondary school and then senior secondary school. You will end up with 17 and a half by the time they are ready for admission. So, we are not coming up with new policy contrary to what some people are saying; we are just simply reminding people of what is existing.

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“In any case, NECO and WAEC, henceforth will not be allowing underage children to write their examinations. In other words, if somebody has not spent the requisite number of years in that particular level of study, WAEC and NECO will not allow them to write the examination.”

The minister went further to give a breakdown of the number of years pupils are expected to spend between child care and senior secondary school.

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According to him, early care is expected to last for the first five years. Pupils are expected to begin primary one at the age of six, spend six years in primary school and move to junior secondary school at the age of 12, spend three years, before moving to senior secondary school at the age of 15, to spend three more years and leave for university at the age of 18.

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