Notice: Function register_uninstall_hook was called incorrectly. Only a static class method or function can be used in an uninstall hook. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 3.1.0.) in /home/u115151829/domains/teamplato.com/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 5833
UTME 2025: JAMB, institutions to decide ‘cut-off points’ for 2025 Admissions Monday - TEAM PLATO REPORTS
RECENT POST

Blog Post

UTME 2025: JAMB, institutions to decide ‘cut-off points’ for 2025 Admissions Monday
General

UTME 2025: JAMB, institutions to decide ‘cut-off points’ for 2025 Admissions Monday 

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) will, on Monday (tomorrow), meet with the heads of all tertiary institutions in Nigeria to decide the National minimum tolerable UTME score (NTMUS), also known as ‘cut-off points’ for the 2025 Admission exercise.

The JAMB Admission Policy meeting is held annually with heads of all university polytechnics and colleges of education –both public and private– to decide the ‘cut-off point’ for admissions from the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

The UTME, also held annually, is a Computer-Based Test (CBT), a prerequisite for candidates seeking admission into Nigerian tertiary institutions. The maximum obtainable score in the UTME is 400 –100 for each of the four subjects for which candidates sit.

Cut-Off points
Each institution has different cut-off points. While some universities set as high as 200 UTME points, others set as low as 100 or 120 UTME points.

However, all the institutions agree on a national minimum score a candidate is expected to get before being considered for admission by any tertiary institution.

Last year, the NTMUS for universities was pegged at 140 and 100 for polytechnics and colleges of education.

How cut-off points are set
All the tertiary institutions have their individually preferred cut-off points, which they have communicated to JAMB.

At the meeting, they will all agree to a national minimum which no institution is allowed to go below. The decision on which points to go with is usually subject to voting by the heads of institutions present.

Any institution with a cut-off point set below the agreed point would have to raise its cut-off point.

Last year, at the meeting, the then Minister of Education, Tahir Mamman, a professor, directed institutions not to admit candidates under 18. He rescinded the decision after protests by the heads of institutions present. He then asked that 16 be used for the 2024 admissions and 18 in subsequent years.

However, after Mr Mamman was removed as minister in October, the new education minister, Tunji Alausa, asked that the minimum age for admission be placed at 16

Related posts

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *

WordPress Theme built by Shufflehound. © 2022 Team Plato Reports
Don`t copy text!