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UNILORIN Post-UME out, cut off marks remains the same

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For those of you who chose UNILORIN during your JAMB registration and have heard about the new JAMB policy, don’t be afraid anymore. UNILORIN in its magnanimous spirit has maintained its stand by considering students who didn’t score high marks.

See cut off marks for various courses below :

 

2015/2016 UTME CUT-OFF
S/NO UTME CUT-OFF COURSE
1 B.Sc. (Aquaculture and Fisheries) 180
2 B.Agric 180
3 B.Sc. Food Science 180
4 B.Sc. Home Economics 180
5 B. Forestry and Wildlife 180
6 B.A. Arabic 180
7 B.A. English 180
8 B.A. French 180
9 B.A. History and International Studies 180
10 B.A. Linguistics 180
11 B.A. Yoruba 180
12 B.A. Hausa 180
13 B.A. Igbo 180
14 B.A. Performing Arts 180
15 B.A. Christian Studies 180
16 B.A. Islamic Studies 180
17 B.A. Comparative Religious Studies 180
18 B.Pharmacy 230
19 B.Sc. (Ed.) Social Studies 180
20 B.Sc. (Ed.) Economics Education 180
21 B.Sc. (Ed.) Geography Education 180
22 B.A. (Ed.) Social Studies 180
23 B.Sc. (Ed.) Educational Technology 180
24 B.Sc. (Ed.) Computer Science 180
25 B.Sc. (Ed.) Technology Education 180
26 B.Sc.(Ed.) Health Education 180
27 B.(Ed.) Primary Education Studies 180
28 B. Ed Adult Education Studies 180
29 B.(Ed.) Counsellor Education 180
30 B.(Ed.) Educational Management 180
31 B.(Ed.) Business Education 180
32 B.Sc.(Ed.) Human Kinetics Education 180
33 B.Sc. (Ed.) Biology Education 180
34 B.Sc. (Ed.) Chemistry Education 180
35 B.Sc. (Ed.) Maths Education 180
36 B.Sc. (Ed.) Physics Education 180
37 B.Sc. (Ed.) Agriculture 180
38 B.A. (Ed.) Arabic Education 180
39 B.A. (Ed.) Christian Studies Education 180
40 B.A. (Ed.) English Education 180
41 B.A. (Ed.) French Education 180
42 B.A. (Ed.) History Education 180
43 B.A. (Ed.) Islamic Studies Education 180
44 B.A. (Ed.) Yoruba Education 180
45 B.Eng. Water Resources and Environmental
Engineering 180
46 B.Eng. Computer Engineering 200
47 B.Eng. Food Science and Technology 180
48 B.Eng. Agricultural & Biosystems Engineering  180
49 B.Eng. Civil Engineering 200
50 B.Eng. Mechanical Engineering 200
51 B.Eng. Electrical Engineering 200
52 B.Eng. Chemical Engineering 200
53 B.Eng. (Metallurgical Engineering) 180
54 B.Eng. (Biomedical Engineering) 180
55 B.Sc. Architecture 180
56 B.Sc. Estate Management 180
57 B.Sc. Quantity Surveying 180
58 B.Sc. Surveying and Geo-informatics 180
59 B.Sc. Urban and Regional Planning 180
60 DVM 190
61 LL.B. Common Law 240
62 LL.B. Common & Islamic Law 220
63 B.Sc. Anatomy 200
64 B.Sc. Physiology 200
65 MB;BS 235
66 B. Nursing Science 210
67 B.Sc. Computer Science 200
68 B.Sc. Mass Communication 220
69 B.Sc. Information and Communication
Science 180
70 B.Sc. Library and Information Science 180
71 B.Sc. Telecommunication Science 180
72 Doctor of Optometry 190
73 B.Sc. Bio-Chemistry 200
74 B.Sc. Microbiology 200
75 B.Sc. Plant Biology 180
76 B.Sc. Zoology 180
77 B.Sc. Industrial Chemistry 180
78 B.Sc. (Applied Geophysics) 180
79 B.Sc. Chemistry 180
80 B.Sc. Physics 180
81 B.Sc. Geology & Mineral Science 180
82 B.Sc. Mathematics 180
83 B.Sc. Statistics 180
84 B.Sc. Finance 200
85 B.Sc. Marketing 180
86 B.Sc. Industrial Relations & Personnel
Management 180
87 B.Sc. Public Administration 180
88 B.Sc. Accounting 200
89 B.Sc. Business Administration 200
90 B.Sc. Psychology 180
91 B.Sc. Social Work 180
92 B.Sc. Criminology and Security Studies 190
93 B.Sc. Economics 210
94 B.Sc. Geography 180
95 B.Sc. Political Science 200
96 B.Sc. Sociology 190

Education

Lagos to Seal Dowen College

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Lagos to Seal Dowen College Over Illegal Waste Dumping

Lagos to Seal Dowen College Over Illegal Waste Dumping

Lagos State authorities have ordered the sealing of Dowen College, Lekki Phase 1, following allegations of improper waste disposal traced to the school.

Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab, announced the move on X (formerly Twitter), stating that the Corps Marshal of the Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps had been directed to enforce the order.

“This waste was traced to Dowen College in Lekki Phase 1. Such disregard for environmental laws is unacceptable,” Wahab said. “We will not hesitate to take firm action against any institution or organization that violates waste management regulations.”

The commissioner’s statement comes as part of the state’s intensified crackdown on environmental law violations.

Dowen College has previously faced scrutiny from the state government. In 2021, it was shut down indefinitely following the controversial death of student Sylvester Oromoni Jnr., pending investigation.

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Education

UBEC, NGF in Conjunction with NEWGLOBE Spotlight Kwara as Model for Tackling Out-of-School Crisis

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UBEC, NGF in Conjunction with NEWGLOBE Spotlight Kwara as Model for Tackling Out-of-School Crisis

UBEC, NGF in Conjunction with NEWGLOBE Spotlight Kwara as Model for Tackling Out-of-School Crisis

-By Olufemi A. Adetola

 

As Nigeria grapples with the challenge of out-of-school children—estimated to be among the highest globally—recent interventions led by the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) and the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) offer renewed hope. At the center of this momentum is Governor Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq of Kwara State, whose leadership as NGF Chairman is setting a new national tone on foundational education.

 

Penultimate week, the NGF in collaboration with UBEC and NEWGLOBE convened a multi-stakeholders dialogue in Abuja focusing on foundational learning and strategies to combat the out-of-school children crisis. Commissioners of Education and Chairpersons of State Universal Basic Education Boards (SUBEBs) were present to discuss reforms and implementation pathways. The gathering reaffirmed the need for stronger state-level ownership and collaborative policymaking.

 

UBEC, NGF in Conjunction with NEWGLOBE Spotlight Kwara as Model for Tackling Out-of-School Crisis

 

Kwara State represented by the Hon Commissioner of Education, Dr Lawal Olohungbebe and the Executive Chairman of Kwara State Universal Basic Education Board, Prof Shehu Raheem Adaramaja presents a model of what focused leadership and fiscal discipline can achieve in basic education. According to their presentation, upon assumption of office as the Executive Governor of Kwara State , Mallam AbdulRahaman Abdulrazaq CON moved swiftly to pay backlogs of UBEC counterpart funding, allowing the state to access over ₦14.2 billion in federal matching grants for the years 2014-2019 . This intervention reversed Kwara’s prior blacklisting from UBEC funding and unlocked a cascade of basic education infrastructure projects across the state.

 

Through the Prof. Shehu Adaramaja-led Kwara SUBEB, over 600 schools have been renovated or newly constructed across the 16 local government areas. Classrooms have been furnished with pupils and teachers furniture, perimeter fences erected, boreholes sunk, Digital literacy centres established in 38 centres and WASH facilities provided across the 193 political wards of the state, with clear attention to equity and rural inclusion. These upgrades are impacting both teaching and learning environments in meaningful ways.

 

In addition to infrastructure, Kwara has tackled the human resource challenge head-on. Between 2021 and 2025, the state recruited over 6,400 new teaching and non-teaching staff, with an emphasis on STEM subjects. The recent recruitment exercise adopted community-based recruitment approach, where qualified NCE and Bachelor degrees in education from various communities were recruited to teach in their localities. All recruited staff signed performance bonds, demonstrating a commitment to accountability and diligence performance at duty.

 

Another bright spot is the KwaraLEARN programme—an ambitious education technology initiative that has digitized classroom management in over 1,770 public schools. With real-time monitoring, teacher coaching, and structured lesson plans, over 620,000 pupils now benefit from a more consistent and effective learning experience.

 

Mallam AbdulRahaman Abdulrazaq gave priority attention to teachers motivation and encouragements. He largely demonstrated this in prompt payment of salaries, promotion of teaching and non teaching staff of the State Basic Education Board, enhance capacity building with significant attention to technology education, modern pedagogical trainings, classrooms management techniques, foundational literacy and numeracy skills and other impactful workshops. Early results show gains in literacy and numeracy scores, attendance, and classroom engagement.

 

Kwara has also gone beyond the school walls. Earlier this year, a targeted enrollment drive brought over 2,300 out-of-school children into classrooms. These efforts were especially focused on nomadic communities, Qur’anic school pupils, street children, and underserved areas often missed in national data. Plans are also underway to build 75 new schools in remote areas to further reduce access barriers.

 

Perhaps the most telling endorsement of Kwara’s progress came in May 2025 when UBEC’s North-Central Director, Elder Abalaka described the state as “a pacesetter in compliance.” This reflects not just infrastructural output but the state’s commitment to due process, transparency, and strategic alignment with federal education goals.

 

Governor Abdulrazaq’s leadership at the NGF is crucial to replicating this progress nationwide. His advocacy for coordinated policies, timely funding, and inclusive education models is influencing how states approach their UBE responsibilities. The recent dialogue in Abuja underscored the need for such synergy.

 

As Nigeria intensifies efforts to implement a new national strategy on foundational learning, it is clear that the states must lead from the front. Kwara State’s success story shows that with the right blend of policy, leadership, and stakeholder engagement, progress is not just possible—it is sustainable.

 

The crisis of out-of-school children and weak foundational education has persisted for too long. But if more states follow the Kwara example under Governor Abdulrazaq’s NGF-backed leadership, the foundation of Nigeria’s future can be salvaged and secured.

 

In this regard, what is happening in Kwara should not just be applauded—it should be emulated. The real task now is to replicate such bold governance across every corner of the country.

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Education

Worst WAEC Results in 10 Years Raise Concerns Over Education Standards, CBT Readiness

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Worst WAEC Results in 10 Years Raise Concerns Over Education Standards, CBT Readiness

Worst WAEC Results in 10 Years Raise Concerns Over Education Standards, CBT Readiness

 

ABUJA, August 5, 2025 — Nigeria’s education sector is under renewed scrutiny after the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) recorded its worst performance in a decade, igniting debate over exam reforms, poor teaching quality, and readiness for full Computer-Based Testing (CBT) next year.

On Monday, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) announced that only 38.32 percent of the 1,969,313 candidates who sat for the exam obtained five credits, including English and Mathematics—a sharp drop from the 72.12 percent pass rate in 2024.

The last time Nigeria posted a worse result was in 2014, when just 31.28 percent made the benchmark. Over the past decade, performance peaked at 81.70 percent in 2021 before plunging this year.

 

WAEC Blames Anti-Cheating Measures, CBT Integration

Head of WAEC Nigeria, Dr. Amos Dangut, linked the massive drop to stricter anti-malpractice measures, including serialisation of objective papers, which made collusion “more difficult.”

“The decline can be attributed to new protocols designed to curb malpractice,” Dangut said. He added that Computer-Based Testing was introduced in key subjects like English Language, Mathematics, Biology, and Economics, reducing malpractice but exposing digital illiteracy among students.

He noted that 192,089 results (9.75%) were withheld for alleged cheating—slightly lower than 2024’s 11.92 percent—while 451,796 results (22.94%) remain under processing for technical and administrative reasons.

Despite the low benchmark pass, 87.24 percent of candidates earned five credits in other combinations of subjects.

 

Digital Transition Sparks Fresh Concerns

The sharp performance decline comes ahead of Nigeria’s planned full CBT transition for WASSCE in 2026, following a Federal Government directive earlier this year.

However, stakeholders warn the timeline is unrealistic, citing this year’s glitches in CBT-based Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) and WAEC’s own logistical chaos—such as the late-night English Language paper on May 28, which saw students writing under candlelight in some states.

WAEC blamed the midnight session on the reprinting of leaked papers, a move that disrupted logistics nationwide.

 

Stakeholders React: ‘A Reflection of Deep Rot’

Parents-Teachers Association (PTA) President, Haruna Danjuma, said poor preparation and lack of computer knowledge among candidates worsened the outcome:

“Some students did not prepare well. Public schools lack learning materials, and the environment is not conducive. CBT exams blocked chances of malpractice, which many depend on,” Danjuma said.

Prof. Francis Egbokhare, former Director of Distance Learning, University of Ibadan, described the results as a symptom of systemic failure:

“This reflects a crisis of quality in education. We neglect teacher training and infrastructure while obsessing over technology and AI as if they can replace quality instruction,” he lamented, warning of growing “functional illiteracy” among graduates.

Dr. Bisi Akin-Alabi, Project Lead, Safe Schools, Lagos, agreed with WAEC that tougher protocols and serialised question papers made cheating harder, exposing students’ dependence on “expo.”

“The option of CBT shocked many students who lack digital skills,” she said, urging educators to embrace AI-assisted learning and better preparation rather than reliance on leaks.

 

What Next for WAEC and Nigeria’s Education System?

With less than a year to full CBT exams, experts warn that failure to train teachers, upgrade infrastructure, and close digital gaps could doom millions of students.

As WAEC insists the reforms are necessary to protect exam integrity, Monday’s result has left one question hanging:
Is Nigeria ready for a technology-driven education system—or headed for another decade of failure?

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