Vice-Chancellors of Nigerian universities have agreed on 140 as the minimum benchmark for the admissions of 2023/2024 academic session.
They made this agreement at the 2023 policy meeting of the
Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board.
However, it was reported that universities can decide
individual cut-off marks.
According to the JAMB registrar, Prof.Ishaq Oloyede, he
stressed that no university will be allowed to admit any candidate who scores
below the 140 benchmark.
He made known during the 2023 policy meeting ongoing in
Abuja.
For instance, the University of Jos proposed 180 as cut-off
mark for admissions; the University of Ibadan proposed 200; University of Benin
proposed 200; University of Lagos proposed 200; and the Federal University of
Technology proposed 180, among others.
The Pan-Atlantic University, Lagos, is the only university
that proposed the highest benchmark of 220, while about 15 universities, most
especially those in the private sector, advised that the benchmark be lowered
to 120, a move that was rejected.
The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education,
Andrew Adejoh, said, “We have heard the voices of the majority. Most of the
universities have agreed and the decision stands that 140 is the minimum
benchmark for university admissions.”
For the polytechnics, the minimum benchmark score was 100
for admissions, while Colleges of Education adopted the benchmark of 100 for
admissions.