The Senate has called on the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board, JAMB to increase the cut-off marks for students going into tertiary institutions to study education courses in order to get intelligent people into the teaching profession.
The Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Basic and Secondary Education, disclosed this while monitoring the ongoing National Personnel Audit by the Universal Basic Education Commission.
The Joint admission and matriculation board (JAMB) and tertiary education Stakeholders in Abuja adopted 140 as the minimum cut-off mark for 2022 admission into the nation’s universities, 100 for Polytechnics and Colleges of Education.
Many persons argue that this will encourage underachievement and lower standards in an education system already struggling with quality issues.
This issue arose during the Senate Committee on Basic and Secondary Education’s monitoring of the Universal Basic Education Commission’s ongoing National Personnel Audit.
The Vice Chairman of the Committee believes that the teaching profession should not be a dumping ground for students who fail to secure admission to other professions like medicine, Engineering, and Law.
As the Senate Committee went round some schools in the FCT to monitor the ongoing National Personnel Audit by the Universal Basic Education Commission, it called for more investments in basic education in the country.
The 2022 National Personnel Audit by the Universal Basic Education Commission will enable the commission to collect accurate data on school enrolment, the number of teachers and other personal in the system as well as facilitates among others.