120 UTME cut-off: NANS Kick, Says It Will Encourage Indolence

As uproar continues to greet the recent cut-off marks into tertiary institutions in the country, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) has expressed the worry that it will lead to indolence on the part of candidates.

NANS in a statement in Abuja on Thursday by its National President, Mr Chinonso Obasi, said that knowledge acquisition was a function of determination and hard work, adding aspiring students should not be encouraged to relapse into laziness.

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“If over the years, students were able to work hard to meet cut off points, it does not make any logical sense to now lower the standard.

“The inability of any student to meet the cut-off points is a function of outright indolence that should not be encouraged.

“The general impression is that Nigerian graduates are not employable; therefore, lowering of standard will translate to a disastrous outcome in the future by churning out young people who cannot fit into the demands and expectations of the 21st century.

“Nigerian youths are intelligent and willing to learn but because of the enabling environment provided by tertiary institutions abroad, Nigerian students who attend school abroad always break records,’’ he said.

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The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) had at a stakeholders’ meeting on August 22, reviewed downward the cut-off marks for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).

The minimum cut off marks for admissions into universities was fixed at 120; polytechnics and colleges of education pegged at 100, while that of innovative enterprising institutes was fixed at 110.

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