The
Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, has taken a critical swipe at the Joint
Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB, policy that sets 180 as cut-off marks
for students seeking admission into Universities and 150 for those seeking
admission into Polytechnics and Colleges of Education.
According to NUT, the policy is bent
on degrading the professional status of teachers with its concomitant negative
effect on the attainment of quality education in the country.
In a statement issued by the union
via the General Secretary, Obong Obong, it described the policy as derogatory,
and highly discriminatory.
He said, “It is of great disservice to the education sector where the best
brains and students of distinction are placed in other courses while those with
lower grades are pushed into teaching.
“In
most advanced and developed countries, it is considered that a teacher’s
ability to disseminate knowledge to students is dependent on his sound
intellectual capability.
“It
is the government who deliberately source for people with lower educational
standard to become teachers and then still to turn around and blame them for
poor delivery.”
“However,
the NUT has in abundance very brilliant and effective teachers currently in
service who should be nurtured for effective service delivery. We wish to warn
that the teaching profession must not be made an all comers affair.”
“If
this policy is allowed to stand, government should be ready to account for the
resultant short comings that may be observed in our educational institutions in
future from those teachers”.
The union furthermore urged an
immediate reversal of the policy, adding that government must ensure that only
students of distinction are admitted to be trained as teachers in all
educational institutions in the county.

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