Education
2026 UTME: JAMB to Fix Admission Cut-Off Marks Monday
2026 UTME: JAMB to Fix Admission Cut-Off Marks Monday
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has announced that it will hold its 2026 Policy Meeting on Monday in Abuja, where key decisions on 2026 UTME cut-off marks and admission guidelines for tertiary institutions across Nigeria will be officially determined. In a statement issued on Sunday by its Public Communications Advisor, Fabian Benjamin, the board said the meeting will be chaired by the Minister of Education and will bring together key stakeholders in the education sector to agree on national admission policies for the 2026 exercise.
The meeting is expected to set the minimum cut-off marks for universities, polytechnics, and colleges of education, alongside broader admission guidelines that will govern the 2026/2027 academic session. JAMB explained that the decisions taken will directly influence how millions of candidates who sat for the 2026 UTME are considered for admission across various institutions in the country.
JAMB also stated that the policy meeting will review and establish broader admission standards, including the determination of “minimum tolerable scores for admissions,” which serve as the national benchmark for entry into tertiary institutions. While the board provides the baseline, individual institutions are still allowed to set higher departmental requirements depending on the competitiveness of their courses.
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The board further confirmed that the 2026 Policy Meeting will host a delegation from Sierra Leone, led by the country’s Deputy Minister of Education, Mr. Sarjoh Aziz Kamara. The delegation will also include two vice-chancellors, including Prof. Edwin Momoh of Ernest Bai Koroma University. According to JAMB, the visiting team expressed interest in Nigeria’s centralized admission system, noting that it provides structured solutions to admission challenges experienced in their own country.
JAMB used the opportunity to reaffirm the importance of its centralized admission system, stressing that it remains essential for ensuring fairness, consistency, and standardisation in tertiary admissions across Nigeria. The board noted that the system helps streamline the admission process for millions of candidates while maintaining national academic standards.
The 2026 Policy Meeting is expected to produce key outcomes, including the approval of 2026 UTME cut-off marks, national admission guidelines for tertiary institutions, post-UTME screening frameworks, institutional admission quotas, and the official timetable for the 2026/2027 academic session. Once concluded, the decisions will officially mark the beginning of the new admission cycle across Nigerian tertiary institutions.
2026 UTME: JAMB to Fix Admission Cut-Off Marks Monday
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Education
Teachers’ Union Demands Safe Rescue of Victims Before Schools Reopen in Oyo
Teachers’ Union Demands Safe Rescue of Victims Before Schools Reopen in Oyo
The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) in Oyo State has declared that public schools across the state will remain closed until the government puts in place strong and verifiable security measures to protect both teachers and students following the recent mass abduction in Oriire Local Government Area.
The union said the decision followed the May 15 attack in which armed men invaded schools in parts of Oriire, abducting more than 40 students and teachers and killing at least two educators, an incident that has deepened fear and disrupted academic activities across the state.
The Oyo State chapter of the Nigeria Union of Teachers (Nigeria Union of Teachers) said the worsening insecurity forced its members to withdraw from classrooms indefinitely, warning that schools have become unsafe for both learners and educators. According to the union, the strike was not declared immediately after the attack. It said it initially engaged relevant authorities in hopes of a swift response but later concluded that the security situation had not improved enough to guarantee a safe return to classrooms.
Speaking in Ibadan, NUT Secretary, Mr. Olukayode Salami, said the reopening of schools now depends on two major conditions: the safe rescue of all abducted victims and the implementation of effective preventive security measures to stop future attacks. He said teachers would not return to classrooms until there is clear evidence of improved protection in vulnerable communities, especially in rural areas that have become frequent targets of attacks. Salami added that the emotional and psychological impact of the abduction has made it difficult for teachers to continue normal academic activities, noting that fear and panic have taken over many school environments.
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The union urged the government to urgently strengthen school security, especially in high-risk communities, stressing that educational institutions must no longer be treated as soft targets. It also called for increased security patrols, intelligence gathering, and joint operations involving conventional security agencies and local security groups to prevent further attacks. Salami stressed that the responsibility of protecting lives and property rests with the government, insisting that visible security presence is necessary to restore confidence among teachers, students, and parents.
The union disclosed that it has held several meetings with government officials and security stakeholders, leading to agreed action plans aimed at improving school safety across the state. However, it said it is still awaiting full implementation of these measures, particularly in vulnerable local government areas close to forested regions where recent attacks occurred.
As a result of the ongoing strike and security concerns, many schools in affected areas remain shut indefinitely, with no official timeline yet for reopening. Stakeholders have warned that academic activities may not resume fully until the government demonstrates clear commitment to securing schools and restoring public confidence. The union maintained that while schools cannot remain closed forever, safety must come before academic calendars.
Teachers’ Union Demands Safe Rescue of Victims Before Schools Reopen in Oyo
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Education
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