The Lagos State Government on Saturday conducted placement test for
8,700 primary schools’ pupils seeking admission into its 15 Junior Model
and Upgraded Secondary Schools for 2015/2016 academic session.
Mrs
Olayinka Oladunjoye, the State Commissioner for Education, who
monitored the exercise, said 18 out of the candidates wrote the
examination on a pilot Computer-Based Test (CBT).
Oladunjoye said the CBT mode of examination had come to stay in the state.
“We do not want to be left behind. There is the need to prepare the children to be computer literate.
“The last examination that JAMB did was computer-based hence our children should be conversant with it.
“That is why we thought that at this stage of our development, we should experiment and see how it goes.
“And
we can see that the candidates coped very well; I am pleased with the
conduct of the examination and I am fulfilled because this is what I had
always wanted.
“The pupils are serious-minded and I can see the enthusiasm in them,” the commissioner told newsmen.
Oladunjoye commended the state examination board for improving on the mode of writing examinations every year.
She said the state government would accommodate the increasing number of candidates in future examinations.
According to her, Saturday’s examination is better than that of 2014.
Also
speaking, the Director, Lagos State Examinations Board, Mr Femi Hassan,
said that CBT would curb examination malpractice because the questions
were randomised.
“As a government, we saw that we have the capacity to do a CBT and we tried a pilot scheme and today it is a success.
“In
CBT, questions are randomised; students cannot copy each other, your
question one will not be the same with others,” he said.
Hassan
announced that the state government would conduct the next Junior
Secondary School Certificate Examination (JSSCE) by CBT in 2016.
Some of the parents who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), expressed satisfaction with the conduct of the examination.
Mrs
Omowunmi Fakunle, a parent, said that she preferred the model schools
because the state government had invested heavily in the education
subsector.
Some of the centres monitored by NAN include Vetland
Junior and Senior Grammar School, Agege, Government Junior College,
Agege and the Lagos State Examination Board, venue of the CBT.
The
15 model colleges and upgraded schools include Model Junior College,
Meiran; Vetland Junior Grammar School, Ifako Ijaiye; Model Junior
College, Igbokuta and Civil Service Model Junior College, Igbogbo.
Others
are Oriwu Model Junior College, Ikorodu; Government Junior College,
Ikorodu; Model Junior College, Igbonla; Model Junior College, Agbowa;
Model Junior College Badore; and Lagos State Junior Model College, Ojo.
Eva
Adelaja Memorial Junior Secondary, Bariga; Model Junior College,
Kankon; Government Junior College, Ketu, Epe; Epe Junior Grammar, Epe;
and Badagry Junior Grammar School, Badagry, are also on the list.
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