JAMB fixes dates for 2018 examination
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board said on Wednesday morning that the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination in 2018 would hang on March 9 to March 17, 2018.
The JAMB Registrar, Prof Is-haq Oloyede, reported this amid a continuous partners’ meeting, saying that the dates were picked “taking into perception the dates of other open examinations.”
The board said the ridicule examination would hold between January 22 and 27, including that the application charge remained N5000.
Source : Punch
University of Alberta, Canada holds seminar in Lagos
The University of Alberta , Canada hold a workshop for final year and recent high school graduates at Digital Editions Conference Hall, Grace Court, Stillwaters Gardens Estate Road, Lekki, Lagos on Friday November 17, 2017 by 11 a.m.
It is one of Canada’s top five world clas universities, home to more than 500 graduate and 200 undergraduate programmes.
Mrs. Margaret Jibodu is the MD/CEO of Digital Editions, the representative of the university in Nigeria and a Canadian immigration consultant. According to her, the conference will provide parents and students with up-to-date materials and information as Canada has a high standard of university education recognised worldwide.
Source : Dailytrust
Lagos orders relocation of 64 private schools
Ex-Officio, League of Muslim School Proprietors in Lagos State, Sulaimon Anthonio (left); Chairman, Fatai Raheem; Guest Speaker and Director General, Office of Education Quality Assurance, Mrs Ronke Soyombo; and others at the LEAMSP’s school managers’ workshop.
The Lagos State government has directed 64 private primary and secondary schools to relocate because of their alleged non-conduciveness for human and educational activities. The number is from over 6,000 private schools operating across the state.
The Director-General, Office of Quality Assurance, Mrs. Ronke Soyombo who disclosed this at the annual school managers’ workshop organised by the League of Muslim School Proprietors (LEAMSP) in Ikeja, recently.
Soyombo said the affected schools were operating in either swampy or flooding areas or very dirty and poorly ventilated structures as well as in places totally unsafe for human beings.


