Folashade Adebayo
The West African Examinations Council
has barred two secondary schools in Imo State from registering as an
examination centre or presenting their pupils as candidates in any of
its examinations for a period of five years.
This is just as 28 other schools across
the country have been derecognised for two years for engaging in
examination malpractices.
The Head, Public Affairs of the council,
Mr. Demianus Ojijeogu, said this on Thursday in a telephone interview
with our correspondent.
Ojijeogu, who declined to name the
affected schools, added that a supervisor was assaulted in one of the
Imo schools, noting that WAEC officials were “locked out for more than
30 minutes in the second school obviously to perpetrate examination
malpractice.’’
Explaining the difference between
derecognising a school and withdrawing the recognition given to a
school, Ojijeogu said the one which had been derecognised by the council
could still be used as an examination centre but without the
participation of its teachers as invigilators, while a school whose
recognition had been withdrawn could no longer be used as a centre nor
have its teachers participate as invigilators for a period of five
years.
He said, “We don’t usually name the
schools because we refer to them by their centre numbers. For the
derecognised schools, examination can still hold in the school but we
will not use their teachers as invigilator. There are 28 of those
schools across the country and they can still reapply after two years,
telling us what they have put in place to prevent a recurrence of
examination malpractice.”
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