In a hurry to submit their answer booklets to invigilators, some
candidates forget their expo (materials used for examination
malpractice) in the booklets, the West African Examination Council has
said.
The council also noted that some other candidates use different answer booklets from its authorised copies.
Its
Public Relations Officer, Mr. Demianus Ojijeogu, who confirmed this in
an interview with our correspondent, however, added that the council had
reduced the incidence of impersonation in its examinations through its
biometric registration process
He said, “We encounter malpractice
during the examination and during marking. Some leave the expo in the
answer booklets. We see that all the time. Others use other answer
booklets different from the council’s own. But, we discover these things
during marking because the booklets do not have our serial numbers and
they are not usually signed by the supervisors. Supervisors usually sign
the booklets before they are given to the candidates.
“We have
been able to handle impersonation through our biometric process but
there is still collusion where candidates will copy exactly the same
answers usually dictated by a teacher. We have our invigilators but the
number is limited. When you leave the centre or before we get there,
they will do what they want.”
He added that the council was still
dealing with challenges of collusion, which involved teachers aiding
candidates during examination.
Ojijeogu, who said that some
candidates harassed supervisors, noted that the development had forced
the council to adopt a more discreet approach in making announcements
regarding examination malpractice.
“We no longer make noise about
examination malpractice because examination supervision is a hazardous
job. When candidates engage in malpractice, we just take their number
and they fill a form. Some of our workers have been held hostage, female
supervisors have been harassed. It is a hazardous job,” he added.
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