2019 JAMB Official Cut-off Marks For Institutions Officially Out

Filed in JAMB UTME by on 1 Comment

Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, 2019 JAMB Official Cutoff Marks For Institutions [Cut-off Mark For Universities, COE, Polytechnics, And Monotechnics] Has Been Announced – See JAMB Cut Off Marks For Admission 2019/2020.

JAMB Official Cut-off Marks

We Have Been Receiving Questions As Regards 2019 JAMB Cut Off Mark;

When Will JAMB 2019 Cut Off Mark Will Be Out?

What is JAMB Cut Off Mark 2019?

Has JAMB Release Admission Cut Off mark 2019?

What is Cut Off Mark For My Course?

Recommended: JAMB Official Cut-Off Mark: What It Really Means

– JAMB released new cut-off marks for tertiary institutions

– The institutions are however at liberty to raise theirs above JAMB’s requirement

– JAMB also lifted the ban on Post-UTME The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has released the cut-off marks for Nigerian tertiary institutions while also lifting the ban for post UTME examination.

Our source reports that these decisions were taken at the 2017 Combined Policy Meetings on Admissions into Tertiary Institutions in Nigeria which ended on Tuesday, August 22. Minimum cut-off marks for tertiary institutions are:

Table of Contents

JAMB Official Cut-off Marks For Institutions

The 19th Policy Meeting on Admissions to Tertiary Institutions in Nigeria has approved 160 and above as the national minimum benchmark for admission for the year 2019 into public universities.

The meeting held at Bola Babalakin Auditorium, Gbongan, Osun State, on Tuesday also approved 140 as minimum UTME score for admission into private universities.

For public polytechnic, 120 UTME score was approved, while 110 score was approved as the least score for admission into private polytechnic.

Recall that ngschoolz.net previously reported that the post-Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (post-UTME) conducted for candidates seeking admission into higher institution was scrapped by the Federal Government. The Federal Government explained that all tertiary institutions were at liberty to conduct screening for candidates seeking admission into any school. 

Tags: , , ,

Comments (1)

Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed

  1. Favourr says:

    Wow…..

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

//ptukedaisoalreb.net/5/8477988