No fewer than 61 blind candidates on Tuesday, April 23, sat for the 2024 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) organised by the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) in Enugu centre under the JAMB Equal Opportunity Group
The candidates are part of the 577 others writing the examination nationwide.
The examination, held at the University of Nigeria Enugu Campus (UNEC), saw the candidates drawn from nine states of southeast and south-south regions namely: Imo, Abia, Anambra, Enugu, Ebonyi, Rivers, Cross River, Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states.
The candidates included those with blindness, autism, down syndrome, and other challenges that saw the candidates writing with all sorts of writing aides depending on their disability, such as brailles, typewriters, stylos while some others wrote with pens.
Speaking with newsmen on the exercise, the coordinator of the UTME Blind Enugu Centre, Prof. Mosto Onuoha explained that JAMB had introduced the blind UTME programme to give people with special needs an equal opportunity to achieve their dreams of going to the university or other higher institutions of learning.
Onuoha, who is a former deputy Vice Chancellor of UNN, and former president of Nigeria Academy of Science, said: “What is important is that JAMB recognizes that people should have opportunities, especially the physically challenged.
“This is a different kind of exam because they can’t do computer-based tests (CBT).
“We read the questions for them and options. They provide the answers. The only difference is that we extend their time for them”.
Another member of the committee and provost, Federal College of Education (Technical), Isu, Ebonyi State, Prof. Okey Okechukwu, disclosed that in order to encourage and motivate the candidates, JAMB took care of their transportation, feeding and accommodation for three days with those of their guides starting from Sunday when they arrived till Wednesday when they would depart to their various states.
Prof. Okechukwu used the opportunity to call on the governors of the Southeast and Southsouth, the local government areas chairmen and traditional rulers to create awareness among people with disabilities to enable them access services of the JAMB.
According to him, with adequate awareness especially to parents of disabled persons, more candidates would be motivated to sit for the JAMB examinations.
“I’m using this opportunity to appeal to the governors in the Southeast and their Southsouth counterparts to create awareness so that many parents will get to know this kind of arrangement JAMB has put in place to encourage and motivate them so that we get more candidates in future”, Okechukwu said.