By Gabriel Dike
The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has commenced the sensitisation of Nigerians on the conduct of the Computer-Based West African Senior School Certificate Examination (CB-WASSCE).
The sensitisation for the CB-WASSCE, which kicked off from the WAEC headquarters in Yaba, moved to some parts of Lagos in a convoy of buses, with sensitisation leaflets being distributed to the public.
WAEC staff wore customised T-shirts with the inscription, ‘CB-WASSCE, the Future of Examination is Here.’ They addressed the public in different Nigerian languages explaining the CB-WASSCE.
WAEC Head of National Office (HNO), Dr. Amos Dangut, who flagged off the campaign said there was no going back on the conduct of the Computer-based May/June 2026 WASSCE and private candidates exams.
Dangut said: “Some people are still doubting the conduct of the CB-WASSCE. WAEC is ever ready to deploy ICT for smooth conduct of any of its exams. We have conducted five CB-WASSCE exams and the council will continue to take the lead in the deployment of ICT to conduct exams.
“Every candidate will write the CB-WASSCE in Nigeria. We are prepared to conduct the CB-WASSCE as directed by the Federal Government. It is the way to go now,” he stated.
He assured that the CB-WASSCE would reduce examination malpractice. “The five CB-WASSCE exams we conducted indicate a reduction of exam fraud and an improvement in candidates performance.
“This sensitisation is a nationwide exercise to tell schools and candidates about the CB-WASSCE in 2026,” he said.
On the removal of trade subjects from the WAEC portal, the HNO said it acted on the instruction of the Federal Government after they were renamed and introduced.
He explained that WAEC is a law abiding body and did not act arbitrarily in removing the trade subjects but acted on the directive from the stakeholders.
“The Federal Government directed the council to remove the old trade subjects. The subjects have been modified and reintroduced. The trade subjects the government asked us to remove are no longer important,” the HNO stated.
The Lagos sensitisation took place simultaneously at Surulere, Yaba, Ojo, Ikeja, Ikorodu and in some other states of the federation.
The acting Public Affairs of WAEC, Mrs. Moyosola Adesina, said CB-WASSCE would now be centre based exam and no longer school based.
At Maryland, WAEC staff explained the sensitisation in different Nigerian languages.
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