The House of Representatives has called for the establishment of at least one computer-based testing (CBT) in each of the 774 local government areas of the country for the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME). 

The lawmakers made the resolution during plenary on Thursday, following the admission by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) that there were glitches in this year’s examination.

According to the lawmakers, the move would aid in forestalling future recurrence.

The House also called for calm in the wake of JAMB’s admission to errors in the 2025 UTME.

Last month, the Senate mulled a similar resolution, saying there will be budgetary provisions in 2026 fiscal year for the establishment of CBT centres across the 774 local government areas of the country.

According to the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Tertiary Institutions and TETFUND, Mohammed Dandutse, who spoke when he monitored the 2025 UTME, the absence of CBT centres in some parts of the country calls for concern.

He said, “In making it easy for candidates seeking admissions into universities or other tertiary institutions through UTME, the ICT centres must be made available in all the 774 local government councils across the country.

“I am from Katsina South senatorial district, where only two out of the 11 local government councils have ICT centres for UTME.

“Since the examination is computer-based, centres for it need to be made available across the 774 local government councils in the country. In doing this, this committee of the senate, in collaboration with our colleagues in the house of representatives, shall facilitate budgetary provisions for it in the 2026 fiscal year.”

JAMB said some candidates are to retake the examination.

On Wednesday, the JAMB registrar, Ishaq Oloyede, in a rare admission while fighting back tears, said some errors affected candidates’ performance in the 2025 UTME.

At a press briefing in Abuja, Oloyede said about 379,997 candidates who sat for the examination would retake it owing to the errors.

The move came in the wake of widespread outrage over what some described as technical glitches, unusually low scores, and alleged irregularities in the questions and the answers in this year’s examination.

When JAMB reviewed the 2025 UTME, it found out that a technical glitch affected 157 out of the 887 centres.

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