30,000 prospective teachers to take TRCN qualifying exam on June 7-8

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The Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria (TRCN) has said that around 30,000 prospective teachers would write the first diet of the 2019 Professional Qualifying Examination (PQE) in 50 centres nationwide.

TRCN Registrar, Professor Josiah Ajiboye, stated this during a news briefing in Abuja.

While the PQE would hold on Saturday, 8th June in all the states of the federation, that of states like Bauchi, Kaduna and Kano would start earlier on Friday, 7th June due to the large number of candidates in such instances.

EduCeleb.com had earlier reported that the May diet of exam was to hold between 24th and 25th May but Ajiboye said it had to be postponed “because of the National Environmental Sanitation Exercise.”

He reiterated the resolution of the National Council on Education on the 31st December, 2019 deadline given for any teacher who is not qualified, registered and licensed by TRCN to be removed from the classroom.

“About 30,000 would-be teachers across the states of the federation and the FCT have registered for the examination, ” the University of Ibadan professor said.

“Our technical officers are being prepared and have been trained in preparation for the examination.”

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Ajiboye said the PQE had become one of the benchmark processes for registering professional teachers in Nigeria set by the TRCN.

He said the PQE was introduced in October 2017 and the May 2019 diet was the fourth in the series.

The TRCN boss said one of the aims of the examination was to get the teachers prepared technologically in the 21st century.

“It has provided a big experience for us because when we started, many people who took the exam were not computer literate, and that accounted for the large number of failure in the first exam in 2017.

“But progressively, teachers now know that since it is a CBT exam, they have to go for computer appreciation programme, and the result over the years have been improving,” he said.

He further said that the council recorded not less than 83 per cent pass nationwide in the last examination in 2018.

Ajiboye, however, said there was state by state disparity when the results were examined.

He said external people would serve as monitors and supervisors, including members of the governing council of TRCN, staff of the Ministry of Education, National Teachers Institute and National Commission for Colleges of Education.

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Ajiboye believed that the December deadline may have accounted for the increase in the number of people going to take the May diet of the PQE.

“In the first PQE, we had like 16,000 candidates. In October 2018, we had 22,000. This year, we have recorded the highest number.

“Presently, we have registered about 30,000 candidates.

“By January 2020, we are going to begin our enforcement and we may likely start from the private schools because our mandate covers both the public and private schools.

“We have more than 80 per cent compliance from public schools, but the major problem we have is the private schools.

“However, we are still appealing to all teachers to key into this directive,” he said.

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