Bachel Academy has helped many students in achieving their goals in life, and I'm one of them. I registered for UTME, and I was fortunate to meet with Mr Bachel in which he advised me to also register for ATS. Currently I'm in PE2 and in my final year at unilag studying accounting. I know lot of friends and family who graduated from Bachel academy that are doing well today. So,I wondered where this is coming from?
[quote author=Rgade post=92152616] So? If not for runs how many of you for pass WAEC Abegi,runs have been saving lives since buharis first recession. I remember that time we were all forming bright students, only for me to jam waec maths and begin rethinking the Engineering wey I talk say I wan study. To God,na runs save us that year. Even seun cannot swear he didn't do runs. A solid 100% of Nairalanders who are going to view and comment on this thread did runs.. [/quote]
You are bloody shameless idiots using your cheating brush to rubbish everybody on the platform to justify your shame. You thing the over one million people on the platform are indomie or millennial generation? Every generation have cheats but it was a minority in pre-millennial generations and those cheats were usually ashamed to talk about it openly like you're bragging about now.
These ones still dey write exam nh... I once met a Corper colleague that year without jamb result. He joined the school in his PPA to take jamb that year.
Institutionalised and systematic cheating in the south; no wonder there are so many of them here in Nailraland who still have difficulty differentiating between basic words like: taught vs thought, other vs order, him or his vs her or hers, in vs on etc; yet some of these half baked products of malpractice are ironically among the ones in the forefront chanting 'Buhari no get certificate.'
Shehuyinka: In this report, Damilola BANJO, who went undercover as Grace Adebiga, and Habeeb OLADAPO, expose examination malpractices in a popular Lagos school during the last WAEC and JAMB exams.
OVER the years, there has been a consistent increase in the number of students seeking tertiary education in Nigeria. Over 1.5 million young people in Nigeria sit for the West African Secondary School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) and slightly above the number sit for the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board Examination (JAMB).
In 2019, the year of this investigation, exactly 1,590,173 students registered for the West African examination and 1.8 million sat for the JAMB. Out of this number, just a little over 600,000 got admission into the different tertiary institutions available in the country.
The number of admission seekers far outnumber the available slots in the tertiary institutions. This has created a huge competition for limited spaces hence the desperate moves by students, parents and teachers who have resorted to sharp practices at every level to beat the system, thereby edging out honest students with their fraudulently acquired superlative results.
Examination malpractice has flourished in Nigeria for a long time and many people have created an illegal business around their ability to outsmart the system, as revealed in this investigation.
After documenting stories on how results are easily bought at Bachel Academy, Damilola BANJO and Habib OLADAPO investigate some of the claims.
In this Investigation, Banjo, under the pseudonym of Grace Adebiga enrolled at Bachel Academy in Egbeda area of Lagos State, for both WASSCE and JAMB examination.
Grace Adebiga is a 25-year-old rice seller, who wanted to get tertiary education. She would need to write WASSCE and JAMB in order to achieve her goal of gaining a tertiary education. For six months, Grace went through the Bachel Academy as an admission seeker who was too busy to study but willing to pay for the needed grades. She registered for the 2019 WASSCE and JAMB in the school where she documented evidence of extortion, bribery and examination fraud.
Not all that glitter is genuine
Bachel College, and its other affiliates, like the Bachel Academy, are popular for churning out good WASSCE results and well above 200 JAMB scores. On the school’s Facebook page, a former student shared how she made her O’level result at Bacheal Academy after five failed attempts elsewhere.
“Mr bachel is the only solution for all the people in the nation that see education as the problem of our nation like me now have loss hope about all this education stuff have been doing waec gce neco for almost good five years but i thank god today because have make my result math b3 phys b3 chem b3 eng c5 biology c6 bachel is too much and one thing is that some people didn’t know that we used our money to buy our self good things love bachel once again (sic),” the student, Humble Sinner, praised the school.
This would have been commendable if the results were achieved through hard work but the cue to how students of Bachel make outstanding grades is obvious in the disjointed and grammatical blunder in the testimonial of Humble Sinner. The lack of punctuation and capitalization would have earned Sinner a grade way below C6 but at Bachel even a ‘sinner’ can be made a saint.
Bachel is one of the notable private schools in Lagos by all standards. It has state-of-the art secondary schools in Ayobo, Ogba and Egbeda areas of Lagos State. The school at Ayobo is built on a large expanse of land with a lush green field for recreation. The level of examination fraud perpetrated in all the branches of Bachel schools is antithetical to the quiet exterior at the Ayobo branch.
With well over 2,000 students in its three branches, including the tutorial centre, Bachel has the capacity and infrastructure to be in the business of education, but lacks integrity to inspire value of hard work in its students.
This would have been commendable if the results were achieved through hard work but the cue to how students of Bachel make outstanding grades is obvious in the disjointed and grammatical blunder in the testimonial of Humble Sinner. The lack of punctuation and capitalization would have earned Sinner a grade way below C6 but at Bachel even a ‘sinner’ can be made a saint.
Bachel is one of the notable private schools in Lagos by all standards. It has state-of-the art secondary schools in Ayobo, Ogba and Egbeda areas of Lagos State. The school at Ayobo is built on a large expanse of land with a lush green field for recreation. The level of examination fraud perpetrated in all the branches of Bachel schools is antithetical to the quiet exterior at the Ayobo branch.
With well over 2,000 students in its three branches, including the tutorial centre, Bachel has the capacity and infrastructure to be in the business of education, but lacks integrity to inspire value of hard work in its students.
Founded on September 15, 2006, Bachel positioned itself as the epitome of quality education in Nigeria, providing “unique, outstanding and remarkable academic service to Nigerians and foreigners of different social-status in its four standard schools at Ogba, Ayobo and Ikotun, with several academy centers in Lagos and Ogun metropolis,”
“We simply provide technical and professional standards required to bring out the best, useful and hidden potentials in students through a team of dynamic management and passionate professionals who frown at failure,” it claimed on its official website.
However, behind the walls, there is an organised system of examination fraud. The sterling grades being flaunted by Sinner, and many of its students, are the result of organised exam fraud. Everyone in the school, including WAEC officials, play a part in this malpractice. The students, and the gatemen, are not left out; they all are fully involved.
Honestly, each time I look back through the years, I am always grateful to God for the sacrifices I made and by decision to do the right thing especially during exams. When I was preparing for my SSCE that I wrote in SS3 (2011) I read till I was depressed, my school organized 6am morning and 3:30 -4:30 pm evening tutorials for us. Our principals kept on reminding us that they have invested passionately in teaching us and that we should make them proud by reading well so we could pass. After the evening tutorials in school everyday, I would trek to my JAMB class for 25 minutes . I developed ulcer cos I felt so much pressure to make sure I study like craze and when my results came out, I passed outstandingly but had an F9 in Igbo . I taught in a private school two years ago and I was shocked to see that the proprietor of the school always assured them that they will help them during their Waec and Neco and that made the students lazy during their class activities. Till my university I tried as much as possible to study hard and avoid malpractice cos I know I have a role to play in building this country irrespective of the painful behavior of our politicians. I admire all those that didn’t boycott corners to pass any kind of exams or achieve any kind of success. May God never shame us
So? If not for runs how many of you for pass WAEC Abegi,runs have been saving lives since buharis first recession. I remember that time we were all forming bright students, only for me to jam waec maths and begin rethinking the Engineering wey I talk say I wan study. To God,na runs save us that year. Even seun cannot swear he didn't do runs. A solid 100% of Nairalanders who are going to view and comment on this thread did runs..
Please speak for yourself, I have never done 'runs'.
Your stupidity is baffling! Don't you see how every small issue involving education tags the northerners as beneficiaries of quota system not merit. And here we are seeing how "meritorious" ones acquire the supposed "merit". So it's all about buying results.
You need sense for your writing career to flourish
Bachel academy is just unfortunate This is a norm in almost all the secondary schools in Nigeria, both private and public schools are involved in this.
Marjos international college idiaraba mushin keeps bagging award of the best school in Lagos with this nonsense. From what I saw in this video, nothing different from what they do in marjos
ODJ124: well.... waec is one of the most difficult exam.. u are gonna wrt ...before making it to the uni.. some of the questions asked most of the students hasn't been thought... should they keep failing... though exam malpractice is very bad.... but it has good side shall.. especially went u are frustrated in exam hall...
ODJ124: well.... waec is one of the most difficult exam.. u are gonna wrt ...before making it to the uni.. some of the questions asked most of the students hasn't been thought... should they keep failing... though exam malpractice is very bad.... but it has good side shall.. especially went u are frustrated in exam hall...
pls forgive them...
You can see the consequences of malpractice already. Imagine a person who went through university writing in this manner Continue doing yourself.
Shehuyinka: In this report, Damilola BANJO, who went undercover as Grace Adebiga, and Habeeb OLADAPO, expose examination malpractices in a popular Lagos school during the last WAEC and JAMB exams.
OVER the years, there has been a consistent increase in the number of students seeking tertiary education in Nigeria. Over 1.5 million young people in Nigeria sit for the West African Secondary School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) and slightly above the number sit for the Joint Admissions Matriculation Board Examination (JAMB).
In 2019, the year of this investigation, exactly 1,590,173 students registered for the West African examination and 1.8 million sat for the JAMB. Out of this number, just a little over 600,000 got admission into the different tertiary institutions available in the country.
The number of admission seekers far outnumber the available slots in the tertiary institutions. This has created a huge competition for limited spaces hence the desperate moves by students, parents and teachers who have resorted to sharp practices at every level to beat the system, thereby edging out honest students with their fraudulently acquired superlative results.
Examination malpractice has flourished in Nigeria for a long time and many people have created an illegal business around their ability to outsmart the system, as revealed in this investigation.
After documenting stories on how results are easily bought at Bachel Academy, Damilola BANJO and Habib OLADAPO investigate some of the claims.
In this Investigation, Banjo, under the pseudonym of Grace Adebiga enrolled at Bachel Academy in Egbeda area of Lagos State, for both WASSCE and JAMB examination.
Grace Adebiga is a 25-year-old rice seller, who wanted to get tertiary education. She would need to write WASSCE and JAMB in order to achieve her goal of gaining a tertiary education. For six months, Grace went through the Bachel Academy as an admission seeker who was too busy to study but willing to pay for the needed grades. She registered for the 2019 WASSCE and JAMB in the school where she documented evidence of extortion, bribery and examination fraud.
Not all that glitter is genuine
Bachel College, and its other affiliates, like the Bachel Academy, are popular for churning out good WASSCE results and well above 200 JAMB scores. On the school’s Facebook page, a former student shared how she made her O’level result at Bacheal Academy after five failed attempts elsewhere.
“Mr bachel is the only solution for all the people in the nation that see education as the problem of our nation like me now have loss hope about all this education stuff have been doing waec gce neco for almost good five years but i thank god today because have make my result math b3 phys b3 chem b3 eng c5 biology c6 bachel is too much and one thing is that some people didn’t know that we used our money to buy our self good things love bachel once again (sic),” the student, Humble Sinner, praised the school.
This would have been commendable if the results were achieved through hard work but the cue to how students of Bachel make outstanding grades is obvious in the disjointed and grammatical blunder in the testimonial of Humble Sinner. The lack of punctuation and capitalization would have earned Sinner a grade way below C6 but at Bachel even a ‘sinner’ can be made a saint.
Bachel is one of the notable private schools in Lagos by all standards. It has state-of-the art secondary schools in Ayobo, Ogba and Egbeda areas of Lagos State. The school at Ayobo is built on a large expanse of land with a lush green field for recreation. The level of examination fraud perpetrated in all the branches of Bachel schools is antithetical to the quiet exterior at the Ayobo branch.
With well over 2,000 students in its three branches, including the tutorial centre, Bachel has the capacity and infrastructure to be in the business of education, but lacks integrity to inspire value of hard work in its students.
This would have been commendable if the results were achieved through hard work but the cue to how students of Bachel make outstanding grades is obvious in the disjointed and grammatical blunder in the testimonial of Humble Sinner. The lack of punctuation and capitalization would have earned Sinner a grade way below C6 but at Bachel even a ‘sinner’ can be made a saint.
Bachel is one of the notable private schools in Lagos by all standards. It has state-of-the art secondary schools in Ayobo, Ogba and Egbeda areas of Lagos State. The school at Ayobo is built on a large expanse of land with a lush green field for recreation. The level of examination fraud perpetrated in all the branches of Bachel schools is antithetical to the quiet exterior at the Ayobo branch.
With well over 2,000 students in its three branches, including the tutorial centre, Bachel has the capacity and infrastructure to be in the business of education, but lacks integrity to inspire value of hard work in its students.
Founded on September 15, 2006, Bachel positioned itself as the epitome of quality education in Nigeria, providing “unique, outstanding and remarkable academic service to Nigerians and foreigners of different social-status in its four standard schools at Ogba, Ayobo and Ikotun, with several academy centers in Lagos and Ogun metropolis,”
“We simply provide technical and professional standards required to bring out the best, useful and hidden potentials in students through a team of dynamic management and passionate professionals who frown at failure,” it claimed on its official website.
However, behind the walls, there is an organised system of examination fraud. The sterling grades being flaunted by Sinner, and many of its students, are the result of organised exam fraud. Everyone in the school, including WAEC officials, play a part in this malpractice. The students, and the gatemen, are not left out; they all are fully involved.
Hope International School Umuahia is still the only school I know that doesn't support malpractice. Waec officials hate coming there for invigilation cos there will be no illegal money. Students and the exam hall are searched by the proprietress herself before exams commence. The sitting arrangement is such that you can't even cheat. Students that aren't confident enough leave at the end of SS2 so not many write the final exams in the end. The ones that do can defend their results anywhere. The discipline is like no other.
paulolee: miracle centers..... was guilty too and paid 15k for waec in one of its branch inside lagos... my main aim was to pass maths because i was just too bad in maths maybe its because of my unserious maths teacher back then in sec. skul.. the d-day came and we were asked to pay extra 1k each to settle the stubborn holy looking invigilator that came to preside that maths exam and we all played along and wished she accept after hearing that she is an elder in deeper life.. she didnt accept but just left the hall for assistant that collected the cash after much begging saying she can't be part of such injustice.. we happily "copied" all maths answers on the board and submitted but when the results came out i was shocked when i see my beautiful f9 gallantly looking at me... till today i don't know if its because the miracle center gave us a fake miracle or if its that invigilator's handwork..
So? If not for runs how many of you for pass WAEC Abegi,runs have been saving lives since buharis first recession. I remember that time we were all forming bright students, only for me to jam waec maths and begin rethinking the Engineering wey I talk say I wan study. To God,na runs save us that year. Even seun cannot swear he didn't do runs. A solid 100% of Nairalanders who are going to view and comment on this thread did runs..
talk for yourself... I never did runs. I went to a public secondary school and made my result.. I took GCE the following year and made the only subject I had problem with the previous year( English).
ODJ124: well.... waec is one of the most difficult exam.. u are gonna wrt ...before making it to the uni.. some of the questions asked most of the students hasn't been thought... should they keep failing... though exam malpractice is very bad.... but it has good side shall.. especially went u are frustrated in exam hall...
pls forgive them...
it is a lie.. Some of the present generation of students are lazy. I have taught for some years..I give them questions to solve so that when i mark and corrections could forwarded to them, they hard do it. I can guarantee A1 in Mathematics and Further Mathematics if only the student could be " diligent, persistent, practice and punctual" . Those four words will a student do well if the student is sincere with himself / herself