Not less than eight per cent of candidates that sat for the Oyo State Teaching Service Commission (TESCOM) Computer Based Test (CBT) sails through to the recommended pass mark, the consultant for the test has said.
The consultant, Dr. Muyiwa Bamgbose, said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Ibadan on Thursday.
He explained that more than eight per cent of the candidates scored 50 per cent and above to pass the test.
According to him, candidates in the sciences do not do well in Biology and Chemistry, describing the performance as worrisome, especially in the two subjects.
READ ALSO:China Opens 5G-Covered Road For Testing Of Self-Driving Cars
“I know that in some of the public discussion fora, some people are complaining; some of them said that the Mathematics questions were too many for them.
“There are a set of questions of which the Mathematics questions are just four questions out of 50, but there were some reasoning questions that some of them call Mathematic questions that are not.
“You tell somebody that there are four rooms and there are eight people, how do you want to distribute them? That is a reasoning question and not Mathematics, for instance.
“The reasoning questions were of two types — qualitative and quantitative — those are about eight out of 50 questions.
“Nobody should complain about the results, as a matter of fact, if we are to restrain the test to the subject areas of the teachers, it will not be far from the results we have now.
“Some of them would prefer to be tested in their subject only but that would not make a good teacher.
“A teacher is a leader, so about 40 per cent of the questions are formed from their subject competence.
“If you are a Government subject teacher, then you should be able to teach the students about life’s skills because you’re likely to be more than a teacher such as becoming a principal or vice-principal.
“Then, there are questions on pedagogy; which is the way you teach; and that again is eight questions out of 50, that is like 16 per cent.
“If you want to teach, you know the content but how do you teach, how do you discipline, how do you arrange the class and how do you motivate these students. So they have it there for the CBT,’’ he said.
According to Bamgbose, English language questions take about 16 per cent because teachers should be able to speak good English language.
“It is a fair assessment for everyone; there is always room for improvement and those who didn’t do well should go back and equip themselves.
“I think there is a need for every graduate to work on himself or herself to make sure that he or she is not just employable but he or she will add value in whatever environment he or she finds himself or herself,’’ he said.
He noted that to reposition the education sector in the country, the step taken by TESCOM should be emulated and sustained.
“What TESCOM Oyo State has done is an eye-opener. We should not just measure education based on how much we spend but how we spend it and is not good enough to just employ people but to know who to employ,’’ he said.