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The West African Examinations Council
(WAEC) has revised its examination rules on the use of mobile phones,
with effect from next year. The revised rule is that any
candidate caught with a mobile phone or any electronic communication
device in the examination hall will have his or her entire results
canceled. The Principal Public Relations Officer of WAEC, Mrs
Agnes Teye-Cudjoe, who disclosed this in an interview explained that the
decision was to deter candidates from carrying mobile phones and other
communication devices to examination halls. She said even though
the new rule would take effect from 2014, the WAEC would embark on
sensitisation programmes to ensure that students understood the
implications of indulging in such practices before writing any of its
examinations. The Principal Public Relations Officer said the
rule covered all its examinations — the Basic Education Certificate
Examination (BECE) as well as the regular and private West African
Senior School Examination Certificate (WASSCE). Mrs Teye-Cudjoe
said prior to the new rule, candidates caught with mobile phones in WAEC
examination halls only had the particular paper they were writing at
the time they were caught with the mobile device cancelled, “but now, we
are going all out,” she stressed. She said even though the
council had introduced a metal detector at most of its examination
centres, malpractices continued to occur. Mrs Teye-Cudjoe blamed
the invigilators at the various centres for not doing their work well
which had resulted in the council’s inability to fight such
malpractices. The practice, she said, was common in the private
WASSCE, but pointed out that the in-school examinations had also begun
recording the use of mobile phones during examinations. Mrs
Teye-Cudjoe said, for instance that in 2011, as many as 282 candidates
were caught with mobile phones in the examination hall while in 2012,
171 candidates were caught with mobile phones. |
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Source: Daily Graphic |
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