Mr. Nobel Onukwue, the board’s deputy director (outstation) said the result was released on Monday.
He advised candidates who wrote the examinations to check their results online.
The CBT, which started on May 17 would end on May 31.
Onukwue said that the second day of the CBT was better, because the challenges experienced during the first day were tackled, so there were no issues of candidates logging out mistakenly, server going off, or power outage.
Mr Buhari Aliyu, JAMB’s biometric operator, said that 332 candidates were screened for the first session, and 342 for the second session, as against the 350 expected candidates.
Aliyu said any candidate that came late would be allowed to sit for the examination, but would be logged out the moment the time was up.
The second session of CBT verification at the Digital Bridge Institute started at about 11.50 a.m. and ended at 1.20 p.m; the examination started at about 1.20 p.m. and would last for three hours.
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