Stakeholders in the education sector are still reacting to the recent results of the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination, WASSCE, released by the West African Examinations Council, WAEC.

It was reported that WAEC had on August 4, released the 2025 WASSCE results for school candidates.

“The West African Examinations Council is pleased to inform candidates who sat WASSCE for School Candidates, 2025 that the result has officially been released today, Monday, August 4, 2025,” WAEC stated.

Recall that out of the 1,969,313 candidates who sat for the examination, only 754,545 candidates, representing 38.32%, obtained credits and above in a minimum of five subjects, including English Language and Mathematics.

Meanwhile, in 2024 WASSCE, 72.12% of candidates obtained credits and above in a minimum of five subjects, including English Language and Mathematics, which was a 33.8% decrease in performance.

The mass failure had attracted strong criticism, with parents and some groups calling for the cancellation of some of the papers, especially English Language and Mathematics.

Stakeholders are also demanding independent investigations into the matter and overhaul of the council’s management team.

According to them, subjecting WASSCE, a standardized evaluation for secondary school leavers and basic requirement for tertiary institution admissions, to trial and error is unacceptable.

Following the public outcry, the examination said it reviewed the Mathematics, English Language, Biology and Economics results released on its site.

The council, while apologizing, said it urgently corrected the technical glitches that led to the situation.

Also, WAEC said it discovered technical glitches during an internal review and temporarily withdrew access to the results.

Reacting to the mass failure, the Nigeria Union of Teachers, NUT, said the development boils down to system failure.

“Let us first take a look at the condition under which some of the candidates sat for some of the papers, especially the English Language paper. The Council said it discovered that the paper leaked, and instead of cancelling it, went ahead to let students write it at odd hours.

“The students, who had conditioned their minds to write the paper in the morning, were delayed till evening and even night in some cases,” it said.

On its part, the National Association of Nigerian Students, NANS, stated that the condition under which the candidates wrote some papers, especially English, was terrible.

“What do you expect? The conduct of the exam in some instances left much to be desired. Look at the day they wrote the English Language paper. It was horrific. Candidates were drained emotionally and were tired.

“But a lot of other factors also contributed. The technical hitches in the exam were what some candidates also experienced during the UTME,” the students’ body noted.

A school teacher, Divine Mike, questioned the council’s credibility and the integrity of Nigeria’s education assessment system, describing the development as a national disaster and accused WAEC of bastardising the entire education process.

“You cannot make such a serious examination a subject of trial and error.

“Today the pass rate is 38 per cent, tomorrow it becomes 63 per cent. How are we supposed to trust the authenticity of these results?” He queried.

He, therefore, urged the federal government to urgently probe the matter, insisting that those at the helm of affairs in WAEC should be reshuffled.

Another private school teacher, Israel Chukwudi, stressed that the incident highlights the importance of ensuring exam bodies have robust systems.

He expressed worries that the development could jeopardise the council’s proposed full Computer-Based Testing, CBT, examination in 2026.

According to him, the incident raises questions about WAEC’s transition to CBT, by 2026, considering Nigeria’s digital infrastructure gaps in rural areas.

“If WAEC, as an examination body, could not put its logistics together to ensure smooth running, how would it transit to the Computer-Based Testing it is proposing,” he asked.