Wednesday, 25 January 2017

JAMB ADMISSION SUBJECT COMBINATION


JAMB ADMISSION SUBJECT COMBINATION

2016/2017 Full List of JAMB Subject Combinations
For All Courses
JAMB Subject Combinations for Sciences:

1. Medicine and Surgery:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

2. Agricultural Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

3. Computer Science:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and one of Biology,
Chemistry, Agric Science, Economics and Geography

4. Biochemistry:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

5. Biological Sciences:
Use of English, Biology, Chemistry and Physics or
Mathematics.

6. Physics:
Use of English, Physics, Mathematics and Chemistry or
Biology.

7. Mathematics:
Use of English, Mathematics and any two of Physics,
Chemistry, Economics, Biology and Agricultural Science.

8. Chemistry:
Use of English, Chemistry and two of Physics, Biology
and Mathematics.

9. Nursing:
Use of English, Physics, Biology and Chemistry

10. Food, Science and Technology:
Use of English, Chemistry, Mathematics / Physics and
Agric Science

11. Pharmacy:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

12. Industrial Chemistry:
Use of English, Chemistry, Mathematics and any of
Physics/Biology/Agricultural Science.

13. Fisheries:
Use of English, Chemistry, Biology/Agricultural Science
and any other Science subject.

14. Geology:
Use of English and any three Chemistry, Physics,
Mathematics, Biology and Geography.

15. Geography:
Use of English, Geography and any two of Mathematics,
Biology, Chemistry, Physics and Agricultural Science.

16. Surveying an Geoinformatics:
Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of
Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics.

17. Statistics:
Use of English, Mathematics and any two of Physics,

18. Building:
Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of
Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics.

19. Microbiology:
Use of English, Biology, Chemistry and either Physics or
Mathematics.

20. Botany:
Use of English, Biology, Chemistry and any other Science
subject.

21. Zoology:
Use of English, Biology and any two of Physics,
Chemistry and Mathematics.

22. Pure and Applied Mathematics:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Biology or
Agric Science or Chemistry or Geography.

23. Agriculture:
English, Chemistry, Biology/Agriculture and any one of
Physics and Mathematics.

24. Agricultural Economics:
English Language, Chemistry, Biology/ Agricultural
Science and Mathematics.

25. Agric-Extension:
English, Chemistry, Biology/ Agricultural Science plus
Mathematics or Physics.

26. Agronomy:
English, Chemistry, Biology or Agriculture and Physics or
Mathematics.

27. Animal Production and Science:
Use of English, Chemistry, Biology/Agric Science and
Physics/Mathematics.

28. Crop Production and Science:
English, Chemistry, Biology/Agriculture and Mathematics
or Physics.

29. Soil Science:
English, Chemistry, Biology or Agricultural Science plus
Mathematics or Physics.

30. Veterinary Science:
English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology

31. Forestry:
Use of English, Chemistry, Biology or Agriculture and
Physics or Mathematics.

32. Civil Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

33. Chemical Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

34. Computer Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

35. Electrical Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

36. Electronic Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

37. Marine Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

38. Mechanical Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

39. Metallurgical and Materials Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

40. Petroleum and Gas Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

41. Systems Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

42. Structural Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

43. Production and Industrial Engineering:
Use of English, Mathematics, Physics and Chemistry.

44. Architecture:
English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of Chemistry,
Geography, Art, Biology and Economics.

45. Quantity Surveying:
Use of English, Physics, Mathematics, and any of
Chemistry, Geography, Art, Biology and Economics.

46. Urban and Regional Planning:
English, Mathematics, Geography and one of Economics,
Physics, Chemistry.

47. Estate Management:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and one other
subject

48. Anatomy:
English, Mathematics, Biology and Chemistry or Physics.

49. Dentistry:
Use of English, Chemistry, Biology and one Science
subject.

50. Medical Laboratory Science:
English Language, Physics, Chemistry and Biology.

51. Medical Rehabilitation:
Use of English, Physics, Chemistry and Biology

52. Physiology:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

53. Physiotherapy:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

54. Radiography:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry

55. Veterinary Medicine:
Use of English, Biology, Physics and Chemistry
JAMB Subject Combinations for Social Sciences:

1. Accountancy:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any other
Social Science subject

2. Business Administration:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any other
Social Science subject

3. Public Administration:
Use of English, Government, Economics and any other
subject

4. Banking and Finance:
Use of English, Mathematics, one Social Science subject
and any other subject

5. Economics:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and any of
Government, History, Geography, Literature in English,
French and CRK/IRK.

6. Demography and Social Statistics:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics/Geography and
any other subject.

7. Geography:
Use of English, Geography and two other Arts or Social
Science subjects

8. Library Science:
Use of English and Any three Arts or Social Science
subjects

9. Mass Communication:
Use of English and any three from Arts or Social Science
subjects.

10. Sociology:
Use of English, Three Social Science or Arts subjects.

11. Political Science:
Use of English, Government or History plus two other
Social Science/Arts subjects.

12. Philosophy:
Use of English, Government and any other two subjects

13. Psychology:
Use of English, Any three subjects from Arts or Social
Science

14. Religious Studies:
Use of English Language, CRK/IRS and any two other
subjects.

15. Social Works:
Use of English Language, Mathematics, Economics/
Geogra phy and any other subject

16. Sociology and Anthropology:
Use of English, Three Social Science or Arts Subjects

17. Industrial Relations:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other
relevant subject

18. Human Resources Management:
Use of English, Economics, Government and any other
relevant subjects.

19. International Relations:
Use of English, Economics, Literature- inEnglish and
Geography/Govern ment/History.

20. Business Management:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics and one other
subject.

21. Cooperative and Rural Development:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other
subject.

22. Tourism:
English, Mathematics, Economics and any other subject.

23. Marketing:
Use of English, Mathematics, Economics plus one other
relevant Subject.

24. Insurance:
English, Mathematics, Economics and one other subject.

JAMB Subject Combinations for Arts:

1. Arabic and Islamic Studies:
Use of English, Arabic and Two subjects from Arts and/
or Social Sciences.

2. Christian Religious Studies:
Use of English, Two Arts subjects including Christian
Religious Knowledge and any other subject.

3. Fine and Applied Arts:
Use of English Language, Fine Art and two other Arts
subjects or Social Science subject.

4. Theatre Arts:
Use of English, Lit. in English and two other relevant
subjects.

5. Linguistics:
English, Two relevant Arts subjects and any other
subject.

6. English and International Studies:
Use of English, Literature in English, Government or
History or any other Arts subjects.

7. French:
English, French and any other two subjects from Arts
and Social Sciences.

8. English Language:
Use of English, Lit.-in-English, one other Arts subject and
another Arts or Social Science subject.

9. Hausa:
English, Hausa, Lit in English and any of Economics,
Government, History and Arabic.

10. History and International Studies:
Use of English, History/Government and any other two
subjects from Arts & Social Science.

11. Islamic Studies:
English, Islamic Religious Studies plus two other Arts
subjects.

12. Igbo:
English, Igbo and two subjects from Arts and social
Sciences.

13. Mass Communication:
Use of English, Any three Arts and Social Science
subjects.

14. Music:
Use of English, Music, one other Arts subject plus any
other subject.

15. Philosophy:
Use of English, Any three subjects.

16. Religious Studies:
English, CRK/IRS and any two other subjects.

17. Yoruba:
Use of English, Yoruba and two other subjects in Arts or
Social Sciences.

18. Anthropology:
Use of English, Any three of History, CRK/IRK,
Geography, Economics, Literature in English and French.

19. Criminology and Security Studies:
English, Economics,CBN NJ Government, and any one of the
following: History, Geography, Literature in English,H H g b
French, IRK, Hausa.

20. Law:
English, Literature, Economics and any other Art Subject.

21. Civil Law:
English Language and Any three Arts or Social Science
subjects.

22. Islamic / Sharia Law:
Use of English Language and Any three Arts or Social
Science subjects including Arabic

Tuesday, 24 January 2017

The 39 Most Awaited Movies Of 2017


Wow! The 39 Most Awaited Movies Of 2017


2016 is dead, long live 2017! From unmissable blockbusters to more discreet productions, from the return of great filmmakers to the rising of new talents, from Ryan Gosling to actors yet to make a name for themselves, we are running a real risk of being over-spoilt movie-wise this year. Because some films do not yet have an official release date, we’ve decided on a non-exhaustive, rankless list (it was actually pretty hard to contain it to only this many titles).

The Lego Batman Movie – February 10


With its mini-super-heroes made out of plastic, this parody will focus on all the orphan’s fails.

A Cure for Wellness – February 24



Gore Verbinski’s new flick, set in a goosebump-inducing care home, feels a bit like Shutter Island.It’s a place where weird stories intertwine with real human experiments. A Cure for Wellness looks like it’s going to be the weirdest film of the year, so yeah we’re quite excited about it.

John Wick 2 – February 17

Keanu Reeves is fucking back and he’s surprisingly cool in the new John Wick. Neo and Morpheus(Laurence Fishburne) being reunited on-screen, come on, how thrilling is that? Eighteen years after The Matrix, this is what we call acting maturity.

Logan, The Wolverine –March 2


Hugh Jackman is back in the role that made a global star out of him, the best-known mutant ever, Wolverine. This movie is R-Rated, so expect violence and gore, plus it is supposed to introduce X-23. What else do you need?

Trainspotting 2 – January 27


Twenty years later, the band of crazies led by Danny Boyle is back from the dead. Ewan McGregor, Jonny Lee Miller, Robert Carlyle and Ewen Bremner are at it again, still coached by the same great director. This little taste of nostalgia is right up our alley.

Lost City of Z – March 24


This movie was a headache for the great James Gray, but he’s finally back with an Amazonian adventure inspired by the true story of Percival Harrison Fawcett, who went looking for a lost civilisation.

King Arthur: Legend of the Sword – May 12


 Yes, it is yet another flick about the legend of King Arthur, but this one should be different, or at least that’s what the trailer is hinting at. Director Guy Ritchie has built a fast-paced fresco and after all, how can we say no to Charlie Hunnam, Jude Law, Eric Bana with a bit of Game of Thrones on top?

Life – March 24


A space film starring the duo Jake Gyllenhaal and Ryan Reynolds trying to come back home alive after being attacked by a Martian lifeform they thought they could bring to Earth easy. Mouth-watering.

Ghost in the Shell – March 21


 The most complex and the most badass Japanese anime of all time is getting the live action treatment and fans are ready to shred it to pieces if it is not good enough. Fortunately, if the trailer is anything to go by, it will be. The movie is apparently faithful to the original concept and at the same time distances itself from today’s predictable Hollywood blockbuster recipe, which should make of Ghost In The Shell something more than yet another sci-fi action flick.

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 – April 28


Marvel’s schedule is pretty full this year, and things will start with a bang with the comeback of our space gang. This sequel keeps the keys elements that made a world success of its predecessor, but still adds a few things to the mix (notably a few new characters such as Quill’s dad). James Gunn knows his stuff, or at least we hope so.

Alien: Covenant – May 19


It’s back to basics for one of the best sci-fi saga in history. Alien: Covenant, is not really a sequel to Prometheus, it’s some way between that and the first ever episode (confused?). The pretty cool cast, the first promising shots, the new hybrid creatures, all this announces a great movie that will seduce fans old and new.

Wonder Woman – June 2


Let’s be honest: the last two DC Comic movies were not that great, Nonetheless, there is still hope for their next two movies scheduled for this year. The first one, Wonder Woman, will be Amazon’s first solo DC venture and will take place during WW1.

World War Z 2 – No UK release date yet


 Well, no wonder there’s no official release date yet: the Brad Pitt-led movie has yet to be appointed a director, the last one having buggered off to work on Jurassic World 2.
With the filming not started yet and the colossal amount of post-production work on the cards, we admit we don’t really believe it will ever happen. But hey, just in case (and now that we’ve been told that David Fincher might just do it), we’re including in the list.

Spider-Man: Homecoming – July 7



The third version of Spidey is getting its own film, after his appearance in Captain AmericaTom Holland will fight off Michael Keaton, who plays a mean Vautour, one of the best villains in the Spider-Man universe. Humour, stunning action scenes, plus a dash of Iron Man. Hell yeah.

Dunkirk – July 21



A new film by Christopher Nolan is an event in itself. This huge cinematic fresco about the evacuation of French-British troops in Dunkirk in 1940 (WW2) is going to be mind-boggling.

Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets – August 4


The adaptation by Luc Besson (back in sci-fi territory) of the famous comics promises to be amazing. Everybody says it’s going to be THE summer hit and the whole world is waiting for it, so he’s better not screw it up or there’ll be hell to pay.

War for the Planet of the Apes – July 14


Caesar and co are once again embroiled in another (maybe even the last) epic battle betweenWoody Harrelson’s troops and great apes. Although it is quite possible that this movie concludes the prequel series (and we know how it all ends), the first shots promise a great finale.

The Dark Tower – July 28


Not many movies have been the subject of as much gossip as The Dark Tower: one, it’s a rework of a famous Stephen King story and two, it will pit Idris Elba against Matthew McConaughey, so to say that we are pretty thrilled is quite an understatement.

It – September 8


It was about time the most Machiavellian clown in the history of cinema. 2017 will be he year when movie-goers will rediscover Pennywise and scream. We don’t really know what it will look like, but we have faith.

Blade Runner 2049 – October 6


Philip KDick + Ridley Scott +Harrison Ford + dark Sci-fi. This combination resulted in a cult movie in 1982. Throw in Denis Villeneuve, one of the best director alive today, add Ryan Gosling and 21st century CGI and you’ll understand why this is the movie we are all waiting for at Konbini.

Kingsman: the Golden Circle – September 29


Despite the glorious cast and its original take on the spy movie genre, nobody really expectedKingsman would be such a success. Let’s see what the future brings.

Thor: Ragnarok – October 27



We had a fight at the office to decide whether to include this one or not, but bloody hell: Thor is gonna fight gladiator Hulk in an arena, in space! That, and the fact that the casting is top notch (with Cate Blanchett and Jeff Goldblum), the fact that Doctor Strange is going to show up and that the whole thing is based on Planet Hulk, one of the best series of this past decade, tipped the scales in favour of its inclusion in the list.

Logan Lucky – No release date yet


A fast-car-cum-murder flick featuring Adam Driver, Daniel Craig, Katherine Waterston, Hilary Swank and Channing Tatum.

Justice League – November 17



This  DC Comics style Avengers mené par Batman et Wonder Woman could be quite good, especially thanks to Ezra Miller’s Flash and Jason Marmoa’s Aquaman (with a nod to Black Superman).

Coco – December 8



This new Pixar animation takes place in a colourful and rather pop Mexico on the Day of the Dead. Cute ghost story follows.

Star Wars: episode VIII – December 15



Star Wars. Nuff’ said.

All Eyez on Me –No release date yet



After the success of Straight Outta Compton, we’re all waiting for this Tupac biopic, which should be out this year.

The Circle – No release date yet



We love Emma Watson when she plays the bright student. She gets a job in a big company hiding a dark secret. Like a long episode of Black Mirror in fact.

Death Note –No  release date yet



Another anime adaptation, announced a while ago. To be fair, we were weary of a Hollywood live action remakes and whitewashing Asian movies.

Detour – No  release date yet



This highly polished revenge cum gangster movie looks like something Nicolas Winding Refn could have directed. It’s the story of a guy who pays a small-time hitman to kill his mum.

Free Fire –March 21



Brie Larson had to appear in the list somewhere. Here she is, gun in hand and lost in a world of full of men.

Get Out – March 17



Get Out is a comedy horror flick that has a young African-American guy meeting the in-laws for the first time, a bunch of racist weirdoes fascinated with hypnosis. It will be interesting to see how it will be received in Trump-led USA.

The Girl With All the Gifts – September 23


It is featured the list because it shows that the zombie movie genre is not yet exhausted, because it’s the adaptation of a best-seller, because it stars Gemma Arterton, and because the trailer is really great

The Love Witch – March 10



This little retro gem of a movie mixes glamour and horror and could very well be one of the best portraits of today’s  femmes fatales.

Okja – No release date yet



Netflix’ coup this year will be Bong Joon-Ho’s new work (The Host, Snowpiercer, Snowpiercer). It will tell the story of a little girl fighting a big conglomerate’s attempts at kidnapping her best friend, a monster called Okja.
If the plot was not enough, let us add that it will star Tilda Swinton, Lily Collins, Jake Gyllenhaal, Paul Dano, Steven Yeun (Glenn in The Walking Dead) and Giancarlo Esposito (Gus in Breaking Bad). Will that do?

Le Redoutable –No  release date yet


Louis Garrel plays director Jean-Luc Godard and falls in love with actress Anne Wiazemsky. Directed by Michel Hazanavicius.

Slice – No release date yet



A weird little pop film that transforms Chance The Rapper into a kind of werewolf implicated in a series of night murders involving pizza delivery boys. Make of this what you will.

Song to Song –No release date yet



It’s directed by Terrence Malick and stars Ryan Gosling, Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Rooney Mara, Haley Bennett, Natalie Portman, Michael Fassbender, Val Kilmer, Benicio Del Toro, Clifton Collins Jr., Angela Bettis, Bérénice Marlohe, Florence and the Machine and Holly Hunter. That should be enough of reasons, shouldn’t it?

The Trap – No release date yet

Gucci Mane and Harmony Korine, soon to be working together again.
This one is more wishful thinking than anything. Harmony Korine should have made his comeback this year, but he was swamped with work, his buddy Gucci Mane came out of prison and a few more things have messed things up (among which a serious tiff with the cast). We’re still hoping that it won’t spill into 2018 because we really like the idea of having Korine direct Idris Elba, Benicio Del Toro, Al Pacino, Robert Pattinson and James Franco.