The West African Examination Council (WAEC) has finally released the results of the last West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE). This has been confirmed by multiple candidates who have checked their WASSCE results successfully.
In this article, you will be given the detailed steps on how to use your phone, laptop or any electronic device to check your WASSCE results.
Details Needed To Check your WASSCE results
- First, you have to buy your Scratch Card
- Candidates must also have available their Date of Birth and Index Number
- Students are to Login to the Online portal to check the outcome of their examinations
Where to Buy your WAEC WASSCE Results Checker?
- You can buy your scratch card at any of the WAEC offices nationwide, retail outlets, post offices or cafés
- You can check the list of Scratch card outlets here
Steps To Follow In Order to Check your WASSCE Results
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- Visit this site
- Then enter your Index Number
- Afterwards select the Type of Examination
- From there, choose your Exam Year (eg. 2024)
- Fill in your date of birth
- Enter the Serial Number on the card you purchased.
- Type in the 12-digit Personal Identification Number (PIN) on your Scratch card.
- Confirm the information you’ve provided
- Then click on submit and wait to see your scores.
- Your scores will be displayed on your screen after a short while
- You can proceed to print or save your document as PDF.
What To Do When You Can’t Check Your Result
- Reports has it that the portal designated for results checking is gradually being updated so at times, visitors see it not to be responsive. All candidates facing this kind of problem are entreated to keep checking in intervals or wait for about a day and try again.
About WAEC Ghana
The West African Examinations Council (WAEC), a non-profit-making organization, with its headquarters in Accra, Ghana, was established in 1952 after the Governments of Ghana (then Gold Coast), Nigeria, Sierra Leone and The Gambia enacted the West African Examinations Council Ordinances in 1951. Liberia became the fifth member of the Council in 1974. The enactment of the Ordinances was based on the Jeffrey Report, which strongly supported the proposal for the setting up of a regional examining board to harmonize and standardize pre–university assessment procedures in the then British West Africa.
The main objectives of the Council are:
- To conduct examinations in the public interest
- To award certificates, provided that the certificates did not represent lower standards of attainment than equivalent certificates of examining authorities in the United Kingdom.
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