About the English Language programme
English Language is a undergraduate programme offered at Covenant University, within the Faculty of Arts, Department of English Language. The programme runs for 4 years.
This guide covers what prospective applicants need to know to make an informed decision about studying English Language at Covenant University: the curriculum, the JAMB and O'level requirements, the duration and tuition, the accreditation status, the typical career paths, and the admission process. For first-time JAMB candidates and parents supporting their wards through the application, the requirements and admission-process sections are the most consequential.
What you will study
English Language is a flagship programme at the Faculty of Arts, Covenant University.
For programmes with a professional-practice component (medicine, nursing, pharmacy, law, engineering), additional rotations, internships, or industry-attachment components extend the duration beyond the academic-coursework hours. For research-oriented programmes (basic sciences, humanities), the final-year project is a substantial undertaking that often shapes the postgraduate trajectory of students who continue into Master's or PhD work.
JAMB requirements
JAMB cut-off score: 180. The JAMB subject combination for English Language follows the standard combination prescribed by JAMB for the discipline — typically English Language as a compulsory subject, plus three subjects relevant to the course area.
JAMB cut-off scores set by individual universities can differ substantially from the JAMB minimum and from year to year. Above the cut-off, additional admission filters apply — Post-UTME screening (where the university runs one), O'level subject grades, and catchment-state and quota considerations. A JAMB score 20-30 points above the published cut-off materially improves admission probability for competitive courses.
O'level requirements
O'level requirements for English Language follow the standard pattern for Nigerian university admission. Five credit passes in WAEC or NECO at no more than two sittings, including English Language and Mathematics, with the additional subjects matching the discipline's prerequisites (sciences for STEM courses; arts subjects for humanities and law; commercial subjects for business and accounting).
Universities differ on combining WAEC and NECO results across sittings — some accept up to two sittings combined, others require all credits from a single sitting. Confirm the specific policy of Covenant University in the admission-cycle brochure. Awaiting-result candidates (writing WAEC or NECO concurrent with JAMB) are sometimes accepted provisionally, with admission confirmed only after the O'level results clear the cut-off.
Programme duration
The programme duration is 4 years for direct-entry-zero (DE0) candidates. Direct-entry-one (DE1) candidates — those entering with an A'level or HND foundation — typically complete the programme in one year less than the full duration.
The published duration assumes the academic calendar runs without major disruptions. In practice, Nigerian university calendars have historically been affected by ASUU strikes (the Academic Staff Union of Universities), which have extended some students' actual time-to-graduation by 6-18 months. The 2022-2023 ASUU strike was the most recent major disruption; the trajectory since has been more stable but cannot be guaranteed.
Tuition and cost
Indexed tuition: ₦900,000 per academic year.
Beyond tuition, students should budget for accommodation (hostel or off-campus), feeding, transport, books and materials, departmental fees, and the eventual final-year project costs. Total annual cost of study often runs 2-3× the published tuition figure. Scholarships, federal-government student loans (TETFund-backed and the more recent Federal Student Loan Scheme), and family support fill the gap for most students.
Accreditation
Accreditation status: fully_accredited. Issued by the National Universities Commission (NUC), with professional-body accreditation also relevant where the discipline is regulated. Accreditation status changes periodically; confirm the current status with the university's admissions office before committing to the programme.
Career prospects after graduation
Graduate career paths from English Language follow the broad pattern of its discipline. Graduates typically enter the labour market through three principal channels: direct private-sector employment (where the discipline matches employer demand — accounting, engineering, banking, IT, marketing); professional-practice routes (where the discipline requires further licensing — medicine, law, pharmacy, architecture, nursing); and further study (Master's, professional certifications, or PhD pathways, often pursued either immediately after graduation or after 2-5 years of working experience).
Starting salaries in Nigeria vary substantially by discipline and employer. Public-sector graduate roles (federal civil service, state civil service, NYSC-coordinated graduate-intake programmes) tend to start at modest fixed scales. Private-sector starting salaries range widely — fintech, oil-and-gas, telecoms, and the major-bank graduate-trainee programmes occupy the top of the distribution; small-business and informal-sector roles occupy the lower end. NYSC service in the first year post-graduation effectively delays the labour-market entry by 11-12 months.
For students considering further study or international study, the strength of the undergraduate transcript materially affects postgraduate placements. A First-Class or strong Second-Class Upper ('2:1') degree from a recognised Nigerian university opens substantially more doors — for Master's programmes abroad, professional fellowships, and graduate-trainee selection — than a weaker classification.
Admission process step by step
The standard admission process for English Language at Covenant University follows the Nigerian undergraduate sequence:
- Register for JAMB UTME in the registration window (typically January-February). Choose the university and course as first choice.
- Sit JAMB UTME in the examination window (typically April-May).
- Register for Post-UTME at Covenant University (where the university runs one) once JAMB results are released.
- Submit O'level results through the JAMB CAPS portal as soon as WAEC/NECO results clear.
- Watch the JAMB CAPS portal for admission offers. Accept the offer through CAPS within the published window.
- Complete university-side registration — pay the acceptance fee, register for the first session, complete medical screening, and collect the matriculation pack.
For direct-entry candidates (with A'level or HND), the process bypasses JAMB UTME — register for JAMB DE instead, and proceed through Post-DE screening at the university. The DE route typically admits into 200 level rather than 100 level, with the duration adjusted accordingly.
Practical advice for prospective applicants
Practical advice for prospective applicants. Visit the campus before committing — most Nigerian universities allow casual prospective-student visits, and seeing the departmental building, library, hostel area, and surrounding city before deciding helps clarify whether the institution matches the applicant's expectations. Speak to current students or recent graduates — the realities of departmental life, lecturer availability, and the classroom experience are best captured by people who lived it.
For competitive courses (medicine, pharmacy, law, computer science, civil engineering at the top universities), JAMB cut-offs are typically 30-60 points above the published minimum. For these courses, the admission filter combines JAMB, Post-UTME, O'level grades, and sometimes a more substantive interview or aptitude test. Targeting the published cut-off as the threshold rather than the safe-admission level is a common applicant mistake; aim 30-50 points higher to materially improve admission probability.