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Home EDUCATION

UACE 2025: Examiners flag application gap as performance dips in several subjects

The 2025 results highlight a recurring struggle with tasks that require candidates to apply knowledge to everyday life. According to UNEB Executive Director Dan N. Odongo, this “constant factor” was visible across the curriculum.

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The Uganda National Examinations Board has identified a systemic “application gap” as a primary driver behind declining performance in several elective and humanities subjects during the 2025 examination cycle.

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While overall national pass rates remained high, examiners reported that students increasingly struggle to bridge the gap between classroom theory and real-world scenarios. This deficit in practical reasoning was most pronounced in subjects that recorded significant performance drops, including Entrepreneurship Education, Christian Religious Education, Fine Art, and Physics.

Failures in practical reasoning

The 2025 results highlight a recurring struggle with tasks that require candidates to apply knowledge to everyday life. According to UNEB Executive Director Dan N. Odongo, this “constant factor” was visible across the curriculum.

In Christian Religious Education, for instance, learners consistently faltered on tasks requiring them to connect scriptural teachings to contemporary situations. Similarly, in Geography, candidates demonstrated a lack of data analysis skills and an inability to relate fieldwork findings to the actual physical environment.

Stagnation in technical skills

The board also flagged a notable decline in technical and creative subjects.

  • In Entrepreneurship Education, the percentage of candidates earning an “A” grade plummeted from 3.6 percent in 2024 to 1.5 percent in 2025.
  • Fine Art performance also slipped, with top-tier grades falling to 2.9 percent from 4.4 percent the previous year.
  • Physics, the only core science to see a decline, suffered from what examiners described as “inadequate practical exposure,” leading to errors in experimental procedures and data interpretation.

Language and analytical barriers

Beyond technical subjects, the application gap extended to local languages and history. Examiners noted that many candidates were not sufficiently grounded in grammar or the ability to translate passages coherently. In History, scripts often lacked the necessary analytical and evaluative skills, with students failing to provide a logical flow of content supported by relevant examples.

Despite these pedagogical challenges, the 2025 cohort saw a 17.2 percent increase in total candidates, with 113,291 students ultimately qualifying for university degree programs. The board is now calling for a shift in instructional focus to ensure learners can utilize their education in a dynamic environment.

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