Dimma Tutorials

Dimma Tutorials

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Follow me, if you want to ace your English language exams.I am here to help you smash your exams.

I prepare students to excel in JAMB, WAEC, Post UTME, GCE exams. If you're sitting #JAMB, #WAEC, #PostUTME, #GCE, ensure you follow me.

19/06/2026

If you're planning to join our 2027 JAMB UTME classes in September, be prepared to work hard.

This time, not everyone will be accepted. I am building a legacy, and my goal is to make Dimma Tutorials the No. 1 online academy for JAMB UTME and WASSCE preparation.

If you plan to join us, you must have at least five 80-leaf notebooks. The way I have structured our 2027 classes, I don't think lazy students will survive them.

There will be weekly assessments, monthly assessments, and a parents'/guardians' group through which I will regularly provide feedback and report students' progress.

If you are not ready to be serious and committed, please do not join us.

We are not aiming for average results. We are aiming for excellence.

19/06/2026

Choose the option nearest in meaning to the word(s) or phrase capitalized.

The boy was told he would need SEVERAL pints of blood if he was to survive.

a. Many
b. Much
c. Some
d plenty

Our JAMB UTME classes will begin in September.

18/06/2026

It took me five years to write this book.

This period was dedicated to:
✅ Intensive research and content development
✅ Four years of teaching directly from the manuscript
✅ Continuous professional editing and refinement

I did not rush the publication. I chose patience over speed because my goal was simple: to produce a high-quality, exam-focused masterpiece.

Mastering Oral English for WAEC and JAMB Candidates carries my name, and I take that seriously. I want my work to reflect excellence, accuracy, and real value to students.

This book is designed for candidates preparing for:
WAEC | NECO | GCE | JAMB

To celebrate its release, I am offering a 50% discount to the first 10 buyers of the soft copy.

Special Offer: N1,000 only (original price: N2,000)

To get your copy, send a WhatsApp message to:

0902 701 9103

If you are serious about improving your Oral English performance, this is for you.

18/06/2026

One thing I learned from an Entrepreneurship course I took at UNN is that you must ensure there is a genuine demand for your product. You don't just create or market a product that people do not need.

For those asking why we do not conduct lessons specifically for WAEC candidates, let me ask: do WAEC candidates really need extra lessons?

Considering the high rate of examination malpractice, do you think we can attract a reasonable number of serious enrollees?

As an organizer, I have to pay teachers whether we have students or not. Because of this, I currently see conducting lessons for WAEC candidates as a high-risk venture.

I'd love to hear your thoughts. Do you think there is still a strong demand for genuine WAEC preparation lessons?

Photos from Dimma Tutorials's post 18/06/2026

Please help me choose 🙏🏼

18/06/2026

Extracted from "Mastering Oral English for WAEC and JAMB Candidates"

/v/

The /v/ Sound: Articulation and Characteristics

1. How the Sound is Formed

The /v/ sound is the voiced counterpart of /f/. It is produced by bringing the upper teeth into contact with the lower lip. As air is pushed through this narrow gap, it creates friction. Because it is voiced, the vocal cords must vibrate.

Classification: Voiced Labio-dental Fricative.

The Vibration Test: If you make a long “vvvvvv” sound and touch your throat, you will feel a strong buzzing sensation. This vibration is the primary difference between /v/ and /f/.

2. Spelling Variations
While the letter ‘v’ is the most common spelling, examiners often use the exceptions to test a student’s phonetic depth.

‘v’: Van, vault, value, have, weave.
‘f’ or ‘ff’: In specific words, the letter ‘f’ represents the /v/ sound.

Examples: Of, thereof, hereof.
‘ph’: In the name Stephen, the ‘ph’ is traditionally pronounced as a /v/ (/ˈstiːvən/).

Choose the one that has a different consonant sound.

(a) Van
(b) Of
(c) Thereof
(d) Off

To get a copy, click the link in the comments section.

The price is N2,000

17/06/2026

Why do JAMB candidates forget everything they studied once they enter the exam hall? 🤔

They read. They attend classes. They cover the syllabus. Yet when the questions appear, it feels like everything has disappeared.

The truth is simple:

It’s not always about how much you studied… it’s about how you studied.

Many students rely only on reading and memorization, but the brain doesn’t store information effectively that way.

Without active learning, like summarizing, scribbling, practicing questions, and teaching yourself, the brain treats information as “temporary.”

That’s why under exam pressure, recall becomes difficult.

So the real question is not just “Did you study?”
It is “Did your brain truly learn it?”

If you want better retention for JAMB, don’t just read to finish topics.
Study in a way that makes your brain work with you, not against you.

That difference is what separates confusion in the exam hall from confidence in answering questions.

17/06/2026

I’m currently at a crossroads and I’d love your honest opinion.

I’ve been in talks with an educator who has over 100k followers about promoting my book, “Mastering Oral English for WAEC and JAMB Candidates.”

Now I’m trying to decide the best direction to take:

👉 Should I invest in influencer promotion?
👉 Or should I put the same effort and budget into Facebook ads?
👉 Or simply focus on growing and promoting consistently on my own platforms (Facebook, YouTube, and TikTok)?

This is my first major push for the book, and I really want to make the smartest decision—not just an emotional one.

If you’ve ever been in a similar situation or understand digital marketing better, I’d really appreciate your advice.

What would you do if you were in my position?

17/06/2026

Many JAMB candidates make a common mistake: they only read.

Whether you are studying with textbooks, PDFs, past questions, or online materials, reading alone is not enough to prepare effectively for JAMB.

One powerful but often ignored habit is scribbling—the act of writing while you study.

When you scribble:
✍️ You are not just reading passively
✍️ You are actively processing information
✍️ You are summarizing key points in your own words
✍️ You are training your brain to recall information faster during the exam

From a cognitive point of view, writing strengthens memory because it engages multiple parts of the brain at the same time, visual, motor, and language processing centers. This makes it easier to remember formulas, definitions, rules, and concepts when answering JAMB questions.

So don’t just read to complete topics or cover your syllabus.
Read to understand—and scribble to remember.

That simple habit can improve retention, boost confidence, and help you perform better on your JAMB exam.

17/06/2026

Her: “Mummy, my classmates were laughing at me and saying ‘ewww’ because I was eating porridge yam.”

Me: “What did you say to them?”

Her: “I told them to mind their business.”

Me: “Good girl. Did you enjoy the food?”

Her: “Yes, I enjoyed it and even wanted more.”

Me: “Don’t mind them.”

Are we supposed to give our children rice and spaghetti every single day? 🤔

Have we now turned food into a competition in schools?

Must a child feel ashamed because they didn’t bring “popular” food in their flask?

Porridge yam is food.
Healthy, filling, and nutritious.

We need to raise children who understand that food is for nourishment, not status.

And we also need to teach children kindness… because no child should feel embarrassed for what they eat.

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