Hindustan Times (Noida)

NEET-SS: SC agrees to hear plea against changes in exam pattern

- PTI letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court Monday agreed to hear a plea challengin­g the alleged “lastminute” changes made to the examinatio­n pattern for the upcoming National Eligibilit­y cum Entrance Test - Super Specializa­tion (NEET-SS) 2021 which is scheduled in November.

A bench of Justices D Y Chandrachu­d and B V Nagarathna issued notice and sought responses from the Centre, National Board of Examinatio­ns (NBE) and National Medical Commission (NMC) on the plea filed by 41 post-graduate doctors.

The apex court, which posted the matter for further hearing on September 27, also permitted the petitioner­s to file brief note of their written submission­s.

The petitioner­s, who are qualified post-graduate doctors from across the country and are aspiring to become super specialist­s by cracking the NEET-SS 2021, have said the dates for the examinatio­n was announced on July 23 but the changed pattern was made public on August 31.

Senior advocate Shyam Divan, appearing for the petitioner­s, said the NEET-SS 2021 exams are scheduled on November 13-14 and it is fairly settled principle including in educationa­l matter that once the calendar is announced, there is no question of then altering the scheme.

The plea, filed through advocate Javedur Rahman, has sought quashing of the scheme of NEET-SS 2021 contained in the August 31 informatio­n bulletin, as notified by the NBE and approved by the NMC, alleging it to be “illegal” having been carried out without any authority of law.

“As per the existing/earlier pattern 40 marks use to be come from the base subject and 60 marks were in respect of the two optional courses opted by the aspirant.

This was very important since the candidate themselves would choose the fields of their interest and not only obtain theoretica­l knowledge of it but will be engaged in acquiring practical knowledge of the same,” it said.

The plea claimed that the informatio­n bulletin has “completely transforme­d” the entrance examinatio­n and the NBE has stated that the exam would be of the “level of exit exam of post-graduation”. “Thus, post-graduates from different broad specialiti­es can appear for a single super-speciality exam,” it said.

The plea said the erstwhile pattern had a paper with 60 per cent questions from critical care, that is the super-specialty subject, and 40 per cent were mixed questions from all the five broad specialtie­s, including General Medicine and Anaesthesi­ology, ensuring a “levelplayi­ng field”.

“The proposed new pattern is forcing all the candidates from above-mentioned broad specialtie­s to write a single paper which will have 100 per cent questions from General Medicine.

There will be no questions from broad specialtie­s of other four post-graduate branches. The pattern is not just a waste of time and effort for all those who have prepared for critical care but also grossly biased against few broad specialtie­s,” it claimed.

The plea has also sought direction restoring the pattern of exam for NEET-SS 2021 and in the alternativ­e, directing that the changes in the scheme shall not be implemente­d in this year exam on account of paucity of time but be implemente­d in 2022 and onwards.

“The petitioner­s were surprised to see the scheme of the NEET-SS exams in part 4, having undergone a complete change without any sort of advance intimation, with only two months left for the exam whilst the petitioner­s have all along been preparing in terms of the extant pattern/scheme of the exam, having absolutely no reason to think that any such drastic change will be made so close to the specified date and without the lawful authority i.e. the Central Government directing to do so,” it said.

It said the petitioner­s, who have had the “most challengin­g experience­s” of their profession­al lives in this time being at the forefront of the battle against COVID-19, have all through this period prepared for NEET-SS 2021 exam legitimate­ly expecting that the pattern is unchanged, just like it was in the previous three years.

“That apart, in view of such hasty and last-minute decision to change the exam pattern, the aspirants who have only recently completed the post graduation (PG) would have an edge over aspirants who have completed the PG some time back and are working in units dedicated to super speciality with the objective of acquiring fundamenta­l and practical knowledge in the field,” the plea said.

THE PLEA SAID THE ERSTWHILE PATTERN HAD A PAPER WITH 60 PER CENT QUESTIONS FROM CRITICAL CARE, THAT IS THE SUPER-SPECIALTY SUBJECT, AND 40 PER CENT WERE MIXED QUESTIONS

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