Hindustan Times (East UP)

UP’s ERA charges Rs 500 for every objection, candidates upset

- HT Correspond­ent allahabad.htdesk@hindustant­imes.com

PRAYAGRAJ: Challengin­g a question asked by the Exam Regulatory Authority (ERA), UP, in an exam it conducts, is a most expensive propositio­n for a candidate. The Prayagraj-headquarte­red ERA charges Rs 500 for objecting to each of its questions.

The ERA conducts the Uttar Pradesh Teacher Eligibilit­y Test (UP-TET) besides teachers’ recruitmen­t exams for government-aided primary and upper primary schools, among others.

The Rs 500 fee is in stark contrast to other bodies of the state that conduct examinatio­ns, like the Uttar Pradesh Public Service Commission (UPPSC), the Uttar

Pradesh Higher Education Services Commission (UPHESC) and the Uttar Pradesh Secondary Education Service Selection Board (UPSESSB) which do not charge anything from the candidates for raising objections to questions asked by it in recruitmen­t exams.

Even the Staff Selection Commission (SSC), New Delhi, charges just Rs 100 for objection on each question. This has candidates appearing in ERA exams quite upset.

After conducting exams, most bodies release tentative answerkeys to the questions asked by it in the exams and invite objections, if any, from the candidates, and then, after getting the objections removed by subject experts, release a final answerkey based on which it awards marks to the candidates and releases the final result.

“Charging a fee of Rs 500 from candidates for objection to each question is unjust and especially unfair for candidates belonging to economical­ly weaker sections. Let’s not forget that it is the job of the examinatio­n conducting body to engage subject experts who prepare question papers without any mistakes or anomalies. But on one hand the ERA is failing to do so and then charging candidates heavily who point out anomalies,” said Avanish Pandey, president of Pratiyogi Chatra Sabha, an organisati­on representi­ng educated unemployed youths vying for government jobs.

So, if a candidate appearing in ERA exams points out a fault in three or four questions, the body ends up earning Rs 1,500 to Rs 2,000.

“ERA is earning lakhs every year by levying this fee. Just for the recently conducted recruitmen­t exam for 1,504 posts of assistant teachers and 390 posts of headmaster­s in government­aided junior high schools of UP, the ERA had received 754 objections and earned Rs 3.77 lakh from candidates pointing out its possible mistakes in questions asked in question papers,” said Prashant Pandey, a competitiv­e exam candidate based in Prayagraj.

However, officials cite their own reasoning for levying a high fee for raising these objections.

“The aim behind charging Rs 500 per objection to a question is to deter non-serious objectionm­akers from lodging objections as this results in unnecessar­y delay in declaring results. It should not be forgotten that ERA refunds the fee charged if the objections raised are found to be true,” said Sanjay Kumar Upadhyay, secretary, ERA, UP.

 ?? HT FILE PHOTO ?? Prayagraj-based ERA, UP headquarte­rs.
HT FILE PHOTO Prayagraj-based ERA, UP headquarte­rs.

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