Khaleej Times

HC orders 196 extra marks for Tamil NEET students

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madurai — The Madras High Court on Tuesday ordered the CBSE to grant 196 marks — 4 marks each for 49 erroneous questions — in the Tamil version of this year’s NEET to those who took the exam for medical admissions in the regional language.

Passing the orders on a public interest litigation, Justices C T Selvam and A M Basheer Ahamed of the Madurai Bench also directed the Central Board of Secondary Education to consequent­ly revise the list of eligible candidates and publish it afresh.

The bench, however, said it shall be open to authoritie­s concerned to go about the counsellin­g process (which is already on in Tamil Nadu) for eligible candidates.

Petitioner senior CPM leader T K Rangarajan has sought full marks for the 49 questions, saying key words in the Tamil questions were wrongly translated from English and this caused confusion for the students. There were 180 questions with a total mark of 720 in the NEET.

The judges said the students who took the National Eligibilit­y cum Entrance Test for admission to the medical and dental colleges in Tamil should be suitably compensate­d to provide a level-playing ground.

Referring to the CBSE’s submission that the decision on most appropriat­e answer was taken by experts and marks were awarded based on that, the bench wondered whether the board entrusted with the conduct of such a national-level examinatio­n could be so uncertain about the answers for the questions raised by it.

Such an exercise, giving marks for the most appropriat­e answer, might be acceptable for civil service examinatio­n. But to do it in respect of the NEET examinatio­n for students aged 17-18 should not have been thought of. The level of difficulty should not be raised to such a level for the teenagers, the bench said in its order.

Referring to the question of locus standi of the CPM leader to move the court on the issue, the judges said asking 49 erroneous questions out 180 questions was large enough public interest and it mattered little as to who raised it.

The judges lamented why the private plus two students were not eligible to take the NEET examinatio­n. —

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