
On Friday, May 30, the Supreme Court rejected the National Council for an Exam for the Neet-PG exam in two shifts and noted that different questionnaires vary in terms of difficulty and never be the same, informed live law. He heard was chaired by a bench composed of justice Vikram Nath, justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice NV Anjaria.
The Top Court ordered the investigative authority to identify sufficient centers and to take measures to carry out the Neet-PG test in one shift to ensure justice and prevent the practices. The court justified that the possession of the Neet-PG 2025 in two shifts creates arbitrariness and is unfair. He found that two examination papers have different levels of difficulty and can never be the same.
The court asked, “How can it remain the same? There are different questionnaires. There can never be the same.” The petitioners claimed that the double shift test favored “happiness” over “merit”.
“Take action for an exam in one shift”
The Supreme Court noted: “Following the test in two shifts leads to arbitrary and cannot provide equal conditions. Questionnaires in two shifts can never be at the same level. Last year it could have been in two shifts in the facts and circumstances of this phase.
Meanwhile, NBE represented by the head of lawyer Maninder Acharya claimed that online examiners were limited and all important exams in which a large number of candidates in two shifts appear, with onions of infrastructure, access to good computers and security security concerns. He also noted that the Board of Directors ensures a suitable level of difficulty of both shifts and claims that no candidate is caused by any prejudice.
After ensuring the same level of difficulty, normalization is performed to ensure that a slight difference between the difficulty level is eliminated, NBE advisor added.
The bench was not convinced by these arguments and stressed that Neet-Ug, who has more candidates, was not led in a double shift.
(Tagstotranslate) Supreme Court