By P. K. Balachandran/Sunday Observer
Colombo, June 30: Millions of youth across India have risen against high corruption and other forms of malfeasance in the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET), which is a common examination for admission to medical colleges across India.
NEET is conducted by the National Testing Agency (NTA), an autonomous body under the Union Ministry of Education.
The NTA was established by the Union Government to conduct examinations for admission to higher professional courses across India. It conducts the entrance examination for India’s prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology. The Common Management Admission Test and tests for the University Grants Commission are also conducted by the NTA
The NTA is in charge of preparing the questions and marking the answers in a “scientific manner” in consultation with subject matter experts and psychometricians.
NEET Controversy
In the controversial NEET examination held recently, 2.4 million candidates vied for 100,000 seats in medical colleges across India. However, when the results came out on June 4, it was noted that the number of toppers was staggeringly high, raising a thick cloud of suspicion about the validity of the test.
A wave of arrests took place across India of persons who had allegedly leaked the question paper and earned millions of rupees in the bargain.
Al Jazeera reported that one of the arrested men confessed that he secured access to the paper the night before the NEET examination for the equivalent of US$ 36,000. In Gujarat, applicants had allegedly paid the equivalent of U$ 12,000 to US$ 50,000 to get the question papers. Involved in the scam were private coaching centres, teachers and examination centre supervisors.
Congress party spokesman, Jairam Ramesh, said that the BJP Government had passed the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024 and had even got the assent of the President of India in February. But the Act was brought into effect only on June 21 after the question paper had been leaked and money amassed.
On June 19, even as aggrieved candidates filed cases in the High Courts and the Supreme Court against the NEET scores, the BJP Government cancelled the National Eligibility Test (NET) that selects persons for university research fellowships. The question paper had been leaked “in the darknet” and was circulated on Telegram.
On June 22, the Ministry of Personnel said that Subodh Kumar Singh, who was the Director General of the NTA, was replaced by retired IAS officer Pradeep Singh Kharola.
While the universal wrath that the results elicited was justified, it is doubtful if the corrective steps taken thus far will bring the necessary benefits to the people at large.
The real solution to the problems in NTA and NEET lies in basing the selection system on notions of social justice through the removal of inequities and making it serve a larger social purpose.
Centralised selection systems like NEET are elitist and exploitative.
The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK)-led Tamil Nadu Government and the Congress party have demanded the abolition of NEET, objecting to the social iniquities it reflects and fosters.
No doubt, there is a need to uphold high standards and choose candidates for higher education on merit, but it would not be appropriate to apply these norms in toto in a country like India where there is a gross inequality of opportunity.
Social-economic conditions vary from region to region and from caste to caste. There is a yawning gap between the rich and the poor, between the urban and the rural areas.
The NTA is designed to suit the urban elite which has access to all the resources needed for educational advancement. It is not designed for the hoi polloi who are the majority.
Language Discrimination
The NTA was also accused of discrimination on the basis of language. Urdu was not included among the ten regional languages for the examination. In Warangal in Telangana, candidates received question papers in English and Hindi instead of Telugu.
In Madurai (Tamil Nadu), nearly 100 students were given question papers in Hindi. In 2018, the Calcutta High Court awarded 20 marks to a candidate because five questions were wrongly translated into Bengali.
Human rights activist Yamini Aiyar, writing in the Deccan Herald, slammed the Modi Government’s bid to establish a “One country, One examination, One merit system”, that strips medical colleges of their autonomy.
States lost their ability to devise locally relevant ways of responding to the quality and corruption challenge, she added.
Undermining autonomy in admissions leads to the curbing of innovation and experimentation which are critical to ensure quality higher education, Aiyar said.
India may claim to be the fifth-largest economy, but inequalities here are glaring. Excellent facilities for a good education exist in the cities, but these are only for the privileged few. Primary and secondary schools that are open to the poor in the urban and rural areas are of extremely poor quality.
The primacy given to “merit” and the “tests” prescribed to ascertain it by the NTA only perpetuate and exacerbate existing inequalities.
The leaders and the social elite of India, have rendered the country a disservice by prioritising the creation of high quality educational facilities for themselves, while totally neglecting the needs of the less fortunate majority.
The Government at New Delhi claims that it caters to India’s “aspirational classes”, but these aspirations cannot be realised when conditions appropriate for their realisation lack in most places and classes in India.
Producing aspirations before creating the conditions for their fruition is like putting the cart before the horse.
The economy and employment opportunities have not improved to sustain those aspirations. Conditions have in fact deteriorated in the last decade.
This is a perfect recipe for the growth of discontent, alienation and revolt, which are seen across India. Some disappointed NEET aspirants in Kota, Rajasthan, have committed suicide.
Tamil Nadu’s Pioneering Role
After coming to power in Tamil Nadu in 2021, the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) constituted a High-Level Committee headed by Justice A K Rajan to study the impact of the NEET-based admission process.
The Rajan Committee found that after NEET was introduced in 2017-2018, fewer students from rural areas, from the Tamil medium, from families with lower incomes, have secured admission in medical colleges in the State.
In the four years from 2017-18 (when NEET was introduced), the share of Tamil-medium students in medical colleges ranged from 1.6 percent to 3.27 percent. But the share of English-medium students shot up from 85.12 percent in 2016-17 to 98.41 percent in 2017-18, and was 98.01 percent in 2020-21.
In the pre-NEET period from 2010-11 to 2016-17, students from rural Tamil Nadu had secured 61.5 percent seats on average in government medical colleges. In 2020-21, this figure had fallen to 49.91 percent.
By contrast, the share of students from urban areas in government medical colleges rose from an average 38.55 percent in the pre-NEET years to 50.09 percent in 2020-21.
Income Divide
Students whose parents had an annual income of less than Rs. 250,000 secured an average 41 percent of admissions in the pre-NEET period; this fell to an average 36 percent in the post-NEET years.
The Rajan committee asked the Tamil Nadu Government to take “immediate steps to eliminate NEET from the admission process.”
In the interest of social justice, the Tamil Nadu State Assembly passed the Under Graduate Medical Degree Courses Bill in 2021. But Governor R.N.Ravi sent it back. It was passed again and sent back the Governor, but to no avail. The DMK Government now hopes to fight in Parliament for exemption from NEET. The INDIA alliance and like-minded parties are expected to support it.
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