Quash combined result of NEET-I and NEET-II (UG) for sessions 2016-2017, says advocate Manoj Singh

The fresh petition alleged that National Entrance and Eligibility Test (NEET)-II was tougher than the earlier one and CBSE came out with a common result without normalisation or rationalisation of marks obtained by the medical aspirants in these two tests.

author-image
Neha Singh
Updated On
New Update
Quash combined result of NEET-I and NEET-II (UG) for sessions 2016-2017, says advocate Manoj Singh

Fresh plea in SC seeks setting aside the combined result of NEET I and II

The legal battle over the single-window medical entrance test, NEET, seems to be unending, with the Supreme Court on Tuesday agreeing to hear a fresh plea seeking setting aside of the combined result of NEET-I and II on grounds of different "difficulty levels" of question papers.

The fresh petition alleged that National Entrance and Eligibility Test (NEET)-II was tougher than the earlier one and CBSE came out with a common result without "normalisation" or rationalisation of marks obtained by the medical aspirants in these two tests.

The plea, filed by a Bihar based medical aspirant Shivangi Singh who has already been selected in the combined result, was mentioned before a bench of Justices A R Dave and L Nageswara Rao for urgent hearing.

The bench agreed to hear the matter along with the other pending petitions on the issue next week.

"Set aside/quash the combined result of NEET-I and NEET -II (UG) for Sessions 2016-2017 prepared and declared on August 16, 2016 by CBSE by combining raw scores of candidates treating the same to be a single test and direct CBSE to prepare All India Merit List/rank on percentile basis after adopting 'normalisation' method for NEET-I and NEET-II test conducted on May 1 and July 24," the plea filed through advocate Manoj Singh said.

The plea said the declaration of combined result without normalising the marks obtained in by candidates in NEET-I and II was "illegal and unconstitutional and violative of their Fundamental Rights under Article 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution".

It said that treating NEET-I and II conducted on two different dates with two different sets of questions with different difficulty level as one single exam for determining the rank of candidates without applying the "normalisation" formula, amounted to placing NEET-I candidates higher in All India Ranking vis-a-vis candidates from NEET-II with poor score due to difference in difficulty level.

The plea also sought direction for appointing an independent committee of experts to ascertain the difference in difficulty level of the questions of NEET-I and II and applicablity of "normalisation" method.

The petitioner also sought direction to CBSE to rectify the errors in answer keys in question booklet of NEET-II and quash the wrong answers with a further direction to declare her result after making correction.

NEET results