NEET is letting in students with zero/negative marks into MBBS

NEET is letting in students with zero/negative marks into MBBS
16 Jul 2018
  • Be careful when you visit unknown doctors: someone you have trusted with your life might have gotten admission into a medical course with zero marks.
  • As many as 110 students who made it into MBBS through the NEET 2017 scored zero, or even negative marks, in physics and chemistry.
  • At least 400 scored in single digits, TOI reports.
  • So how are they even clearing the exam?

How did the NEET start?
NEET
  • The NEET (National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test) replaced the All India Pre-Medical Test (AIPMT) in 2013 and started determining admission into graduate/postgraduate medical courses in colleges under the Medical/Dental Council of India.
  • Initially, a general candidate needed 50% marks in individual subjects, or at least 360 out of 720, to make the cut.
  • A reserved-category candidate needed 40%, or a total of 288.

So what's happening now?
New rules
  • In 2016, NEET introduced the percentile system and dropped the minimum marks requirement.
  • Now, a general candidate simply needs to be in the 50th-percentile.
  • Percentile refers to what proportion of the population falls below that level. Someone securing 90th-percentile means 90% candidates scored lower.
  • So if 10 students scored 100/720, the highest marks, it would place them in the topmost-percentile, but with 13% marks.

So how did it affect marks?
Marks
  • As a result, last year, 1,990 students cleared the NEET for admission into MBBS with less than 150/720 (20.8%).
  • Of these, 530 had either single-digit marks, or zero, or even negative in physics or chemistry.
  • General cut-offs stood at a lowly 131 (18.3%) and reserved-category cut-offs at 107 (14.8%).
  • This was worse than 2016, when general and reserved category students needed 145 (20%) and 118 (16.4%) respectively.

But that wasn't the only impact
Money power
  • There were other repercussions too. Due to the low scores, as many as 6.1L out of 10.9L candidates cleared the NEET last year, leaving people fighting for seats.
  • TOI found 507 of the aforementioned 530 had taken admission in private colleges, with an average tuition fee of Rs. 17L per annum- a testament to how poor students are being left out.

Despite criticism, percentile method to stay for now
Complaints
  • "Students are expected to get a minimum 40-50% to get into medicine. With this flawed criteria, we saw students with low scores getting into medical colleges," Dr Raj Bahadur, VC, Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, had said.
  • Other eminent personalities too criticized it, but this criterion seems set to continue.
  • However, human life is too precious to be handed over to incapable professionals.



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