Deccan Chronicle

Let Neet be the gold standard

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The Supreme Court’s brief order prohibitin­g private colleges and deemed universiti­es from conducting their own undergradu­ate medical and dental entrance tests is to make them fall in line with the higher objective of upholding the supremacy of the National Eligibilit­y-cum-Entrance Test . The first phase of Neet has already been held (May 1) and the modalities of holding the second phase on July 24 are being worked out. Meanwhile, the private colleges have been raising an issue about their constituti­onal right to establish and administer their own institutio­ns. Their objections seem to be based on the fear that they will lose total control over admission procedures, besides ending the long running capitation fee racket. The lead judge was categorica­l: “We have already said this. One: There shall be Neet. Two: No private colleges or associatio­ns will be permitted to have their own exams. Three: States will be allowed to conduct their exams after we consider what the solicitor-general has to say on it.”

Only by establishi­ng a gold standard and maintainin­g it can the fair expectatio­n that health be handled by the most competent brains and hands be fulfilled. The court’s aim is to give every aspiring doctor and dentist an opportunit­y to get a prized opening to qualify and serve as one of around 50,000 medical profession­als who qualify each year, towards which a single national test would help as it would facilitate picking the best brains for an essential profession. This can be achieved only when the states also channel their students to excel at the national test rather than keep promoting their own entrance tests, even if they have some very good reasons. The court has so far upheld the right of states to hold their entrance exams, but then there are also states like Tamil Nadu which do not wish to hold such a test at all on the premise that rural students are disadvanta­ged in a merit-first system with reservatio­ns only for SC/ST students.

There are several knotty issues to be resolved. The Supreme Court may be inclined to exempt states from Neet 2016 because of paucity of time with the matter coming up so late and only after an earlier key order was recalled. It would be in the interest of all students if the top court were to pass final orders soon.

The manner in which elite engineerin­g institutio­ns, like the IITs, have cherry-picked aspirants in objective tests may also be said to have been the motive force behind their exalted position in academia. Nothing untoward will happen if all political and other considerat­ions are set aside and Neet is allowed to set the benchmark.

Only by establishi­ng a gold standard and maintainin­g it can the fair expectatio­n that health be handled by the most competent brains and hands be fulfilled

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