--°C
Loading...
Listen to Article
2 min read
80%

As the UGC and NTA have not imposed any restrictions on the number of attempts, this will enable hopefuls several opportunities to show up for the entrance exam and not miss any possibilities, according to the UGC chairman.

Digital Desk: The University Grants Commission (UGC) is preparing to set up an expert committee to look into options to integrate the engineering and medical entrance exams with the Common University Entrance Test (CUET-UG) starting in the following academic year.

Bringing JEE (Main) and NEET within the greater purview of CUET, according to UGC chairperson M Jagadesh Kumar, will lessen the burden on students, and the plan is in line with the National Education Policy, 2020. NEET is the entrance exam for all undergraduate medical programmes, and JEE (Main) is the entrance exam for admission to the nation's top engineering institutions.


From 2023 to 2024, the CUET-UG, which is presently in progress, will probably be held at least twice a year, according to Kumar, who also noted that a common entry should eventually be created to do away with the requirement to appear in different entrances.

"With the addition of CUET, there are now three major admission exams offered in the nation: NEET, JEE, and CUET. The majority of students take at least two of these tests, and some choose to write all three. Math, Physics, and Chemistry are the subjects covered in JEE while Biology, Physics, and Chemistry are covered in NEET. Therefore, two disciplines are taught there frequently and are also used in CUET for university entrance. So, why should we subject the students to multiple entrance examinations,” he told the media.

 

 

When will the exams be merged?

The head of the UGC has made it clear that the plan has not yet been finalised and that he wants to make sure the National Testing Agency (NTA) and all other relevant parties are well-prepared before the new common admission test is introduced to students. The UGC will first convene an expert committee to review the current admission examination procedures. Additionally, they will consider the feasibility of a combined, unified CUET and make recommendations. Following that, these proposals will be made available for stakeholder feedback, and the recommendations will then be finalised, according to Kumar.


It will also mentally prepare students and other stakeholders that there is such a possibility and nothing will come as a surprise, the UGC Chief said. "When you look at the time frame, we have just started this discussion and even if you want to hold it next year, there is one year's time," the UGC Chief said.

Kumar further mentioned that starting the following year, the CUET exam might be offered more than once. "Perhaps in the upcoming year or the following year, let's have one common entrance examination, but conduct it several times in a year, maybe twice in a year, so that students will have the option to do it again and acquire admission in subjects of their choice," he suggested.


As the UGC and NTA have not imposed any restrictions on the number of attempts, this will enable hopefuls several opportunities to show up for the entrance exam and not miss any possibilities, according to the UGC chairman.

Combined entrance test syllabus

The NTA will be given instructions to closely adhere to the class 12 syllabus for all disciplines, including the courses connected to JEE and NEET, and the new and redefined CUET-UG would also follow the NCERT syllabus. As a result, Kumar claimed, students will perform better and experience less stress.

 

In spite of the fact that NEET and JEE have contributed significantly to the coaching culture in our nation, Kumar noted that "as long as we make sure that we stick to the syllabus that the students have studied, over time students will come to know that if they can study well for their board examinations and focus on becoming a good learner, then that should help them in doing well in CUET."

Controversy over poor conduct of CUET


Due to technical difficulties, the NTA has received criticism for being unable to effectively administer the CUET-UG 2022 phase two exam at a number of testing locations. Students are now concerned that integrating these three significant entry tests into one will put additional strain on the NTA and could have unintended consequences.

The UGC chairman, however, said that the NTA had learned from the events of August 4 and had already fixed all of its mistakes. Additionally, the NTA will now establish particular exam centres across the nation that will be furnished with computers and other necessities as well as controlled by the NTA. These NTA exam centres, in addition to other well-known centres, will be used specifically for these exams.

When the NTA is not holding a test there, "these centres can then be used as training centres" to make use of the space, he said.









FOLLOW US F
POPULAR
FEATURE
TRENDY
Delhi Gears Up For First-Ever Artificial Rain To Battle Air Pollution
Guwahati: Youth Brutally Assaulted Inside Central Mall, FIR Filed Against Staff Member
Spike in Japanese Encephalitis Cases Alarms Guwahati: GMCH Reports Rising Toll
Suspension of Evening Ferry Service Between Guwahati and North Guwahati
National Footballer Durga Boro Retires from the Field
Megapari Cricket Tour 2025: Aussie Fire Meets Island Fury