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Updated May 23, 2025 · 21:58
India News Updated May 23, 2025

SC to hear next week pleas challenging lack of transparency in NEET-PG exam

The Supreme Court is preparing to hear critical petitions challenging the transparency of the NEET-PG medical entrance examination. Medical students have raised serious concerns about the exam's conduct, including two-shift scheduling and lack of detailed performance disclosure. The petitioners argue that the current examination method violates principles of fairness enshrined in the Constitution. The case highlights growing tensions in India's medical education selection process and seeks to establish clearer standards for national-level competitive examinations.

New Delhi, May 23

The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear next week a clutch of petitions challenging the lack of transparency in the conduct of the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET)-PG examination.

A bench presided over by Chief Justice of India (CJI) BR Gavai will likely hear the matter on Monday (May 26). In their plea filed before the apex court, NEET-PG aspirants claimed that the introduction of two shifts, normalisation method, and change in the tie-breaker criterion affected medical students adversely.

The petitioners contended that the NEET-PG information bulletin could be amended at the whim and fancy of the authorities, and no rules or regulations existed governing the conduct of examinations. It challenged the National Board of Examinations (NBE) decision not to disclose question papers, answer keys, or response sheets of candidates.

The plea said that there was a clear lack of transparency in the conduct of the examination since none of the documents allowed students to check their performance, adding that neither the question paper, nor the response sheet filled in by candidates, or an answer key was supplied to the students, and merely a scorecard had been provided.

The petition, filed through advocate Parul Shukla, highlighted that, unlike previous years where the candidate used to receive their total score along with the number of correctly attempted questions and the number of incorrectly attempted questions, the NEET-PG 2024 results did not provide their total score.

"The method/manner in which examination under the NEET PG 2024 is conducted by the respondents (authorities) is manifestly arbitrary and against the principles of transparency and fairness in state action as enshrined under Article 14 of the Constitution of India," it added. The plea said that NEET-PG had never been held in two shifts before and had always remained a single-shift and single-day examination to ensure a uniform examination standard and fairness of the national test.

It highlighted a "serious patent defect in the conduct of the examination", requiring redressal in order to achieve a clean, transparent and effective system of examination which gives the best candidates.

Recently, the top court issued notices to the Centre, NBE and NMC (National Medical Commission) on a plea filed by the United Doctors Front (UDF) challenging the conduct of the NEET-PG 2025 examination in two shifts. The plea sought the top court’s intervention to conduct NEET-PG 2025 in a single and uniform session, apart from seeking an interim stay on the examination scheduled for June 15.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rahul K.

Finally someone is questioning this opaque system! Medical students work so hard for years, only to face such unfair practices. The two-shift system clearly benefits some and disadvantages others. SC must ensure transparency 🙏

Priya M.

As someone whose sister is preparing for NEET-PG, this is very concerning. How can they change rules midway? The normalization method seems fishy - they should at least show answer keys like other competitive exams do. #TransparencyNeeded

Amit S.

While I support reforms in medical education, constant changes in exam patterns create unnecessary stress. The authorities should consult stakeholders before making such decisions. Hope SC brings some stability to the system.

Neha T.

This is about our future doctors! If we can't ensure fair selection process, what hope is there for healthcare system? 😟 The NBE must be held accountable. Why hide question papers unless there's something to hide?

Vikram J.

I appreciate the SC taking this up, but let's not forget - multiple shifts might actually help more students appear for exams. The real issue is lack of answer key disclosure. That's non-negotiable in any fair examination system.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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