All efforts should be taken by Chief Minister M K Stalin to remove the "injustice" caused by the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test, Tamil Nadu Congress Committee president K S Alagiri said here on Monday.
As regards Tamil Nadu, students belonging to socially disadvantaged groups like the Backward Classes and Scheduled Castes studying in government schools are seriously affected due to the NEET exam, he said.
However, students who are from the CBSE stream and private schools get more opportunities to study medicine and this was "injustice," he said.
As a replacement to NEET, an expert committee should be appointed to set criteria, and admissions to medical colleges should be based on reservation policy and primacy must be given to students of government schools, he said and urged Stalin to take appropriage measures.
In view of the pandemic, the Tamil Nadu government days ago cancelled class 12 board exams. Admission to college courses would be based on school marks, to be awarded based on a criteria, following recommendations of a panel, the government had said.
Citing data, the Congress leader said that in 2018-19 and 2019-20, though 700 aspirants from state-run institutions had cleared NEET, only nine of them got admission in government medical colleges.
In the wake of NEET, "injustice" rather increased and did not decline, he alleged in a statement.
Only to help address this issue did the Tamil Nadu government recently introduce 7.5 per cent reservation in medical admissions to government school students who cleared NEET.
Still, only 405 students who studied in government schools could enroll themselves in government medical colleges, while about 3,000 (government sector) seats went to those from the CBSE stream and other private schools, he said.
"The time has come to remvoe this injustice and at the same time, it is the need of the hour to improve the standard of education in Tamil Nadu government schools."
Hence, Chief Minister Stalin should take all efforts to remove the "injustice" caused by NEET, Alagiri urged.
Tamil Nadu has 5,550 MBBS seats, 3,600 in the government sector and 1,950 in the private sector
Work is on to set up 11 new government medical colleges and these new institutions in the state sector would bring in an additional 1,650 seats.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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