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New Delhi, Delhi High Court has refused to give relief to a student, who missed the general university entrance examination for six minutes, underlining the “sanctity and discipline” of the examinations.
On May 13, the 18 -year -old candidate claimed that she reached the examination center at around 8.36 am in about six minutes from the scheduled time of the examination, but was refused.
A bench of Justice Priathiba M Singh and Rajneesh Kumar Gupta was listening to their petition against the order of a single judge to intervene in the case. The bench noticed that the National Testing Authority and the Admit Card information Bulletin gave very specific instructions to reach the center two hours before the examination starts, as Gates would be closed at 8.30 am.
The bench said that in the conduct of such a massive examination, chaos and “discipline of the exam should be maintained” gave birth.
“CUET is an important entrance exam and after taking discipline and discipline to seats on time to reach the examination hall on time and after being in the center before the gate closing time, the exam is part of the discipline and ethos of the ecosystem, which can give birth to heavy inequalities among the same students,” the court held 31.
The bench dismissed his appeal and said, “One may feel that it was only six minutes of case, but the authorities could not be convicted for strictly implementing the gate closing time rule and discrimination was not a legitimate basis for intervention.”
Being “extremely conscious” about the negative impact on the student’s career, the court said it cannot lose the vision of discipline required to maintain such examinations.
“CUET UG is an exam where more than 13.54 lakh students across the country appear. If exceptions are made, and discipline is not followed in such an examination, then the timely conduct of examination, timely declaration of results and endowment of timely entry into colleges and universities are likely to be endangered and there will be a cascade impact in such matters.”
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without amending the text.
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