There is no uniformity for the decision…
There is no uniformity for the decision of the final exams !
Accused of trying to divide students by classifying them as professional and non-professional.
Mumbai : Education experts are expressing the view that the same formula of the Chief Minister’s final session examinations has been undermined by his own decision. On the one hand, it is clear that the same standard will not be maintained among the students who do not take the exam and those who take the exam as per the decision of the session examinations announced by the Department of Higher and Technical Education. On the other hand, for students who will get results without taking the exam, the universities will have to use their own assessment method, so there will definitely be no similarity in this assessment method. What is special is that if the decision to cancel the examination of vocational courses is not approved by their apex institutions, then their degree will be questioned. Therefore, many students, both vocational students and non-vocational students, have strongly protested against the decision.
Siddharth Ingle, president of Masu (Maharashtra Student Union), has blamed the government for not conducting its homework with the confusion of exams. Has the government considered how to convey the optional decision of the students in writing? If so, do state universities have a system capable of accepting and replying to students’ online affidavits? He has posed such questions. When an institution like AICTE announced on June 6 that every state university should decide on examinations within the framework of the law considering the local conditions and time, he asked why the Department of Higher and Technical Education needs their approval again. In the case of law students, Sachin Pawar, president of the Student Law Council, has written a letter to the governor demanding an end to the confusion. What is the use of law education if it is not approved by the Bar Council and the students will not get the certificate if they do not take the exam? Asking such a question, the state government has demanded an end to the confusion that has been going on for the last two months.
The Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad has accused 3 lakh 41 thousand 308 students of backlog and ATKT of being misled. Aniket Oval commented that the Department of Higher and Technical Education had in fact tried to create a new confusion by categorizing the students into professional and non-professional categories. In fact, it was already difficult to bring uniformity in the examinations of state universities, but the Chief Minister suggested so. But now that the Minister of Higher and Technical Education has handed over the assessment decision to the universities, it has actually come true. “The government has already delayed the exams and now it has misled the students and created more confusion,” Oval said.