EXAM MALPRACTICE

A seven-member panel headed by former ISRO chairman K Radhakrishnan has made a set of 101 recommendations to the Ministry of Education for conducting national level entrance exams in a “transparent, smooth and fair” manner.

Reasons for Exam Malpractice

  • High Stakes: Competitive exams like NEET and JEE, which determine admissions to top institutes, often drive individuals towards unethical practices.
  • Weak Systems: Reliance on outsourced agencies and fragile digital infrastructure creates loopholes for exploitation.
  • Poor Oversight: Insufficient supervision at test centres enables manipulation.
  • Corruption and Collusion: Insider involvement and private service providers contribute to leaks and irregularities.
  • Technological Abuse: Use of advanced cheating devices and hacking of online systems facilitates malpractice.

Recent Exam Scandals in 2024

  • NEET-UG Paper Leak: Allegations of question paper leaks led to widespread criticism of the National Testing Agency (NTA).
  • UGC-NET Mismanagement: Claims of mismanagement and suspicious allocation of testing centres raised concerns.
  • BPSC Scam: Allegations of paper leaks and manipulation in the candidate selection process highlighted irregularities in recruitment.

Key Recommendations of the Radhakrishnan Committee

  • Restrict NTA’s Role: Limit the National Testing Agency’s responsibilities to entrance exams, reducing reliance on external agencies.
  • Enhance Local Involvement: Engage state and district officials in exam processes, similar to election management practices.
  • Adopt Multi-Stage Testing: Introduce adaptive and multi-session testing to ensure fairness and strengthen security.
  • Digital Infrastructure: Develop 400-500 computer-based testing centres nationwide within a year.
  • Bolster Security: Implement measures like sealed test centres, CCTV surveillance, and secure transportation for question papers.
  • Biometric Verification: Use Digi-Exam systems for robust candidate authentication through biometrics.
  • Uniform Standards: Standardize eligibility criteria, admission processes, and exam modes across institutions.

Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024  (National Level)

  • Objective: To prevent malpractice, promote transparency, and safeguard the integrity of public examinations in India.
  • Scope: Covers national-level exams such as NEET, JEE, UGC-NET, as well as state-level recruitment and competitive exams.
  • Penalties: Imposes strict consequences, including up to 10 years of imprisonment and fines up to ₹10 lakh for offenses like cheating, impersonation, or question paper leaks.
  • Accountability: Holds exam organizers and service providers responsible for any lapses, mandating measures such as biometric verification and CCTV surveillance.

The Assam Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024:

  • Unfair Means: Includes cheating, impersonation, paper leaks, and tampering with merit lists.
  • Penalties: Imprisonment of 3-10 years and fines up to ₹1 crore for serious offenses.
  • Service Providers: Fines up to ₹1 crore and 4-year bans for those facilitating cheating.
  • Organized Crime: Harsh penalties for organized cheating, including property forfeiture.
  • Authority Powers: Surprise checks, device seizures, and cross-agency coordination.
  • Special Courts: For fast-tracking trials and public awareness campaigns.

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