High Court Issues Notice to CBSE on AIEEE Paper Leak
06 May 2011

In its notice, the Delhi High Court has asked the CBSE to respond by May 18, on scrapping the AIEEE held on May 1


The Delhi High Court Thursday issued a notice to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on a petition that has sought the scrapping of the All India Engineering Entrance Examination (AIEEE) held on May 1, after a paper leak that delayed the test by three hours.

A division bench of Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justice Sanjiv Khanna asked the CBSE, the nodal agency for conducting the exam, to respond by May 18, the next date of hearing.

The court was hearing a public interest litigation (PIL) which asked that the May 1 exam, taken by over 12 lakh students for around 26,816 engineering and architecture seats in colleges across the country, be scrapped and all students be allowed to take the rescheduled test.

On Sunday, the national-level examination was delayed by nearly three hours after the paper was leaked in Uttar Pradesh and its copies were sold for Rs 6 lakh each.

At many centres, the examination was cancelled and many students could not appear as the new timings clashed with the Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC) entrance examination.

Earlier, parents of some of the students approached the court and said the candidates who will appear for the rescheduled exam May 11, had an advantage over those who took the entrance test on May 1.

"The students who will appear subsequently in the exam rescheduled by CBSE for May 11 will have the advantage of studying more and preparing better for the exams," the petition said.

The parents said that Sunday's exam be declared null and void and fresh exam be held for all students aspiring to join engineering colleges across the country.


Source: igovernment




Readers Feedback

Comments

There is no comment for this story, please post a comment.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Sign up for your free email EDU newsletter
Enter your email
YOUR OPINION
Will The Liberal Arts Model Redefine Our Educational Institutions?
Poll result:

Yes   (76%)
 
No   (17%)
 
Can't Tell   (7%)