- FAQ-History of Medical examinations in
Tamil Nadu, Why was NEET introduced, how are
medical seats allocated under NEET, Did BJP govt introduce NEET, which state has highest number of medical colleges.
The DMK state government had criticized
NEET (all India entrance examination for medical students) and blamed the Modi
government for its introduction.
Who recommended NEET? How did matter
land up in SC? What are the societal reasons behind protests? This FAQ provides
answers.
1. History of Medical
examinations in Tamil Nadu (TN)
I spoke to resident Tamilians for
insights.
Because of anti-Hindi agitation in the
1960s the word Suicide strikes an emotional chord in TN.
In the 1980s i.e. during MG Ramachandran’s rule it is the state government that mainly provided medical education in its colleges.
Supply of medical seats increased
because of increase in medical colleges. To filter students an entrance exam
conducted by the Department of Technical Education.
Around 2006-07 Jayalalitha Amma
criticised then system that it was detrimental to rural students who could not afford cost of coaching. Karunanidhi changed the system such that entrance was based on 12th standard marks.
To supplement the above is this excerpt
from a Hindustan Times article, “Prior to NEET, Tamil Nadu used to hold its own Common Entrance Test (CET) for admission to medical colleges in the state for filling the state seats. In 2006, the Tamil Nadu government enacted the Tamil Nadu Regulation of Admission in Professional Courses Act, which said that admission to such courses shall be based on marks obtained by the students in qualifying examinations held by the State Board for Class XII. The CET conducted by the state was based on the State Board syllabus.”
A new board was appointed as the
coordinator body for exams. In order to make children get higher scores the
syllabus standards were changed around 2007. This boosted marks percentage.
This way more students joined colleges,
meaning more money for those who owned colleges. This system worked for about a
decade.
TN students were so used to this system
that they forgot the art of writing competitive exams. Thus, introduction of
NEET had all worried. Obviously, students did not fare well initially in NEET.
This led to protests against the BJP even though NEET was a SC directive. In
2023, three of the six NEET toppers were from TN. Source
In 2017 S Anitha, a Scheduled Caste
student who scored well in 12th but failed in NEET, committed
suicide. For reasons explained above, suicide is an emotional issue in TN so protests erupted.
Fear of Brahmins dominating education
is a myth.
Gandhian and author Dharampalji went through British and
Indian archives to reproduce reports, of surveys undertaken by the British in
Madras Presidency (1800-1830), in his book The Beautiful Tree:
Indigenous Indian Education in the 18th century According to the collectors’ reports reviewed by Governor Sir Thomas Munro on 10 March 1826, of the 30,211 male school students in Madras Presidency, 20 percent were Brahmins and Chettris, 9 percent were Vaishyas, 50 percent were Shudras, and 6 percent were Muslims. Others constituted 15 percent. Read
excerpts
Thus,
historically maximum scholars were Sudras.
Deep down votaries of the anti-Brahmin
movement in TN felt that Brahmins would do well in an open exam. So NEET was
perceived to be a Brahmin conspiracy.
Actually, TN Brahmins started leaving
the state decades ago moving abroad or to other parts of India. Some of the
best Chief Financial Officers in India and Software professionals are TN
Brahmins. Note that C.A. has no reservations.
TN has the highest number of medical
colleges in India and state government established colleges. So NEET was perceived
to be a tool to get non-Tamilian students admission in state medical colleges
where the cost of establishing the college was borne by the state government. What
is the reality?
A review of the
National Medical Commission site on 22.10.23 at
4pm shows there are 706 medical colleges in India that teach MBBS having
108,890 seats.
State
|
Colleges in State
|
Govt medical colleges
|
1.Tamil
Nadu
|
74
|
38
|
2.Maharashtra
|
67
|
32
|
3.
Bihar
|
21
|
13
|
4.
U.P.
|
68
|
35
|
5.
W.B.
|
35
|
26
|
6.
Karnataka
|
70
|
24
|
Indeed, at 74 the state of TN has the
highest number of medical colleges and government ones at 38. Uttar Pradesh has
68 and is catching up.
The laggards are Bihar and West Bengal with 21 and 35 medical colleges.
Yet the DMK opposition to NEET continued. In a 2017 MINT article against
one nation one tax P Chakravarty and P Thiagarajan (DMK member) wrote that NEET was
against federalism, “One nation, one curriculum"-a “one nation" construct seems to be the cornerstone of many of the policy initiatives of the Union government. Efficiency gains through standardization are often touted as the motivation for these policies. Such efficiency tugs at the heart of true federalism by implicitly demanding oneness.” The Modi government was blamed.
2. How
are medical seats allocated under NEET?
In TN 15% of the seats in state
government medical colleges are reserved for all India students (subject to
reservation) and 85% for students from TN (state has reservations at 69%). For
private colleges other than deemed universities 100% of seats go to students
from TN.
Any student who wishes to join a medical
college under any quota has to clear NEET. According to this Times of India article, in
2022 the minimum cut off was 147 in unreserved category and 129 for SC/ST/OBC
category. According to this link
corresponding cut-off in 2023 are 137 and 107 respectively. It is not clear if NEET cut-offs are state-wise or all India.
In private colleges there is a Management Quota. It “refers to proportion of seats in Self Financing Medical/Dental Colleges & which are under Management Quota (35% or Less). These seats will have a higher fee structure compared to GQ seats.” 8
The lower the cut-off in NEET, the
easier it becomes for students to acquire seats under the management quota. All
in the name of the poor! Sources state the seat acquisition cost has fallen
post NEET.
20% of the seats in Christian Medical College, Vellore are for Christians. 8
There is also a Special Category in TN. “It refers to seats allotted to candidates who belong to any one of the special categories (i.e Persons with Benchmark Disabilities, Eminent Sports Persons, Children of Exservice Men or Special Preferential 7.5% Reservation to Government School Students.” 8
Is fewer
seats in the general category the reason why so many students go abroad to
study medicine, even to countries like Ukraine and China?
3. Why was NEET introduced
esp. with respect to Tamil Nadu?
In a 2023 petition to the SC, “The state government said that the 2020 judgment had upheld NEET on the ground that it was required to curb the evil of unfair practices-granting admission based on paying capacity of candidates, charging capitation fee, large-scale malpractices, exploitation of students, profiteering, and commercialisation-all of which do not arise with respect to admission to government seats.” Source Hindustan Times
4. What are the timelines?
A 2016 Indian Express article
provides detailed timeline. Here are excerpts-
“Before 2012: CBSE
used to conduct All India Pre-Medical Test (AIPMT).
2012: The Government introduces the one-country, one-test, NEET for medical admissions.” Private and minority institutions went to court.
May 5, 2013: Test
held for the first time.
April 28, 2016: The
Supreme Court clears decks for holding of NEET in two phases for the academic
year 2016-17.
May 1, 2016:
CBSE conducted the first phase of NEET. As many as six lakh candidates appeared
for the exam.
May 20, 2016: Amid strong reservations expressed by several states against conducting the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) this year, the NDA government Friday paved the way for an ordinance to keep state governments’ exams out of the ambit of the common test.
July 18: The Lok Sabha passed a bill mandating the conduct of a single common exam for medical and dental courses. The new measure will also cover private colleges.”
From the above it is clear that the move for NEET was
initiated in 2012 i.e. under Congress rule. Two, NEET had the blessings of the
Supreme Court.
5.
A lot of socially and economically disadvantaged students find it tough to
attend NEET coaching and hence they are at a disadvantage. But will the
abolition of NEET solve this issue?
No. From the
years 2007 to 2016, admission to medical colleges was through the sole criteria
of plus two marks. Did it favour poor students studying in Government school?
No. A RTI query reveals not more than 2% of students who made it to medical
colleges in TN were from government schools. To read RTE
query media report
More number
of poor, government school students made it to Medical colleges when TNPCEE was
around than when the admission was based on plus two marks stands testimony to
the fact entrance exams actually help the disadvantaged students more.
Those who wish
that more government school students qualify for NEET should provide extensive
coaching (free of cost) to students. That is the best way. Upgrade skills.
If one uses the
rural students argument to scrap NEET, then some will ask for scrapping Civil
Services Exams since rural students might be at a disadvantage!
Students studied
and passed before coaching centers opened. It might be a good idea to ask
doctors of the 1960-70s how they managed!
6. States like Maharashtra
and Karnataka, which too have large number of medical colleges, did not oppose
NEET was vehemently as TN!
Inspite of an
earlier SC order, in early 2023 the TN government challenged the constitutional
validity of NEET. This is notwithstanding that the application of NEET was
upheld by the SC in 2020 decision in Christian Medical College vs. Union of
India.
The stakes must therefore be really high
for the TN government! Why would require a separate article.
Errors if any are unintended and without malafide intent.
Also read
1.56%
of the engineering students failed to clear maths paper in Tamil Nadu
2. 97% questions were from revised Tamil Nadu state
textbooks
3. To known
functions of NMC
4. Centre sanctions
Rs 1950 crs for 6 new medical colleges in Tamil Nadu 2019
5. Number of Medical Colleges state wise Aug 23 report
6. Who runs 32 private medical colleges of Tamil Nadu Feb 22 report
7. DMK fights against NEET – the true picture in TN – News18 report
8. Prospectus for
admission to Medical Colleges TN for 2023-24.
9. The anti-NEET
movement in Tamil Nadu
10. NEET is a larger
federal and equity battle
11. Curious case of
TN opposition to NEET
12. Understanding TN’s resistance to NEET