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First Day of Kcet 2023 for 2.6 Lakh Students.

Check Dates for the Karnataka UGCET Exams

May 20, 2023 – A record-breaking 2.6 lakh students are preparing to take the Karnataka UGCET Exam over the course of the next three days as part of the much anticipated Karnataka Common Entrance Test (KCET) 2023, which is due to begin today. Students who want to enroll in professional programmes including medicine, dentistry, engineering or architecture, BSc agriculture, BSc agri bio tech, BHSc (home science), and others can do so by taking this entrance exam. For the benefit of the applicants, let’s go into more detail about the KCET 2023 exam schedule, scheduling, and other crucial facts.

KCET Exam Schedule 2023

From May 20 through May 22, 2023, the KCET 2023 exam will be held. Five papers total—Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics, and Kannada Language—make up the test. Each paper is worth a total of 60 points, with one point given for each accurate response. Notably, there won’t be any deductible marks for erroneous responses, so candidates can attempt questions without worry. Let’s look at the KCET 2023 exam schedule in more detail:

May 20, 2023

  • Biology: 10:30 AM to 11:50 AM
  • Mathematics: 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

May 21, 2023

  • Physics: 10:30 AM to 11:50 AM
  • Chemistry: 2:30 PM to 3:50 PM

May 22, 2023

  • Kannada Language: 11:30 AM to 12:30 PM

Thousands of Aspiring Minds Participated

According to statistics, 2,60,000 students have registered for the Karnataka UGCET, an astounding number. About 1.4 lakh of these prospective candidates are female, while 1.21 lakh are male. The large turnout demonstrates the students’ intense interest in and commitment to getting into the programmes they choose. Bangalore is home to 121 of the state’s 592 exam centres, which will be used to administer the test.

 

FAQs

The following commonly asked questions concerning the KCET 2023 exam are listed to provide further clarification and to answer popular inquiries:

  • How long will the KCET 2023 exam last?

Each paper in the KCET 2023 exam lasts one hour and twenty minutes.

 

  • Do the documents have any gaps in them?

Yes, a break will occur between the morning and afternoon exam sessions to provide candidates a chance to rest and recharge.

 

  • Do applicants need to bring any identification to the testing location?

The KCET 2023 admit card must be carried in addition to a valid ID evidence, such as an Aadhaar card, PAN card, or passport.

 

  • When taking the mathematics exam, are calculators allowed?

No, it is totally forbidden to use calculators or any other electronic devices during the exam.

 

  • How will the results of the KCET 2023 be announced?

On the official website, the KCET 2023 exam results will be published. Candidates can obtain their personal scores by entering their registration information.

 

  • Are there any special guidelines for the exam’s attire?

Although there is no set dress code, it is advised that applicants wear comfortable clothing and steer clear of any items that might be considered exam-inappropriate.

 

Jhajjar Medical College MBBS students expelled for ragging.

Jhajjar: In a ragging incident reported from the World College of Medical Sciences and Research in Jhajjar, six MBBS students were expelled for three months after a junior complained of ragging from seniors, which resulted in injuries.

The complainant, a second-year MBBS student from Faridabad, claimed that on the night of March 1 and 2, six seniors hit him with an iron rod and assaulted his friends.

This incident took place in front of the hostel warden and a guard. The senior students were in a drunken state.

 

He stated, “After we spoke out against the ragging, my friends were assaulted by seniors. My head was stitched up six times. When the incident occurred at midnight, the senior students were intoxicated. They barged into my room and thrashed me for opposing ragging.” In addition, he told Tribune India, “A hostel warden also supported the seniors instead of helping us.”

 

Also, the complainant’s brother also claimed that the college authorities had previously received a complaint about ragging but had taken no action. According to the TOI, the police registered the case under Sections 147 (rioting), 149 (every member of unlawful assembly guilty of the offence committed in prosecution of a common object), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), and 506 (criminal intimidation) of the IPC.

The college dean, Dr.JC Passey, told HT that four of the six accused students had been expelled for three months and two for 45 days. Suraj Bhan, SHO of the Jhajjar police station, stated that the six students and the hostel warden had been arrested and that the case is being investigated.

“NMC’s new draft: Graduate Medical Education Regulations(GMER), 2023 allows migration only between private medical colleges”

NMC’s new draft:

The National Medical Commission (NMC) has made it clear in most draft busts of the Bachelor’s degree Medical Education Regulations, 2023, that only relocation from a public medical college to a public institute and from a private medical college to a non-government college will be given permission.

 

 “No mutual exchange shall be permitted,” In the newly released draught regulations, the NMC, the top governing organisation for medical education, provided clarification.  

 

Unlike former policies, which did not prohibit pupil movement from public to private institutions and vice versa, this does. In actuality, in the past, individuals were only qualified for migration after passing the initial professional MBBS exam.

 

 In addition to this, the prior norms of the former Medical Council of India (MCI) had also limited transfer to 5% of the college’s approved enrollment for the year. Formerly, moving from one medical institution in the same region to another was prohibited for any reason.

 

However, the NMC has recently suggested alterations to the migration regulations and published a draught in this regard. Medical Dialogues had previously revealed that NMC had recently put the draught of these regulations in the public domain and had also solicited feedback in this respect from the general public and stakeholders.

 

 NMC has addressed a number of concerns relating to UG medical education, including the entrance, counselling, and migration processes associated with UG medical admission.

 

Regarding the subject of migration, NMC said that “No student designated to a medical institution, notwithstanding anything stated in these Regulations, shall seek migration to any other medical institution after the first academic year of admission.”

 

The draught has said that, although it is silent on the number of seats for which migration is permitted, “Migration of students from one medical college to another medical college shall be granted as per the guidelines of the UGMEB of the NMC, only in exceptional cases to the most deserving among the applicants for good and sufficient reasons and not on routine grounds. Migration shall be from a government medical college to a government medical college and from a non-government medical college to a non-government medical college only. “No mutual exchange shall be permitted.” 

 

The earlier regulations are in conflict with this. According to the MCI Rules on Graduate Medical Education, 1997, as amended in 2008, “Migration of students from one medical college to another medical college may be granted on any genuine ground, subject to the availability of a vacancy in the college where migration is sought and fulfilling the other requirements laid down in the Regulations. Migration would be restricted to 5% of the sanctioned intake of the college during the year. “No migration will be permitted on any ground from one medical college to another located within the same city.”

 

 “Migration of students from one college to another is permissible only if both the colleges are recognised by the Central Government under section 11(2) of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956, and further subject to the condition that it shall not result in an increase in the sanctioned intake capacity for the academic year concerned in respect of the receiving medical college,” the prior rules went on to mention.

While the new draught prohibits migration after the first year, the previous regulations, “The applicant candidate shall be eligible to apply for migration only after qualifying in the first professional MBBS examination. Migration during the clinical course of study shall not be allowed on any ground”

 

GRADUATE MEDICAL EDUCATION, 1997 (2008 Amendment)

  •  Migration of students from one medical college to another medical college may be granted on any genuine ground subject to the availability of vacancy in the college where migration is sought and fulfilling the other requirements laid down in the Regulations. Migration would be restricted to 5% of the sanctioned intake of the college during the year. 
  • No migration will be permitted on any ground from one medical college to another located within the same city.
  •  Migration of students from one College to another is permissible only if both the colleges are recognised by the Central Government under section 11(2) of the Indian Medical Council Act, 1956 and further subject to the condition that it shall not result in an increase in the sanctioned intake capacity for the academic year concerned in respect of the receiving medical college.
  • The applicant candidate shall be eligible to apply for migration only after qualifying in the first professional MBBS examination. Migration during the clinical course of study shall not be allowed on any ground. 

 

 Draft Graduate Medical Education Regulations, 2023

  •  Migration of students from one medical college to another medical college shall be granted as per the guidelines of UGMEB of NMC, only in exceptional cases to the most deserving among the applicants for good and sufficient reasons and not on routine grounds.
  •  Migration shall be from a government medical college to a government medical college and from a non-government medical college to a non-government medical college only. No mutual exchange shall be permitted

No student designated to a medical institution, notwithstanding anything stated in these Regulations, shall seek migration to any other medical institution after the first academic year of admission.

 

 To know more about the NMC Draft 2023

Click the link below:

https://bodmaseducation.com/graduate-medical-education-regulations-draft/