
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM/NEW DELHI: The NEET-UG re-examination, ordered following a controversial question paper leak, presented a significantly higher difficulty level for candidates nationwide. Moving away from straightforward, direct questions, the revised test focused heavily on analytical thinking and interdisciplinary concepts, testing the core competency of over 2.79 lakh students who appeared for the exam held from 2:00 PM to 5:15 PM.
Shift toward analytical evaluation
Entrance coaching experts noted a distinct evolution in the question pattern compared to the canceled test. Instead of keeping subjects strictly isolated, the re-examination introduced integrated questions, applying concepts of Physics and Biology within the Chemistry section—a trend rare in previous editions.
Experts concluded that the overall standard of the re-test was vastly superior to the cancelled exam, favouring students with a deeper conceptual understanding over rote memorisation.
High security and lower turnout
The high-stakes exam was conducted under unprecedented security protocols. The Central Government, which went as far as coordinating with military authorities to guarantee a foolproof process, expressed major relief as the national event concluded smoothly without any reports of malpractice.
Each examination centre was heavily monitored, with at least ten additional invigilators and security officials deployed over the standard requirement. Notably, overall student attendance saw a decline. In Kerala, where 1.1 lakh students had appeared for the initially cancelled exam, the turnout for the re-test was significantly lower.
PM Modi delays convoy to clear way for aspirants
In a notable gesture, Prime Minister Narendra Modi chose to wait at the Delhi airport to ensure his VVIP movement did not cause traffic bottlenecks for NEET aspirants rushing to their centres.
Arriving in Delhi after attending the International Yoga Day celebrations in Kolkata, the Prime Minister directed his security detail to hold his convoy at the airport. To prevent any potential roadblocks or delays for students during peak hours, the PM remained inside the airport premises and only commenced his onward road journey after 2:00 PM, once the examination had officially begun.