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The number of students applying for re-evaluation of papers has gone up steadily in last three years, according to a reply from Mumbai University to an RTI query.
While the number of applications for re-evaluation received for exams conducted in the first half of 2011 was 31,591, the number for the first half of 2012 was 41,498, while it was 43,256 for the corresponding period in 2013, reveals an RTI reply from MU to activist Vihar Durve.
According to academicians, the increasing number of applications for re-evaluation shows the falling standards of assessment at the varsity.
In a reply an RTI application filed earlier by Durve in March 2014, MU revealed that over 25,000 students were wrongly failed over three semesters between 2012 and 2013. The data shared through RTI showed that over 25,000 students passed after re-evaluation.
Pro-Vice-Chancellor Dr Naresh Chandra said increasing number of re-evaluation applications did not simply mean that the quality of assessment was bad. Increasing number of examinations and change in the examination pattern too lead to increased number of revaluation applications, he said.
“In the last decade, there have been many changes in the examination system of the varsity – from the number of examinations to its pattern. Earlier, it was an annual exam system, now it is a semester system. However, this does not mean the university is not doing anything to reduce the number of re-evaluation cases. We are trying to bring in a transparent assessment system wherein we can ensure students are satisfied with the first assessment, so that the number of re-evaluation applications eventually come down. One such initiative is the online assessment,” said Chandra.
dipti.sonawala@expressindia.com
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