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IIT JEE Mains exam 2023: Registration ends on Jan 12; HC refuses to defer exam

IIT JEE Mains 2023: Registration ends on Jan 12; HC refuses to defer exam

January 11, 2023

The Bombay High Court on Tuesday refused to defer the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) JEE Mains examination scheduled this month.

The National Testing Agency (NTA) announced the JEE Main exam dates on December 15, 2022. It was announced that the NTA will conduct the January session exams on January 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30 and 31. The second session will be conducted in April 2023.

The registration for JEE Main 2023 January intake is scheduled to conclude on January 12, 2023 (tomorrow). Students who are interested can apply for this month’s exams at the official JEE Main website — jeemain.nta.nic.in.

Aspirants were, however, not happy with this schedule as they felt that the NTA should have given them more time to prepare. Many students claimed that the engineering entrance exam is clashing with their pre-board exams, practical exams, vivas, etc.

Read: CBSE class 10, 12 practical examinations begin today

Several aspirants took to Twitter to raise their voices about this issue, and urged the Ministry of Education to intervene.

The PIL was filed by child rights activist Anubha Sahai who wanted the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Mains to be deferred till March. The petition challenged the National Testing Agency’s (NTA) December 15 notification scheduling the examination between January 24 to 31, 2023.

The petitioner contended that the schedule was announced at a very short notice. In the past, exam dates were declared three or four months in advance, giving enough time to students to prepare, Sahai said.

The Bombay High Court on Tuesday heard the plea filed by Sahai but decided to not postpone the January session of JEE Main 2023. A bench headed by acting Chief Justice SV Gangpurwala and Justice Sandeep V Marne ruled on the petition.

“If any orders are passed today directing postponement of January exams, the same may have a cascading effect on future exams also. The extraordinary circumstances do not appear to exist for restraining respondents from holding January examination. Lakhs of students must have been preparing for exam,” the bench ordered, according to Bar and Bench.

Additional Solicitor General Anil Singh, who appeared for the NTA, opposed the PIL.
Since 2019, JEE Mains exams are being scheduled in two sessions, in January and April, he said.

If a student does not fare well in January, he or she can take the exam again in April for improvement and the better score is considered, the ASG said.

If a student does not appear in January, there is still no bar on appearing in April, Singh added.

The court said it was not in favour of interfering with the schedule as lakhs of students would have already started their preparations.

“Your PIL may affect 50,000 students, but not five lakh students. A Supreme Court judgment says that even if an educational policy is not good, the courts ought not to intervene,” it said.

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