Centre defers implementation of revised exam guidelines for disabled students till December 31
Press Trust of India | September 11, 2025 | 12:43 PM IST | 2 mins read
The department of empowerment of persons with disabilities (DEPwD) has clarified that all competitive public examinations notified until the end of this year may continue under the existing framework.
NEW DELHI: The government has deferred the implementation of its recently issued revised guidelines for conducting competitive examinations for persons with disabilities (PwDs) until the year end, citing lack of preparedness among examining bodies and the immediate interest of candidates. In an office memorandum, the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities (DEPwD) clarified that all competitive public examinations notified until the end of this year may continue under the existing framework.
"In view of the likely lack of preparedness of examining bodies for introduction and application of technology for conduct of exams and keeping in mind both larger and immediate interest of the Divyangjan community, this is to state that all the competitive public examinations notified/ to be notified until and including December 31, 2025 may be conducted as per the system in vogue before issuing the said guidelines," the memorandum said.
However, candidates willing to use assistive technologies to attempt exams independently during this period may be "accommodated and encouraged by examining bodies to the reasonable extent possible," the memorandum said.
The department said that in the meantime, it shall undertake wider and more extensive stakeholder consultations on the subject of examination guidelines, including various examining bodies, divyang community and other stakeholders.
The clarification follows the government's last month's notification of comprehensive new guidelines under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016 and the Public Examination (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024.
Also read ‘Zero tolerance for malpractices’: Warns commission ahead of SSC CGL 2025 tier-1 exams
Tightened provisions around use of scribes
Those rules had tightened provisions around the use of scribes, directing agencies like UPSC, SSC, and the National Testing Agency to create vetted scribe pools within two years, and phasing out the widely used "own scribe" system that authorities flagged for malpractice. Instances of collusion between candidates and privately arranged scribes had raised concerns about fairness and transparency, prompting the ministry to stress a shift towards technology-driven solutions and supervised scribe pools.
Officials said the deferment is aimed at ensuring that examining bodies have adequate time to prepare for the technological transition while also safeguarding the interests of candidates appearing in the immediate examination cycle.
The DEPwD said it will hold wider consultations with stakeholders, including examining agencies and the disability community, before finalising the framework's implementation. All ministries, departments, and agencies have been directed to strictly adhere to the revised timelines and ensure compliance.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]93% of SSC CGL 2025 candidates allotted exam centres of first, second or third choice, says commission
SSC CGL 2025 Tier 1: Over 28.14 lakh candidates have applied for the exam and been assigned test centres. The average distance between applied and allotted city is 168 kms.
Vagisha Kaushik | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- IITs will test new JEE Advanced format on first-year BTech students this year: IIT Kanpur director
- ‘BTech Not Enough’: Outdated engineering curriculum leaves students paying to bridge classroom-to-career gap
- Student Suicides: NTF interim report flags impact of NEET, JEE-type exams on mental health
- ‘Police gundagardi’: MLNMC resident doctor picked up, held for 2 days; ‘No info,’ say UP cops after protests
- NCERT to Rashtrapati Bhavan, Doordashan: AICTE’s Anuvadini AI translation tool has grown rapidly
- As ABVP expands footprint in post-TMC West Bengal, SFI, Chhatra Parishad brace for new campus power struggle
- How Samarth portal glitches plague admissions, exams, payments across universities
- IIT Mandi makes attendance must for conference on reincarnation, ‘afterlife communication’
- IIT placements panel discusses ban on sharing of JEE Advanced ranks with recruiters
- CMC Vellore MBBS admissions handpicked doctors who’d serve in India; NEET paper leak renews debate