Karnataka Examination Authority proposes Aadhaar-liked registration for all exams
Press Trust of India | October 29, 2024 | 09:14 PM IST | 1 min read
The KEA's move follows allegations of a seat-blocking scam under the Karnataka Common Entrance Test (KCET) quota after all rounds of engineering seat allotment concluded.
Get exam-ready for KCET 2026 with this ebook containing full-length sample papers based on the latest syllabus and pattern.
Download NowNEW DELHI: The Karnataka Examinations Authority (KEA) has proposed Aadhaar-linked registration for students aspiring for professional course seats from next year, with an intention to put an end to the menace of seat blocking, official sources said on Tuesday. The KEA has submitted this proposal to the Karnataka e-Governance department.
KCET 2026: Sample Papers | Syllabus | Mock Test
Also See: Top Engineering Colleges in Karnataka
"The e-Governance department is in favour of our proposal and they have sent a proposal to the Government of India for approval. We are awaiting the approval soon," KEA Executive Director H Prasanna told PTI. "Aadhaar-linked registration is proposed to ensure authentication which was not there so far, to prevent any mischief in the registration, and also ensure dissemination of exam-related information to students on their mobile phones," he said.
Also read AP TET final answer key 2024 out at aptet.apcfss.in; results on November 2
Aadhaar-linked exam registration
There are also plans to also introduce Aadhaar-linked registration to recruitment exams KEA conducts for various departments, to curb impersonation and other malpractices, Prasanna said. The move by the KEA comes in the wake of an alleged seat-blocking scam coming to light, under the Karnataka Common Entrance Test (KCET) quota, after completion of all the rounds of engineering seat allotment.
It was found that several students had blocked seats using the same IP address and that mobile numbers and email ids they provided to KEA were fake or wrong. According to officials, it was found that in some cases students who opted for seats in sought-after streams at top colleges, did not report to the colleges, which could result in all such seats that were under KCET quota falling into the management quota. Suspecting seat blocking in these instances, they said third parties may be in collusion with the college managements, and also students in some cases.
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.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Economic Survey 2026: Make India ‘education tourism’ hub; offer international students Ayurveda, yoga courses
- From Rohith to Reform: UGC Equity Regulations 2026, born from tragedies, threaten caste dominance, not merit
- Law School For All: IGNOU is drawing lawyers, cops, CAs, even sitting judges with revamped legal courses
- ‘Autonomy Snatched’: Revised ISI Bill faces opposition in council; academics reject new MoSPI draft
- What are UGC Equity Regulations 2026 and why are they facing ‘general-category’ backlash?
- NITs plan multiple-entry, exit in BTech across institutes, research parks with ADB loan, PhD reform
- Environmental Law: NLU Odisha, Assam, Northeast law schools are making tribal rights core of curriculum
- ‘Generative AI knowledge limited to ChatGPT’: Why law schools are launching artificial intelligence centres
- LLB, LLM courses in English but for lawyers in lower courts, regional language command key to win cases
- Part-time law PhD enrolment on the rise as lawyers, aspiring academics embrace flexible courses