Revise UGC NET 2021 Result: Students demand increase in qualifying candidates to 12%
As per the UGC policy, 6% of candidates who appear in both the papers and obtain minimum qualifying marks in aggregate are declared NET qualified.
Anu Parthiban | March 2, 2022 | 02:04 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Demands flood social media to revise the UGC NET 2022 result declared by the National Testing Agency. Candidates who appeared in merged cycle UGC NET December 2022 and June 2021 request to University Grants Commission (UGC) to provide 12% of UGC NET result 2022.
On February 19, the NTA declared the UGC NET 2021 result on the official website, ugcnet.nta.nic.in. The exam was conducted for 18 days in 35 unique shifts between November 20, 2021, to January 5, 2022. Of the total 12,66,509 candidates who registered for the exam, 6,71,288 appeared and 52,857 qualified for JRF and assistant professor.
As per the UGC policy, 6% of those candidates who appear in both the papers and obtain minimum qualifying marks in aggregate of both the papers are declared NET qualified.
Also read | JEE Advanced 2022 relaxation in criteria; Good news for IIT JEE Advanced 2020 candidates
The NTA conducts the UGC NET exams twice a year. Though two cycles were merged, the NTA said in the UGC NET 2021 result declaration notice, “The slots of JRFs of both UGC-NET December 2020 and June 2021 cycles have been merged, while the methodology for subject-wise cum category-wise allocation of JRFs remains unchanged.”
‘Revise UGC NET 2021 result’
Students have been demanding to qualify 12% of candidates who appeared in the exam.
A candidate said, “We don't want 8%,10% we want our full 12% because if you can merge 2 sessions of exam as per your convenience then give us 12% only then you can do justice with us.”
#UGCNET we don't want 8%,10% we want our full 12% because if you can merge 2 sessions of exam as per your convenience then give us 12% only then you can do justice with us #Revisenetresult2021 #wantjustice @PMOIndia @EduMinOfIndia @ArvindKejriwal @DG_NTA @ABPNews
— Jagriti Rana (@Jagriti_Rana_) March 1, 2022
“The UGC Net Exam was conducted jointly in one session after the merging of two cycles. Based on that the number of students who qualify for NET and JRF should be increased,” another candidate said.
The UGC Net Exam was conducted jointly in one session after the merging of two cycles. Based on that the number of students who qualify for NET and JRF should be increased. #UGCNETResult #SupremeCourt #NTAjawabdo #Ministryofeducation
— Rezo (@debokarsho) March 1, 2022
Candidates have been also demanding fellowship to continue their studies.
I gave NET in Social Work (general category) and could not qualify JRF for 1 question. I'm doing PhD from Delhi and I'm from Kolkata. It is very difficult for me to continue PhD without fellowship
— Sayantika Sen (@TheLastDewdrop) March 1, 2022
Please give us 2% JRF @PMOIndia @ugc_india @DG_NTA #UGCNET #Revise_NTANET_Results
A student wrote on Twitter, “Indian education system is degrading day by day. No accountability no transparency. Students need to protest for their basic rights. UGC after claiming that it will give 2% seats of JRF in this merged cycle gave 1% result in many subjects.”
Indian education system is degrading day by day.
— Maria zehra (@Mariazehra5) March 1, 2022
No accountability no transparency.
Students need to protest for their basic rights.
UGC after claiming that it will give 2% seats of JRF in this merged cycle gave 1% result in many subjects. #Ugcnet
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
]- Music, arts and Harry Potter: How top law colleges are using films and fiction to teach legal concepts
- Manipal Law School director: ‘Our LLM courses focus on data privacy, IT laws and other emerging areas’
- Litigation to corporate law: A first-generation lawyer's journey from burnout to breakthrough
- AI and Law: Top law schools blend artificial intelligence into curriculum, with research and global insights
- GLC Mumbai: Asia’s oldest law college struggles with falling academic standards, fund crunch
- NEET PG 2024 Counselling: DNB seats ‘withdrawn’ after being allotted; candidates may lose a year
- Free ‘GP Sir’s Law Classes’ help poor, marginalised students become judges
- 5-year LLB courses soon; want to be India’s top law school: Government Law College Ernakulam principal
- Distance education hampers state bar council entry in Telangana; LLB graduates seek SC intervention
- Not yet time for Hindi-medium LLB: Why law colleges are slow to embrace regional languages