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In stark contrast to what NEET experts had predicted, the marks needed to pass the medical entrance exam have seen a drop. This year, anyone scoring 117 and above marks was considered to have passed NEET. this is a drop from last year when to pass, students needed 138 marks in the unreserved category. For those in reserve categories, there is a bigger fall and anyone with a 93+ score is deemed to have passed as opposed to 108 last year.
NEET has a relative marking. This means that the highest marks obtained by a student in the given year are considered the best score and the rest of the students’ marks are considered in reference to the toppers’ score. For the past two years, the toppers have been scoring 720 marks or full marks whereas this year the top rank holder got 715 marks. Since the topper’s score has seen a dip, so have the qualifying marks.
Read | Despite Top 4 Rank Holders Getting 715 Marks, Why Tanishka Got AIR 1?
Last year, the 50 percentile score for the unreserved category was over 138 marks. This was a drop from 147 in 2020 and 134 in 2019. This year’s score is the lowest in recent years, however, this need not necessarily mean that the cut-off for top colleges will see a major fall.
“It suffices to say that the cut-off for top colleges could be lower than last year given the number of students who have qualified. It will make the competition a bit tougher. However, we should also consider the fact that the number of seats for medical has also increased this year. So, it will not have a major impact,” said Md N.M. Habeeb, Head of NEET Wing, The Narayana Group.
Brajesh Maheshwari, Chairman, Allen Career Institute believes increase in number of students qualifying the exam will not have any impact on competition or cut-off “since the government medical college seats are limited and only high scorers will get admission on such seats.”
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