To be shared with NBEMS once we receive 5000 signatures
To:
The Governing Body / Executive Director,
National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS),
New Delhi, India.
The Issue:
Following the declaration of the NEET MDS 2026 results, a significant number of candidates across the country have reported a massive discrepancy between their calculated scores (based on reliable post-exam memory recalls) and their official results. Many qualified aspirants are facing unexpectedly low percentiles and marks, leading to widespread distress, confusion, and anxiety regarding the integrity and accuracy of the evaluation process.
Because NBEMS does not release the official answer key or candidate response sheets, students have no way to verify their performance or understand how their final scores were calculated. In a high-stakes national exam that determines the future of thousands of dental professionals, absolute transparency is not a privilege—it is a fundamental right.
Our Demands:
We, the aspirants, stakeholders, and well-wishers of the dental community, respectfully request NBEMS to urgently address these grievances by taking the following transparency measures:
- Release the Official Answer Key: Publish the final, verified answer key used for evaluation, detailing any questions that were technically flawed, dropped, or given multiple correct options.
- Release Individual Candidate Response Sheets: Provide every candidate access to their personal response sheet showing exactly which options they selected during the CBT (Computer Based Test).
- Clarify the Normalization/Scaling Process: Provide a clear, detailed breakdown of how the final raw scores and percentiles were calculated, ensuring there are no technical anomalies in the backend data processing.
Conclusion:
We respect the mandate of NBEMS to conduct fair testing. However, fairness cannot exist without transparency. Releasing these details will either vindicate the evaluation process or allow for the timely correction of errors, ensuring justice for hard-working candidates.
We urge NBEMS to act swiftly in the interest of student welfare and institutional credibility.
Following 0 students have signed the petition.