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The Calcutta High Court has recently made a decision regarding the issue of wrong questions in the Teachers Eligibility Test (TET) examination. The case dates back to when a petition was filed in front of the then-Justice Sampanna Chatterjee, claiming that there were incorrect questions in the TET exam.
In response, Justice Chatterjee formed a committee consisting of members from Vishwabharati University to investigate whether the questions were indeed incorrect. The committee ultimately confirmed that six questions in the TET exam were indeed incorrect.
However, the court only ordered for the number of petitioners to be increased, which led other examinees to approach the bench and demand an increase in the number of all petitioners. Despite their demands, Justice Harish Tandon upheld the decision of the single bench.
Following this decision, a petition was filed in the Supreme Court, which eventually returned the matter back to the Calcutta High Court on April 1, 2019. The case has since been ongoing, and the recent verdict was delivered by the bench of Justice Talukdar on Thursday.
The verdict has not been disclosed to the public yet, but it will be interesting to see how the case unfolds in the coming days. Many are eagerly awaiting the outcome, as the TET exam is a crucial step for those who want to become teachers in India.
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