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On Thursday, a BCI statement said, “The panel headed by Justice Govind Mathur, former Chief Justice of Allahabad High Court, has recommended that each university and centres of legal education should conduct examination for intermediate and final year law students as per their own discretion, depending upon the availability of resources and the impact of COVID-19 in that region.”
While maintaining that an end-term examination was mandatory to be conducted by all law schools, the committee further said that “University/Centers of legal education are free to determine the mode of examination online/offline/ blended/online open book exam/ assignment based evaluation/research papers.”
Being the regulator of legal education in the country, the BCI had constituted a High-Level Committee of Expert to deliberate upon the issue of mode of intermediate semester examination, evaluation, and promotion of intermediate LL.B students in view of the unprecedented situation arising due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The apex bar body said, the committee also recommended that the universities and centres of legal education should ensure that a sufficient time gap exists between regular and backlog examinations to avoid inconvenience to the students.
The committee unanimously agreed that the University/Centers of Legal Education are free to determine the mode of evaluation/examination for promotion and for the award of the Law Degree and for the conduct of the examination.
“The Council has considered and deliberated over the report submitted on June 8 and this council resolves to accept the report of the Committee in too,” BCI Secretary Srimanto Sen said in the press release.