The court's remarks came after it was told that the Board was reluctant to accept applications for re-evaluation after the high court on July 6 had directed CBSE to re-evaluate the answer sheets of all the subjects of all students who wrote the class 12 examination this year and were seeking re- evaluation.
The Board, in its defense, contended that the deadline for accepting applications was July 7, as per an earlier order of the high court, and added that re-evaluation cannot be an open-ended exercise.
The court also said that once it passed the July 6 order, the deadline no longer applied.
In its July 6 order the high court had said that "the relief (of re-evaluation) is not confined only to the petitioners before it and shall be admissible to all the similarly situated students who seek re-evaluation of their answer sheets".
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The observations came during hearing of a plea filed by four students against the CBSE's June 28 notice imposing certain conditions with regard to re-evaluation of answer sheets.
The high court had set aside the conditions that the right of applying for scrutiny was limited to 12 subjects only, with maximum 10 questions per subject and a revised mark sheet would be issued only if the marks increased by five or were reduced by one.
When the Board said that in most cases the increase was of only one of two marks, the court remarked that "even one mark makes a lot of difference".
The matter has now been fixed for further hearing on August 29.
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