Hi friends, Here is a piece of good news for the LAW Aspirant V I Youth, 
courtsey Mr. Prateek Agreval:--


Law schools test to go disabled-friendly this year
  prateek aggarwal <[email protected]> May 02 02:15PM +0530 ^

   
  Hi members, the following sounds like a great news for law aspirants.
  Perhaps it may help some of you.
   
  ---
  Law schools test to go disabled-friendly this year - The Times of India
   
  Mathang Seshagiri, TNN | May 2, 2011, 12.47am IST
   
  
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Law-schools-test-to-go-disabled-friendly-this-year/articleshow/8137883.cms
   
  BANGALORE: The largest-ever law school exam that decides admission to
  nearly a dozen national schools across
  India
  will turn disabled-friendly this summer.
   
  Additional time to crack the two-hour exam, option of bringing one's
  own scribes along with instruments for problem-solving and a question
  paper sans any
  visual reasoning to aid the blind are some of the key features of the
  Common Law Admission Test
  (CLAT) policy of candidates with disabilities to be implemented from
  this year.
   
  The West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences (WBNUJS),
  Kolkata which is organising the fourth edition of CLAT, will allow
  disabled candidates
  who are hearing/vision impaired to bring their own scribes or have the
  CLAT committee pick a scribe for them. The scribe must be one
  educational class
  junior to the candidate and must also not be someone pursuing a law
  degree. The scribe will also give a declaration stating that he/she
  will not in any
  way help the disabled candidate answer any question in the paper,
  apart from the regular duty of reading out the paper and pencilling
  the correct answer.
   
   
  "Thus far, there has been no consistent CLAT policy on the issue of
  scribes. While some CLAT-conducting law schools permitted candidates
  to bring their
  own scribes, others did not. We, therefore, decided that we must adopt
  a detailed policy that would aim to balance the concerns of disabled
  candidates
  as well as to ensure a fair conduct of the CLAT examination. Also, we
  realised that it was important to grant disabled candidates the option
  of bringing
  their own scribes. Often times, it so happens that externally provided
  scribes do not work well with the disabled candidate, and this has a
  detrimental
  impact on their examination," MP Singh, CLAT 2011 convenor, told TOI.
   
  Disabled candidates taking the May 15 exam will get 40 additional
  minutes to complete the under-graduate entrance test and 60 minutes
  for the post-graduate
  test.
   
  The question paper itself is being given a makeover to make it
  friendly for the differently-abled. "We've decided that we will not
  have any "visual reasoning"
  questions in the "logical reasoning" section, since this unfairly
  prejudices visually impaired candidates who are not able to see the
  visuals in the question.
  We've also decided to permit them to bring their own instruments for
  helping with sections such as maths, which might require the use of
  Taylor Frames,
  for visually impaired candidates," said
  Shamnad Basheer,
  professor at WBNUJS and part of the CLAT committee.
  ---
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