Punjab medical students take to the streets against ‘strict marking’

Protesters demand the UHS for a re-examination or grace marks.


Our Correspondent February 28, 2012

LAHORE: Dozens of medical students in Punjab blocked the road outside the University of Health Sciences in Lahore on Tuesday, to protest what they called was ‘strict marking’.

Sajjad Haider, an MBBS student at Faisalabad’s Punjab Medical College, told The Express Tribune that the reason for the huge percentage of failing students was improper marking by the UHS. He said that 174 of 300 students at his college had not cleared MBBS-III annual examinations. “Students should be given grace marks or the exam should be administered again.”

Interestingly, most protesters were students who had managed to clear the examinations and had come merely for moral support to others.

Mian Omer, another student at the PMC, said he had cleared his MBBS exam but had come to Lahore to participate in the protest to support his friends who had failed.

But as angry demonstrators blocked the road and also access to the emergency ward of Shaikh Zayed Hospital, one of Lahore’s busiest medical facilities, commuters faced difficulties in going about their business. Police officials were seen convincing the students to let traffic flow but protesters refused to heed police requests.

“I have to reach my examination center and I am stuck here in traffic. If these students have a complaint, they should talk to their professors instead of causing problems for other people,” said Muhammad Idrees, who was scheduled to sit an exam for ACMA.

Meanwhile, a UHS spokesperson said that a committee had already been established to look into the matter. “The paper was not out of the syllabus. Students should spend time studying instead of wasting it blocking roads and causing problems for other people.”

COMMENTS (12)

PakPunjabi | 12 years ago | Reply

I completed my MBBS and passed my final exam last year. I am now in Canada studying for USMLE and MCCQE/EE. American trained doctors are better than Pakistani trained doctors. Everyone will admit. Yes? But the books they teach here are simpler, easier and leaner. Students study hard and are trained properly but they are given sufficient time to relax and enjoy as well. In Pakistan, it was study, study and study. Nobody pays attention to clinical skills. And I know this has been said so many times before but rather than learn concepts and techniques to approach clinical problems, everything has to be memorized. I believe most MBBS students of UHS will agree when I say that UHS makes the worst MCQ's possible. Students spend so much time memorizing that the joy of learning is non existent. And nobody pays attention to clinical skills. Clinical exposure here begins the first day you enter an MD program. For people who say that medical students don't study enough, I'd like to say they are very wrong. These students are those who get 900+/1100. UHS wants its graduates to be at par with international medical graduates but this is definitely not the way to achieve this goal. A generalized, clinically oriented approach to clinical problems and more clinical skills' training are needed.

Mooed | 12 years ago | Reply

seems like doctors are always complaining about one thing or another

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