Medical dental admission test results 2015 www.dghs.teletalk.com.bd
The results of the combined medical and dental admission test will be published on Sunday within two days of the exam.
http://dghs.teletalk.com.bd/. The one-hour entry tests, held at 23 centres across Bangladesh, started at 10am on Friday.http://dghs.teletalk.com.bd/ Forty is the pass mark in the 100-mark MCQ test.
"The examinations were peaceful," Health Ministry Director (Medical Education) Prof ABM Abdul Hannan told bdnews24.com.
Results are typically published within three days. http://dghs.teletalk.com.bd/
Junior health minister Zahid Maleque will officially release the results at about 1pm at the Directorate General of Health Services, director medical education Prof ABM Abdul Hannan told bdnews24.com.
The one-hour 100-mark MCQ admission test for both public and private colleges was held on Friday.
Altogether 69,477 candidates applied for 10,227 seats of the highly-competitive admission test held in 23 centres across Bangladesh.
Forty is the pass mark in the written test, number of which will be added with the SSC and HSC GPA scores for the final results.
Twenty-nine government medical colleges have 3,162 seats while 56 private medical colleges have 5,325 seats.
Nine government dental colleges or units will enrol 532 students while 23 private dental institutions are offering 1,280 seats.
Medical and dental colleges start their academic session in January.
Altogether 69,477 candidates applied for 10,227 seats this time.
Health Minister Mohammed Nasim said precautionary measures had made this year's admission tests incident-free.
"We are taking measures to prevent cheating in exams," he told reporters at the Dhaka University on Friday.
This time, 29 government medical colleges are offering 3,162 seats, while 5,325 students will be able to study in 56 private medicals.
Nine public dental colleges will accept 532 students and another 23 private dentals are offering 1,280 seats.
The Health Ministry had on Tuesday ordered closure of all medical admission coaching centres until the admission tests were over in a bid to prevent any rumours of question paper leakage.
Mobile phones, calculators, and wrist watches, too, were banned in exam centres to prevent 'cheating'.