Suspicious scores on Medicine tests, boom of 90 in Palermo

The Medicine tests have once again ended up in the eye of the storm for the “suspicious” scores. After the scandal of the database sold on Telegram last year, the scores of the candidates of some university structures are causing discussion. Many, too many candidates, have reported a full score at the first test of the Medicine Test in May: 90 points for 60 questions.






The record in the universities of Palermo and Naples

In particular, the universities of Palermo and two of Naples, Federico II and Vanvitelli, not only recorded a record number of tasks without the slightest error (57 in Palermo alone, 76 at Federico II – triple compared to the University of Milan ), but they also recorded an average score well above this year’s already very high national average.




“Used smartphones and smartwatches”

“That the test was a mere mnemonic test – explain the lawyers Francesco Leone and Simona Fell, founding partners of the Leone-Fell & C. law firm which last year caused the quiz buying and selling scandal to explode and which assisted over 3,500 appellants – we’ve been saying this for months. Furthermore, thanks to the parliamentary question asked by the Honorable Caso, we have denounced the lack of controls at the testing sites. In the absence of metal detectors and shielded classrooms – they point out – the use of smartphones and smartwatches was predictable, given the possibility of easily downloading the database made available by Cineca. You don’t need to have a good memory, you just need to know how to copy. What selective method is this? We need to reward the most deserving, not the smartest. Whoever cheats today will not be a good doctor tomorrow.”

The law firm has already collected dozens and dozens of reports from candidates who have witnessed the “test scam” and who will file in the appropriate offices to defend those who have honestly obtained a high score, but which will not lead to their enrolment.



 
For Latest Updates Follow us on Google News
 

NEXT divers’ search suspended