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This draft concerns the topic provisionally titled Psychology Entrance, classified under the cohort of entrance examinations. The phrase, as commonly understood in the Indian higher-education context, refers broadly to admission tests through which candidates seek entry into postgraduate, doctoral, or specialised programmes in psychology and allied disciplines at universities and institutes across India. Because the title itself is generic, this editorial draft is intentionally written as scaffolding for human editors rather than as a finished encyclopaedic entry. It does not assert the existence of any single, named examination, nor does it attribute conducting authority, syllabus, eligibility, or selection methodology to any particular body.
The purpose of this draft is to provide a neutral starting frame that editors can expand with verifiable references. Editors are requested to confirm, before publication, whether the article should describe a specific entrance examination, a category of examinations, or the broader concept of psychology admissions in India. Each of these framings would require a different structure and a different set of citations. Until such clarification is obtained, statements in this draft are kept general, descriptive, and non-committal, and any specific factual claims must be added by editors with appropriate sourcing.
Psychology as an academic discipline is offered in India at undergraduate, postgraduate, MPhil, and doctoral levels across central universities, state universities, deemed universities, private universities, and specialised institutes. Admissions to these programmes are typically governed by a mix of merit-based evaluation, written entrance examinations, interviews, and, in some cases, statement-of-purpose reviews or research proposals. The specific mechanism varies considerably from institution to institution and from year to year.
Within this landscape, the term "psychology entrance" is used colloquially by aspirants and coaching providers to refer to any of several admissions pathways. These may include nationally administered tests that include psychology as a subject paper, university-specific entrance examinations, and common admission tests adopted by groups of institutions. The exact list of examinations that fall under this umbrella, as well as the institutions accepting their scores, should be verified by editors against current and official notifications.
Editors are advised to treat the historical evolution of psychology admissions in India with care. While it is reasonable to note that psychology programmes have expanded over the decades, claims about specific years of introduction, changes in syllabus, or shifts in conducting authority must be backed by official documents or reputable secondary sources before being included in the final article.
Entrance examinations in psychology occupy a meaningful position in the Indian academic ecosystem because they often serve as the principal filter for access to limited postgraduate seats, particularly at well-regarded public institutions. For aspirants, performance in such tests can shape access to clinical training, research opportunities, and downstream professional pathways such as counselling, organisational psychology, academic research, and licensure-related routes that require recognised qualifications.
From an institutional perspective, entrance examinations help departments identify candidates with foundational knowledge of psychological theory, research methodology, and applied domains. They also contribute to standardising selection across diverse undergraduate backgrounds, since aspirants frequently come from honours programmes, general degree programmes, and allied disciplines such as sociology, philosophy, education, and the life sciences.
The wider significance for readers of an encyclopaedic article lies in understanding how these examinations interact with policy frameworks for higher education, professional regulation in mental health, and the supply of trained psychologists in India. Editors are encouraged to articulate this significance carefully and avoid evaluative language that suggests one route is superior to another. Comparative or ranking-style claims should not be introduced without strong, neutral, and current sourcing.
The following checklist is offered to help editors identify items that frequently appear in articles about entrance examinations and that must be independently verified before inclusion. None of the items below should be assumed; each requires sourcing from official notifications, university handbooks, regulatory bodies, or reliable journalism.
Once the scope is clarified, editors may consider the following structure for the final published article. The exact section headings should be adjusted based on whether the article describes a specific examination or a broader concept.
Editors should ensure that each section is short, factual, and supported by citations. Promotional language, unverified ranking claims, and anecdotal accounts should be removed during review.
This draft has been written without inventing specific facts. No dates, fees, statistics, names of officials, names of institutions, ranking claims, or allegations have been introduced. The draft assumes that human editors will determine the precise scope of the article, identify the relevant examination or examinations, and supply citations from official and reputable secondary sources.
Reviewers are requested to take the following actions before publication: first, decide whether the page should be a disambiguation page, a redirect, a stub on a specific examination, or a broader concept article; second, replace generic language with sourced specifics; third, ensure that all claims comply with verifiability and neutrality standards; fourth, remove or rewrite any sentence that may inadvertently imply endorsement of a particular institute, coaching provider, or methodology; and fifth, check for currency, since admissions frameworks change frequently and outdated content can mislead readers. If sufficient reliable sources cannot be located, consider proposing the title for redirection or deletion rather than publishing speculative content.
To be supplied by editors. Suggested reference categories include: official notifications from the conducting authority; university admission handbooks; regulatory documents from relevant higher-education bodies; peer-reviewed analyses of admissions in Indian psychology education; and reputable news coverage. Each citation should include publication, date of publication, date of access where applicable, and a stable link or archival copy.