GSSSB 367 Analysis

GSSSB Medical Social Worker (367) cutoff prediction using ShiftRank submission data

This page summarizes ShiftRank's current unofficial cutoff estimate for the Medical Social Worker 367 exam based on 500 submissions, the published seat matrix, and qualifying conditions shared by candidates.

This is an unofficial prediction page. It is meant for early analysis and planning, not as an official result, final merit list, or recruitment decision. Final outcomes can still change because of objections, answer-key revisions, tie rules, and post-exam authority actions.

Why this exam is worth analyzing carefully

Medical Social Worker 367 is the kind of exam where raw score alone does not tell the full story. Seat count is limited, category distribution matters, and qualifying conditions filter out a chunk of the response pool before seat filling even starts. That is why ShiftRank combines live submissions with seat-matrix logic instead of showing only a generic score estimate.

Attendance Estimate

~11,000

Based on roughly 15,000 forms filled and an assumed 70% historical attendance pattern for similar GSSSB exams.

Qualifying Rule

24 + 60

Candidates needed at least 24 marks in Part A and 60 marks in Part B to remain in the considered pool.

Sample Strength

500

ShiftRank has 500 usable submissions for this exam, which currently maps to a 55% rank confidence score.

Seat matrix used for this prediction

CategorySeatsFemale Seats
General / UR206
EWS41
SC30
ST72
SEBC / OBC123

Horizontal ex-army reservation is considered separately inside the overall 46-seat structure. The live seat-filling estimate therefore depends on both category competition and which qualifying candidates are actually visible inside the current sample.

Current category-wise cutoff estimate

CategoryVacanciesOpen CutoffFemale Cutoff
UR20/20160.25160.25
OBC/SEBC12/12153.25146.00
SC3/3159.25N/A
ST7/7130.75130.75
EWS4/4149.25149.25

These estimates should be read as the current likely floors inside the ShiftRank sample, not as official declared cutoffs. They are most useful for understanding whether a score looks comfortably safe, borderline, or in need of more data before drawing conclusions.

What the 55% confidence level means

A 55% rank confidence score does not mean the cutoff is 55% correct. It means the current submission pool is large enough to become useful and reasonably stable, but still not large enough to be treated like a near-final merit list. In practical terms, higher scores above the current cutoff bands look stronger, while borderline scores can still move as more candidates enter the sample.

For this exam, the sample is already meaningful because it combines 500 submissions with known seat counts, qualifying rules, and category constraints. That gives the estimate more structure than a simple “top score vs your score” calculator.

Practical reading of the current prediction

  • If you are clearly above the current category cutoff, your current standing looks comparatively stronger.
  • If you are sitting close to the displayed floor, your position is likely borderline and can still move as more responses are added.
  • If you are below the current category floor, you should treat the present estimate as a warning sign rather than wait for blind optimism.