Tag: Class 12 board exam

  • Board exams twice a year, removal of arts, science and humanities streams: NCF proposes key changes

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) draft released on Thursday proposes board exams for Class 10 and 12 twice a year and to scrap arts, science, and humanities streams for higher secondary students.   

    Based on the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, the curriculum will change the basic structure of school education as it also proposes no exams for lower classes.

    “The overarching objective of the NCF is to help in positively transforming the school education system of India as envisioned in the NEP 2020 through corresponding positive changes in the curriculum, including pedagogy,” said the draft framework. 

    The draft said that the two board exams would give time to students to prepare, and the test papers would be based on suitable software.  

    The subjects will be divided into eight curricular areas: Mathematics, humanities, computing, vocation education, physical education, arts, social science and science.

    The recommendation drafted by a 12-member steering committee under former chairperson ISRO K Kasturirangan says that the structure for classes 9 and 10 will significantly change as students will be expected to clear eight papers.

    The class 11 and 12 students may opt for any three curricular areas, which will be divided into four courses per discipline. 

    “Summative assessments can be designed using case-based questions, simulations, and essay-type questions to enable assessment of competencies. At this stage, students should also be prepared to undertake the Board examinations and other selection tests to gain access to higher education and livelihood opportunities,” said the draft about class 9 and 11 students.

    It also suggested that students should have the option to quit school after Class 10 and pursue vocational education in Grades 11 and 12 if they wish to.

    “In particular, students would continue to have the option of exiting after Grade 10 and re-entering in the next phase to pursue vocational or any other courses available in Grades 11-12, including at a more specialised school if so desired,” the document said.

    There will be no written test from pre-school to class 2. “Formative assessments are continuous and ongoing,” said the draft. The new system proposes an all-around assessment of children. 

    The draft said that a child’s progress card will be a “holistic, 360-degree, multidimensional report that reflects in great detail the progress as well as the uniqueness of each learner in the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains,” the NCF draft said.

    During Covid, CBSE held board exams twice in the academic year 2020-21 but later reverted to the old system, saying it was a temporary measure taken during the pandemic. 

    NEW DELHI: The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) draft released on Thursday proposes board exams for Class 10 and 12 twice a year and to scrap arts, science, and humanities streams for higher secondary students.   

    Based on the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, the curriculum will change the basic structure of school education as it also proposes no exams for lower classes.

    “The overarching objective of the NCF is to help in positively transforming the school education system of India as envisioned in the NEP 2020 through corresponding positive changes in the curriculum, including pedagogy,” said the draft framework. googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The draft said that the two board exams would give time to students to prepare, and the test papers would be based on suitable software.  

    The subjects will be divided into eight curricular areas: Mathematics, humanities, computing, vocation education, physical education, arts, social science and science.

    The recommendation drafted by a 12-member steering committee under former chairperson ISRO K Kasturirangan says that the structure for classes 9 and 10 will significantly change as students will be expected to clear eight papers.

    The class 11 and 12 students may opt for any three curricular areas, which will be divided into four courses per discipline. 

    “Summative assessments can be designed using case-based questions, simulations, and essay-type questions to enable assessment of competencies. At this stage, students should also be prepared to undertake the Board examinations and other selection tests to gain access to higher education and livelihood opportunities,” said the draft about class 9 and 11 students.

    It also suggested that students should have the option to quit school after Class 10 and pursue vocational education in Grades 11 and 12 if they wish to.

    “In particular, students would continue to have the option of exiting after Grade 10 and re-entering in the next phase to pursue vocational or any other courses available in Grades 11-12, including at a more specialised school if so desired,” the document said.

    There will be no written test from pre-school to class 2. “Formative assessments are continuous and ongoing,” said the draft. The new system proposes an all-around assessment of children. 

    The draft said that a child’s progress card will be a “holistic, 360-degree, multidimensional report that reflects in great detail the progress as well as the uniqueness of each learner in the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains,” the NCF draft said.

    During Covid, CBSE held board exams twice in the academic year 2020-21 but later reverted to the old system, saying it was a temporary measure taken during the pandemic. 

  • Class 12 boards: CICSE tells schools to submit average scores of students in class 11, internal exams

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: The CICSE board has asked its affiliated schools to submit data including average of marks obtained by class 12 students in class 11 and during this session, according to an official letter.

    The board had postponed class 12 exams which were scheduled from May 4 in light of the aggressive second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    A large section of students and parents have been demanding cancellation of the exams but the board has not announced any decision yet.

    The class 10 exams have already been cancelled by the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CICSE).

    “The CISCE is in the process of collating and collecting data from all our schools presenting candidates for class 12 examination. You are, therefore, requested to provide the requested information for class 12 candidates,” CISCE Secretary Gerry Arathoon said in a letter to school principals marked as “strictly confidential”.

    While there was no response from Arathoon about whether the exercise to collect data hints at possible cancellation of board exams and opting for alterative assessment methods, schools affiliated with the CICSE confirmed that they have received the letter.

    The information sought by the board includes the average marks of subjects scored by the candidates in class 11 (2019-20) and average marks of subjects scored in various tests and examinations conducted by the school during class 12 (2020-21).

    “The papers and subjects must be the same for which the candidates have been registered and confirmed for class 12 examination.

    The submission of the average marks of papers should be done online, through the internal assessment module on the CAREERS Portal,” the letter added.

    The schools have also been asked to upload consolidated marksheet of class 11 and 12 to validate the uploaded marks.

    The deadline for completing the exercise has been set for June 7 by the board.

    There has been no final call yet by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on class 12 board exams and the Ministry of Education is likely to announce a decision by June 1 in this regard.

  • Uncertainty prevails over Class 12 state board exams in West Bengal after COVID surge

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education on Wednesday said it is waiting for the state government’s decision on holding the Class 12 board examinations scheduled in June, amid a raging second wave of COVID-19.

    The council had earlier announced that the higher secondary exams would begin on June 15 and continue till July 2.

    “We are waiting for the government’s decision on whether the exams can be held as per the scheduled time table or the tests will be postponed or cancelled,” Mahua Das, the president of the council, told reporters.

    The council had in April said exams for Class 12 students, in a departure from the norm, would be held at their respective schools this year, on account of the spread of the coronavirus infection across the state.

    West Bengal’s daily tally of new COVID-19 cases breached the 20,000-mark on Tuesday, while 132 more people died in the state taking the death toll to 12,593, the Health Department said in a bulletin.

    A record 20,136 new cases took the caseload to 10,32,740,it said.

    Das said the council has taken all necessary steps if exams are held.

    “It depends whether the Class 10 board exams, scheduled to take place before the higher secondary tests, will finally be held or not,” she said.

    With the second wave of COVID-19 still raging, West Bengal Board of Secondary Education had on Tuesday said it was yet to arrive at a final decision on whether to go ahead with the Class 10 examinations scheduled from June 1 or postpone the tests.

    Board President Kalyanmoy Ganguly had said no decision was taken on postponement or cancellation of the exams.

    “I cannot say anything on the issue at present. We are waiting for the government decision,” he had said on Tuesday.