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CBSE Class 10 Maths, Class 12 Economics board exams to be held again over reports of paper leak

CBSE Class 10 Maths, Class 12 Economics board exams to be held again over reports of paper leak

The CBSE said on Wednesday the Class 10 mathematics and Class 12 Economics board exam will be held again over reports of paper leak.

education Updated: Mar 28, 2018 15:25 IST
Neelam Pandey
Neelam Pandey
Hindustan Times, New Delhi
Students write their CBSE board exams in a Gurgaon school.
Students write their CBSE board exams in a Gurgaon school.(PTI File Photo)

The CBSE said on Wednesday the Class 10 mathematics and Class 12 economics board exam will be held again over reports of paper leak.

The dates for the retest will be announced on the CBSE website within a week, the Board said.

“The Board has taken cognizance of certain happenings in the conduct of certain examinations as are being reported. With the view to upholding the sanctity of the Board examinations and in the interest of the fairness to the students, the Board has decided to reconduct the examinations in the subjects,” a CBSE statement said.

Students appeared for the Class 10 mathematics paper of the Central Board of Secondary Education on Wednesday while the Class 12 Economics paper was held on March 26.Students and teachers said on Wednesday the Class 10 mathematics paper was easy and scoring, and that the questions were according to the syllabus.

Akanksha, a student of Vivekananda School in Dehradun, also found the question paper extremely easy. “There was no issue with any question and the paper was set as per the syllabus of NCERT,” she added.

On Monday, CBSE had denied claims on social media that the economics paper was leaked ahead of the exam as reports of the question paper being leaked circulated through social media and WhatsApp hours before the start of the exam.

“We have checked with all examination centres and the paper was not leaked. The source of the circulation of this information is not known yet,” a senior CBSE official had said.

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Subjecting a large majority of students who are unaware of a paper leakage to a retest shows the callousness with which our education system managers handle such an important function. CBSE has pointed out the ‘unfairness’ meted out to the majority of students in not having access to the leaked paper as the excuse for conducting a retest; this is laughable considering that only a tiny fraction of the millions of students have got access to the leaked paper and of which only a further smaller fraction would have pursued it in any seriousness to have benefitted from it in any real terms. The bigger unfairness is subjecting the millions of innocent children to yet another episode of stressfulness. This is all the more painful since every educator and parent is familiar with the multitude of pitfalls our very examination system suffers from, the least of which is paper leakage: incompetent evaluations, inconsistent evaluations, wrong questions, mixing up of answer sheets, artificially sprucing up results, inflating marks, arbitrary or random level of evaluation standards, so on and so forth. Thus, examinations in our country have already lost its credibility as a tool for evaluation of understanding of the syllabus, leave alone as a calibrated tool for measurement of ability. Thus subjecting millions of hapless students, who do not have a voice, to yet another exercise in futility is a cruel joke. It further subjects students, parents and teachers to unwanted stress and given that the students from next year onwards only have to deal with half of what the present students have to go through, this retest is a tragedy foisted upon them. If anything, the paper leakage has only exposed the incompetence of CBSE to conduct a fair examination and thus leaves open the question of how it will ensure that a leakage of the retest paper will be prevented. Thus, children are facing another futile challenge, considering the pitfalls of examination system already mentioned and which is subject to threat of another leakage. It is the CBSE who should be held accountable for this leakage and not the students. And this entire episode gives us an opportunity to look at the system of examinations with a new understanding. World over, progressive educators and scientists are eschewing the concept of a single terminal examination as any measure of a child’s intelligence or ability and are recommending the use of other credible tools of comprehensive evaluation. It’s time we too junk this wasteful examination pattern and replace it with more trustworthy and reliable measures.

S. B

Very valid points.

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