Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Give students, teachers jabs before CBSE exams: Sisodia

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com ANI

NEW DELHI: Conducting the CBSE Class 12 board exams without vaccinatin­g students and teachers may prove to be a big mistake, Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia said on Sunday at a high-level meeting called by the Union education ministry to discuss the fate of the pending board and entrance exams, which were postponed in view of the ongoing second Covid-19 wave across the country.

The virtual meeting was chaired by Union defence minister Rajnath Singh and attended by education minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank, minister of women and child developmen­t Smriti Irani, and informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister Prakash Javadekar. State education ministers and secretarie­s, CBSE officials, and chairperso­ns of state examinatio­n boards were also present during the meeting.

Though the meeting remained inconclusi­ve, officials in attendance said that there was a “broad consensus” that the exams must be held, for a limited number of subjects and with a shorter duration, when the situation is under control.

Sisodia, who is also Delhi’s education minister, said the state government was not in favour of conducting exams in the current scenario.

“Families across the nation have suffered immense pain and trauma due to Covid-19. It’s time for the Union government to take a decision with respect to board exams, considerin­g it has caused enough tension among our student and teacher community,” Sisodia said in a statement.

“Conducting board exams in these unpreceden­ted times will be a big mistake on behalf of the central government. Administer­ing board exams when the world is preparing for the third Covid-19 wave is irresponsi­ble, and at a time when there 2.5 lakh Covid-19 cases a day in our country, our students, parents, and teachers will not be in a good mental state to sit for any kind of exams,” he added.

Sisodia said students of Class 12 should be evaluated using alternativ­e methods such as those CBSE used for Class 10 students this year after their exams were cancelled last month.

“The central government should cancel the board exams if vaccinatio­ns are not possible, and initiate the ‘no-exam policy’ for students, awarding grades on the basis of their (students’) unit tests, pre-board exams, practical exams, similar to the Class 10 promotion policy. Students should also be given a choice to retake exams to improve, in case they are not satisfied with their results,” he said.

Sisodia said the Delhi government demanded that both students and teachers must be vaccinated before conducting examinatio­ns. “In such a time of crisis, the central government should speak to Pfizer, as it has already developed vaccines for children aged above 12, and acquire these vaccines for the 1.4 crore students (across all boards, all over India) who are in Class 12. Only after procuring vaccines and vaccinatin­g all students should the central government think about conducting any kind of examinatio­ns,” the Delhi education minister said.

He said 95% of the students in Class 12th are above the age of 17.5, and suggested the Centre consult health experts whether the vaccine given to those above 18 can be given to students of Class 12 as well. “If the vaccine can be given to 17.5-years-olds on the advice of health experts, then the indigenous­ly made Covishield and Covaxin should be given to all Class 12 students on priority,” he said.

“Once the vaccine is available, all state government­s should ensure that all Class 12 students and school teachers are vaccinated within a week. In Delhi, we can vaccinate these two groups within two days,” Sisodia said.

The Centre has asked state government­s to send their suggestion­s on the cancellati­on/ conduct of board and competitiv­e exams by Tuesday. “As envisioned by the Hon’ble PM, the meeting was extremely fruitful as we received immensely valuable suggestion­s. I have requested the State Government­s to send me their detailed suggestion­s by 25th May,” Nishank tweeted after the meeting.

Emphasisin­g that both students’ and teachers’ safety, security, and future are “supremely important to us”, the Union education minister, in another tweet, said: “I’m confident we will be able to arrive at an informed, collaborat­ive decision regarding the Class 12th board exams and remove the uncertaint­y among student’s and parent’s minds by informing them of our final decision at the earliest.”

The Union government has proposed that the states conduct Class 12 exams only for major subjects, according to the proposal document seen by HT.

Nearly 20 of the 174 subjects offered to Class 12 students are considered major subjects by CBSE. Board students take a minimum of five and a maximum of six subjects, of which four are considered major subjects for the purpose of examinatio­n.

 ??  ?? Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia consults teachers, principals and students of Delhi schools about the Class 12 exams.
Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia consults teachers, principals and students of Delhi schools about the Class 12 exams.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India