The Asian Age

Kashmir a country, says Class 7 question paper in Bihar

Dept. officials apologise, blame printing press for error CM Nitish may order probe

- NAYEAR AZAD

Education has been under the lens ever since topper’s scam rocked Bihar. The state’s education department was once again left embarrasse­d after a Class 7 question paper defined Kashmir as a country.

The question paper given to Class 7 students asked them to write about the nationalit­y of five countries.

“What are the people of the following countries called?”. Kashmir was mentioned as a country in the list which was distribute­d across government schools.

Other countries listed in the question paper were China, Nepal, England and India. Sources said that a student appearing for the examinatio­n pointed out the error to the invigilato­rs.

Officials said that the examinatio­n was part of Sarv Shiksha Abhiyan, a Central government programme on elementary education, and was being conducted by the Bihar Project Education Council (BPEC) department.

The officials associated with the department have, however, blamed the printing press and also apologised for the error.

“The question will not be taken into account during evaluation. We apologise for the printing error,” Rajiv Ranjan Prasad, BPEC state programme officer, told reporters.

Sources claim that continuous goof-ups in the

The examinatio­n was part of Sarv Shiksha Abhiyan, a Central government programme on elementary education, and was being conducted by the Bihar Project Education Council department

education department have offended Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar, who may order an internal probe into the matter.

Last week, a university in Bihar had released admit card bearing a picture of Lord Ganesh. The university had distanced itself from the controvers­y and blamed the cyber cafe from where the student got the admit card printed.

In 2016, the state education department was left embarrasse­d after a school topper, Ruby Rai, during a TV interview had said that her subject political science was all about cooking and even pronounced the word political as prodigal.

The SIT had later arrested around 20 persons in connection with the toppers scam.

In 2015, the Bihar education department was globally criticised after pictures of a government school in Vaishali district showed people scaling up window shades and walls to hand over answer chits to students appearing for board examinatio­n while the police on duty helped them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India