Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Delhi govt seeks board breather for Class-10 kids

- Neelam Pandey neelam.pandey@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI:The Delhi government wants students writing the compulsory Class 10 board examinatio­ns evaluated on only half the syllabus for two years, arguing city pupils aren’t ready to face the tough test.

The demand comes after the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) — the country’s largest education board — made Class 10 examinatio­ns compulsory from the next academic session (2017-18) after widespread criticism of the earlier system of optional tests and automatic promotion.

In a letter to the CBSE in January, the Delhi education department said students of Class 9 and 8 — who will face the first and second editions of the compulsory examinatio­n in 2018 and 2019, respective­ly — should be given a “breather” for two years.

The letter said these students were used to the semester system — under which pupils are examined every six months — and so, they should be assessed only for one semester in their Class 10 exams for two years.

This effectivel­y meant a halving of the syllabus as the board examinatio­ns assess a candidate on the entire year’s learning.

The CBSE hasn’t taken a call on the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government’s request but sources told HT it might be difficult for the board to change the rule for a union territory or a state because the decision was applicable to affiliated schools.

Board officials also said a semester-based assessment couldn’t be called a board examinatio­n, which had to be based on an annual syllabus.

Officials in the city department of education said they didn’t ask for an exemption.

“We want the semester system to continue for Class 9 and 10 students for an interim of two years… as they had to go through various experiment­s of no-detention policy, CCE (continuous and comprehens­ive evaluation) among others, and will find it (board exams) difficult to adjust,” said a senior DoE official.

“We fully support board exams but currently the students are used to the semester system so they should be assessed using that. The board exam for these students can be based on a semester rather than judging them on the full syllabus, that too for a period of two years,” added the official. The government also said this could be replicated throughout the country so that sudden decisions don’t adversely affect the children.

Last December, CBSE made Class 10 exam compulsory in its schools, doing away with a policy formed five years ago that offered a choice to students to opt for the board-conducted finals or let the institutio­n assess their performanc­e.

The previous policy was roundly criticised for lower performanc­e levels among children and blamed for falling test scores.

The decision was taken by the governing body of the CBSE, which runs more than 18,000 schools in the country including government schools, Kendriya Vidyalayas and private ones.

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