CBSE delivers googly to Class XII physics, accountancy
students
CBSE said the board has a practice of sending
‘Observation Schedules’ to all school heads to share their feedback on the question
papers.
Published: 07th March 2020
KOCHI: Across the country, examination fever has the
entire student community in its grip, with students of Classes XII and X of
nearly all the boards engaged in last-minute preparations for the crucial
tests. But as has been the case throughout, this year too the Central Board of
Secondary Education (CBSE) has given students a fright. The students found the
Class XII physics and accountancy papers quite difficult.
“Only students, who are bright or extraordinary, might
have been able to crack the exam. Though based on the syllabus, the questions
were very difficult to comprehend, especially for a 17-year-old,” said Suchitra
A C, physics teacher of Greets Public School.
She said the average and above-average students could
have never been able to answer the questions during the three-hour paper in the
tense atmosphere of an examination hall. “Of course, if the students were asked
the same questions in a different scenario, they might have solved it,” she
said.
If students found the physics paper tough, with nearly
all the questions at application level, those who appeared for accountancy laboured to complete the paper. “It was very
lengthy,” said Priya Fazil, mother of a Class XII Commerce student. She said
the short-answer questions took up the time usually given to questions which carry five or 10 marks . “Three hours were a very short
time frame for an Accountancy paper,” she said.
Pointing out that the issue is the same across the
nation, T P M Ibrahim Khan, president, Kerala CBSE Schools Management
Association, said, “The association has sought a report from all the schools.
Based on it, we will send a complaint to the board and ask them to make the
valuation liberal.”
The Council of CBSE Schools Kerala too has taken up the
issue with the board. Indira Rajan, secretary-general, National Council of CBSE
Schools, said the council has already sent a letter to the board in this
regard.
“We received a report on the question papers from schools
following a thorough analysis by
teachers. Based on it, we have asked the board to take action in
students’ interest,” she said.
CBSE said the board has a practice of sending
‘Observation Schedules’ to all school heads to share their feedback on the
question papers. “The feedback is examined by subject experts for its merits
before finalising the marking scheme. The board will take similar action in all
such cases,” the CBSE said in a release.
Source: https://www.newindianexpress.com
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