Live
- Pvt degree colleges to shut indefinitely
- Officials unavailable at Tahsildar office even at 11 am!
- DC reviews arrangements for Brahmana Vellemla LIS inauguration
- First night safari in UP to begin by Dec 2026: Yogi
- Memorandum filed against upcoming ethanol plant
- Stage set for BJP-SP electoral battle in UP
- Decision to relocate key legal institutions from Kurnool opposed
- Channi apologises for remarks against women
- Nellore: 700 mobile phones worth Rs 1.5 cr recovered
- BRS miserably failed in administration: Congress
Just In
Nearly 70 per cent students who took the Class 12 Science stream exams of the Bihar School Examination Board have failed, while 76 per cent students who took the Arts exam have failed -- thanks to strict measures against cheating, according to results announced on Tuesday.
Patna: Nearly 70 per cent students who took the Class 12 Science stream exams of the Bihar School Examination Board have failed, while 76 per cent students who took the Arts exam have failed -- thanks to strict measures against cheating, according to results announced on Tuesday.
The only silver lining was that 73.76 per cent students appearing in the Commerce stream exams passed.
The Science stream, which saw only 30.11 per cent students pass, saw an average of 44.66 per cent marks scored.
Last year, when the new rules against cheating were not in place, the state board exams saw 67.06 per cent Science students pass, while the Arts stream saw 80.87 per cent students pass.
Khushbu Kumari of the Simultala Awasiya Vidyalaya in Maoist-affected Jamui district topped in the Science stream. She got 431 out of 500 marks, or 86.2 per cent.
Ganesh Kumar of Samastipur district topped in Commerce stream, scoring 413 out of 500 marks - 82.6 percent.
"It is a historical result of the Class 12 exams in many ways. The pass percentage may have drastically fallen in Science and Commerce streams this year, but the exam was free from cheating," board chairman Anand Kishore told media here.
He said for the first time the board code was used with answer sheets to ensure no unfair means during evaluation and it was easy to identify the answer sheets once uploaded.
About 12.61 lakh students appeared in the exams this year.
A senior official of the board said drastic fall in pass percent rate vindicated their bid to conduct a cheating-free exam this time.
This year, CCTV cameras were installed at entrance of examination halls and videography was conducted through the duration of the examination.
Use of all communication gadgets, including mobile phones, inside the examination halls was disallowed.
Mass cheating in board exams has been reported in Bihar for years. Every year, the media carries images of cheating going on at exam centres, such as scores of people climbing through windows to hand over cheating material to examinees with impunity.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com