CBSE exam 2017 results will be released on time CBSE exam 2017 results will be released on time

Once upon a time, when India was a colony, the matriculation exam marked the end of “high” school education. It served as the gateway for higher education at a college. The Latin root of the verb ‘to matriculate’ means getting enlisted in a college. Not everybody could aspire for higher education, but even among those who did, few could pass the public exam taken at the end of Class X. Failure rates were very high. “Matric pass” meant eligibility for certain careers; even “matric fail” signified status, conveying that a person had spent 10 years at school and taken a very difficult exam.

Reform in secondary education became the focus of policymakers soon after Independence. They felt that 10 years of schooling was not sufficient for higher education. They agreed with their predecessors who had found 10-year schooling to be short for a serious engagement with college education. Initially, an addition of one year was recommended, leading to the model —implemented in some states — of 11 years of school education. Subsequently, one more year was added. In the mid-1960s, the Kothari Commission had hoped that the final two years in a 12-year model will provide a viable option of vocational courses. This hope turned out to be an illusion. The only change that occurred was that instead of one, students had to face two public exams before proceeding to college. Both exams caused great stress.

In the colonial era, board exams had begun to dominate and shape the teachers’ sense of purpose and pedagogic practice. The board exam had become a cultural institution, a test of endurance — of the capacity to cope with intense stress. Popular faith in the integrity of the examination system remained largely intact despite common experience and evidence that the system was neither just nor foolproof. Despite the criticism it faced in policy documents, the system retained its legitimacy. The main point of criticism was that board exams mainly test the ability to memorise. Efforts to reform the system attained only marginal success. The high school exam, taken at the end of Class X, continued despite the introduction of the Class XII board exam. Its main utility was that the high school “pass” certificate carried the student’s date of birth. Structurally, the Class X exam helped to keep the transition rate low by eliminating a huge proportion of students — in many states, the majority — by “failing” them.

Two attempts were made over the last decade to soften the grip of exams on children’s lives. One was to make the Class X board exam optional. The other was the attempt to replace the annual exam with Comprehensive and Continuous Evaluation (CCE). At the elementary level (that is Classes 1 to 6), this step got codified in a law known the Right to Education (RTE). Ostensibly similar in purpose, the two reforms referred to two quite different stages of children’s intellectual growth. Both attempts are now in trouble. Systemic resistance has proved its power in both cases. The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has now decided to make the Class X board exam compulsory once again. As for RTE’s stipulation that CCE should replace an annual exam in elementary classes, political consensus to rescind it by revising the RTE is reportedly growing. In both cases, the main argument being given for reversal of reforms is that children don’t feel motivated to work hard when there is no fear of failure. Restoration of the Class X board exam is also being justified on the ground that the state boards did not make it optional — that is only the CBSE made it optional, hence there was a problem of parity.

Neither of the two arguments can bear scrutiny. If the fear of failure is all that motivates children, surely it is a symptom of poor quality teaching. The way forward lies in improving pedagogy by reforming teacher training. The decision to make the Class X board exam optional was intended to encourage improvement in school-based exams. Class X is not the terminal year of schooling as it once was, so there is no harm in giving children the option to avoid one board exam, especially if they are not planning to shift to a different school. Coordination between the CBSE and state boards should have been attempted by encouraging these boards to follow the CBSE’s lead.

Yet another argument supporting the CBSE’s reversal is that the Class X board exam serves as a rehearsal for the Class XII board exam. If an exam system demands a rehearsal, surely it is not serving a pedagogic purpose. The ordeal of public exams (and “pre-boards”) is cherished because they keep pedagogy tied to preparation drills. Teachers and parents both feel safe when nothing creative or original is expected to take place in the child’s

intellectual life. A public exam is, by definition, narrow in its focus as it attempts to place thousands of pupils on one platform. No individual qualities can be assessed in such mass evaluation. Nor can the results of such a mass test be regarded as reliable and fair.

It is unfortunate that the CBSE has agreed to give up a step meant to encourage the deeper reforms in the long run. Short-lived reforms have been characteristic of India’s policy history in education. If the RTE is amended in order to allow the reintroduction of annual exams in the elementary classes, the path to making elementary education child-centered will close. The idea of CCE as a substitute for annual, “pass-fail” kind of exams demands significant improvement in teacher training. Teachers’ ability to assess a child’s individual trajectory of growth is a crucial factor in the CCE approach. Unfortunately, the CBSE’s own strategy for implementing the CCE is cumbersome and stressful. The NCERT has developed a better strategy, but coordination between the two institutions has never been easy. Ultimately, it is our children who pay the price for the system’s inability to sustain the effort to reform itself.

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