Students having lower grades in any number of subjects can take supplementary exams
" Over three-fourths of those who took the regular exams eligible for the test"
Following a poor show of the examinees in the recent Secondary Education Examination, the government has decided to allow the students who got a ‘C’ or lower grades in any number of subjects to take the supplementary examinations to improve their grades.
In the past, only those who had ‘D+’ or lower grades in a maximum of two subjects were eligible for a second chance. The government, while adopting the letter grading for the evaluation four years ago, had announced that no students irrespective of their grades would be barred from higher studies.
However, in practice, the students scoring less than 1.6 Grade Point Average and lower than ‘C’ grades in the major subjects aren’t enrolled by the schools in grade 11.
Vishnu Prasad Adhikari, examination controller, said though the Office of the Controller of Examinations was preparing for the examinations of just two subjects, it had to revise the earlier decision following a directive from the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology. The exams that were scheduled to be held on August 11 and 12 have been slated to commence on August 18, as the workload of examination controller’s office has increased significantly after the new decision.
Adhikari said 360,600 students, who had got a ‘C’ or lower grades in at least one subjects are eligible for the tests. This comprises 78.5 percent of 459,275 students, who had taken the regular examinations. “It is like conducting another regular examination,” Adhikari told the Post. He however, said they are expecting that all the eligible students will not be taking the examinations.
The students willing to take the test for the second time will have to submit their examination forms by Friday and the education and human resource development units in the respective districts will have to forward the forms to controller’s office by the end of this month. The exact numbers of the examinees will be known only after the forms are received in the Bhaktapur-based office.
The educationists say allowing students to take any number of tests is against the very concept of the supplementary exams. “It is wrong to expect students to perform better in all the subjects in the span of a few weeks,” Binay Kusiyat, a professor at Tribhuvan University who has conducted several research on school education, told the Post. The results of the grade 10 national board examinations held in March were published on June 27. The students, who fared poorly in the exams, will be getting 45 days to prepare for the second chance, from the day of the result publication. Kusiyat said the move is solely aimed at showing the improved results which was disappointing in the regular examinations.
Though the students from the private schools performed better, those from the public schools had fared poorly. Of the 325,330 students who took the SEE exams from public schools, only 2,792 (0.8 percent) scored Grade Point Average (GPA) above 3.60, while 14,788 students (11 percent) of 133,945 students from the private schools were able to secure GPA above 3.60.
Similarly, 11,233 students (3.45 percent) who attended SEE-representing public schools got GPAs that ranged from 3.20 to 3.60; in comparison to that 39,914 students (29.7 percent) from the private schools were able to secure the same grades.
According to the data provided by the board, a significant number of students from public schools have cleared the SEE securing significantly lower grades in comparison to their peers in private schools. For example, 278,276 students (85.5 percent) from public schools have scored less than 2.80 GPA. The percentage of students securing GPA below 2.8 is much less in private schools, which is only 40,072 students (29 percent).
source: the kathmandu post, 24 July 2019
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Posted on: 2019-07-24