CBSE Board Exam 2022 will be conducted in 2 parts, on Reduced Syllabus

# Jul 06, 2021 by Ojasvi Gupta

News Image

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) issues a new assessment scheme for Class 10 and 12 students for the academic year of 2022. This is due to the continued shutdown of schools and examination disruptions due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

In 2021-22, it will reduce the syllabus, hold board examinations twice during the year in different formats, and ensure continuous recording of internal assessment scores in order to have a variety of options to calculate a final score at the end of the year, according to a notification issued on Monday night.

This comes after widespread uncertainty during the 2020-21 academic year, when the second wave of COVID-19 caused the postponement and then cancellation of year-end board examinations, with CBSE finally asking schools to use a combination of Class 10, 11, and 12 scores and internal marks to calculate the final results.

“The syllabus for the Board examination 2021-22 will be rationalized similar to that of the last academic session,” said the notification. Last year, the examination syllabus was reduced by 30%.

CBSE has divided the 2021-22 academic year into two terms with 50% of the syllabus to be covered in each term, with board exams to be held at the end of each term.

The first term exam will be held on a flexible schedule between November-December 2021 with a flexible schedule, with a window period of 4-8 weeks for schools situated in different parts of the country. It will be a 90 minute paper with multiple choice questions only, likely to be conducted in schools with the supervision of external superintendents.

The second term exam will be held in March-April 2022 in examination centers and is likely to be a 2-hour exam with various question formats. In case the pandemic situation is not conducive for such a long, descriptive exam to be held, the second term exam will also be conducted with a multiple-choice question format.

CBSE aims to make internal assessments, practicals, and project work more credible and proper to ensure fair distribution of marks. According to the notification, schools must create a student profile for all assessments undertaken over the year and retain evidence in digital format.

The CBSE has made provisions for different assessment scenarios depending on the pandemic situation.

  • If both term exams are held, the final theory marks will be equally split between the two. If the pandemic forces complete school closures in November and December, the first term exams will be conducted online or in homes and would carry reduced weightage in the final results.
  • If the second term exams cannot be held, the final results would be based on an increased weightage for the first term exam scores and internal assessment marks.
  • If schools are completed closed, and both the first and second term exams have to be conducted at home, the final results will include weightage for the scores in internal assessment, projects, and practical work, as well as both term-end examinations

“In all the above cases, data analysis of marks of students will be undertaken to ensure the integrity of internal assessments and home-based exams,” said the notification issued by CBSE academic director Joseph Emmanuel.

The responses of students will be captured on OMR sheets, which after scanning may be directly uploaded on the CBSE portal or alternatively uploaded by the school on the very same day.

“Students will study only the specific syllabus meant for that particular term-end exam. No part of the first-term syllabus will be part of the second-term exam and vice versa” said the CBSE official.

About Author

Ojasvi Gupta
Ojasvi Gupta

Ojasvi Gupta has worked for the Indian Express and Enactus DSC as a writer. Currently pursuing BCom Hons from Delhi University, she loves to spend her free time listening to music, reading, or playing with her dog. With her strong inclination towards writing, she serves as an author for Educere India.