Kerala to award grace marks to students for reading habits from next academic year
Press Trust of India | August 13, 2025 | 03:40 PM IST | 1 min read
Weekly reading sessions will be held for students, with teacher training and a handbook to guide activities. The Education Department may also include a reading-focused segment in the annual school arts festival, Kalolsavam.
NEW DELHI: Children in state-run schools in Kerala will soon receive "grace marks" for cultivating reading habits, starting from the next academic year, State General Education Minister V Sivankutty said on Wednesday. A dedicated period will be set aside for reading books, newspapers, and related activities, the minister said in a Facebook post. “Grace marks will be awarded from the next academic year to children who engage in activities that promote reading habits,” Sivankutty added.
For students in grades one to four, weekly sessions will focus on appropriate reading activities, while students in grades five to twelve will have similar sessions linked to newspaper reading and other follow-up exercises, he stated. Teachers will receive training, and a handbook will be prepared to guide reading-related activities. The Education Department is also considering including a reading-focused segment in “Kalolsavam,” the annual school arts festival, the minister said.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- 415 universities offer SWAYAM, NPTEL online courses, but UGC’s credit transfer scheme finds few takers
- CBSE changing Class 9, 10 syllabus from 2026-27; 3rd language compulsory, 2 levels of maths, science
- MBBS Abroad: NMC warns students against 3 Uzbekistan medical colleges, TSMU offshore campus
- CBSE AI Curriculum for Classes 3-8: What’s in the syllabus, how will it be taught, will there be exams?
- Pondicherry University advances exams, cancels internals, makes Saturdays working citing LPG shortage
- Osmania University degree college crammed into 5 school rooms; BA, BSc, BCom students take turns to study
- Resident doctors’ workload ‘alarming’; enforce mandatory rest, monitored rosters like for pilots: Panel
- Strengthen nursing courses, set up allied healthcare school at AIIMS Delhi: Panel to health ministry
- Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas have seen 40 student suicides in 5 years, show education ministry data
- ANRF spent just 61% of its budget for 2025-2026, nothing in first 2 years: Parliament panel report