West Bengal: Students protest against Class 12 results
Press Trust of India | July 26, 2021 | 07:28 PM IST | 2 mins read
Students held protests and blocked roads in West Bengal against West Bengal Class 12 results 2021.
Explore 50+ important entrance exams after 10+2 across engineering, medical, law, and more. Don’t miss key opportunities to plan your career and secure admission in top colleges.
Download NowKOLKATA: Disgruntled students hit the streets in different parts of West Bengal on Monday, the second time since the publication of the state higher secondary results on July 22, demanding that they be declared as passed and their marks be increased as no examinations were held this year due to the COVID pandemic and evaluations were based on previous results.
A number of students agitated at Ananda Ashram Bidyalaya at Naktala and Shyambazar AV School in different parts of city demanding their marks be raised, while at Basanti and Bisnupur in South 24 Parganas district and Domkal in Murshidabad district the candidates demanded they be declared as passed. At Domkal Higher Secondary School, a section of students even damaged the furniture of a office room from where mark sheets were being distributed alleging that they were being unfairly held back though no exams had taken place, the reports said. Police went to the spot and there was no further untoward incident.
At Bisnupur and at Naktala the agitating students blocked roads disrupting traffic. They later lifted the blockades after the police persuaded them to do so. In some schools the students, accompanied by guardians, gheraoed the head masters, eyewitnesses said. "We have sent report to the West Bengal Council for Higher Secondary Education about today's incident," the headmaster of the school at Naktala said.
West Bengal Class 12 results
School education department sources said the district inspectors of schools of the districts where such protests took place have been asked to visit the concerned institutions and send their reports about the reason behind the students' grievances at the earliest.
A girl student of the 166-year-old Shyambazar AV School told reporters "When no exams were held how come some of us got 29 in practicals and some only 9. We demand immediate action by the Council." The students said they were baffled by the Council's evaluation process." As no examination was held due to the COVID-19 situation then why the discrimination ? Either all of us be declared as passed or failed," many of them said.
Of the 8,19,202 higher secondary candidates, 97.69 per cent of them have passed the examination this year. About 20,000 of them have been declared unsuccessful. An evaluation method had been worked out this year based on marks obtained by an examinee in the Madhyamik (class 10 examination) and best of four subject scores in class 11 annual examination. The assessment marks in class twelve practicals in the case of science students and projects by humanities students were added in the evaluation criteria. The evaluation was praised by principals of different colleges and authorities in the state run universities as being scientific, fair and dynamic.
The educationists had expressed the fear that marking 100 per cent as passed and 90 per cent as first division holders in Secondary Examination (class ten board exams), result of which was declared earlier, will create crisis and deficit of seats in higher secondary institutions.
Write to us at news@careers360.com .
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.
Featured News
]- CMRIT Bangalore principal: Civil, mechanical engineers migrating to IT – we are building the bridges back
- VIT Vellore professor lectures in 7 languages at once to help BTech students with complex topics; here’s how
- CISCE schools can continue to teach foreign languages as 3rd option: Board secretary
- ‘Fix schools, create jobs’: West Bengal voters cut through election noise with education, employment demands
- BBAU Lucknow student’s death sparks protests against hostel food, curfew; proctor denies link
- Fees to social media-use: What NCAHP’s first ethics code for allied, healthcare professionals says
- NMC junks 150-seat MBBS cap, population rule; sets 10 km limit for medical college-hospital distance
- Suicides, opaque placements, caste: IIT Bombay, Kanpur’s student journals dare to ask the tough questions
- ‘Not just academic, but personal’: NSUT Delhi takes AI beyond BTech, across non-engineering courses
- AI judge, cyber law courses, scholarships: GNLU is revamping LLB degrees to make students courtroom-ready