Colon school plans to divert offline tests for class IX & XI – News2IN
Kolkata

Colon school plans to divert offline tests for class IX & XI

Colon school plans to divert offline tests for class IX & XI
Written by news2in

Kolkata: Many schools in the city, after discussing with parents, have decided that students of class IX and XI will no longer write an exam online.
This transition will help wean them from virtual mode where students begin to take a light test and have lost the habit of sitting in the hall scenario to write their letters.
Because IX and XI are pre-board years, they must be jerked from the comfort of inertia.
The school feels that a large learning gap has been arranged because of a virtual exam where the value is easily printed because of a myriad of unfair methods adopted by children.
Meeting with parents revealed they also look forward to children to write “real” exams now.
“Traveling to school, sitting in the exam hall without support, understanding the question papers and handling it is a positive struggle that must be passed by each school child.
The online exam is part of the online class, which has their day,” Seema Sapru said, head School of Heritage School.
The term exam starts for class IX and XI on Monday – exclusively in physical mode.
Parents support that step.
If someone is sick, children can follow other physical examinations after recovering.
Unit tests for class IX and XI will begin in physical mode in the South City International School from December 6 on Thursday, a webinar was held where the main John Bagul told students of class XI, with parents in the background, that all exams would now in physical mode.
“Students usually take a test easily.
With the help of parents, we try our best to help them let them go.
There will be an initial adjustment problem, which will definitely be overcome,” he said.
Because more than 80% of children began to come to school in class IX and XI, DPS Newtown has decided the unit test must be shifted to offline mode.
“Children return in large quantities, so there is no reason why they have to write a test from home,” said the Sonali Sen School.
Two sets of letter questions will be prepared by the Asian Asian school and class will be divided into physical part of the test for class IX and XI.
“Parents want to write a” real “test,” said Vijaylakshmi Kumar’s school.
There used to be at least 20 toppers every time the exam was held online, whether it was a test unit or test test, said John Ghosh, Secretary and Principal of St Thomas Boys, Kidderpore.
“We have more than 90% of class IX and XI children who are present and so the exam will only be offline,” he said.
Tirthankar Sarkar, whose son Ayushman is a class XI student in DPS Ruby Park, “because my child returned to campus, the next best thing was to write a test on campus.” Ritwick Bhattacharjee, whose daughter Yashamoti was in class XI at GD GOENKA school, said, “Unless they start writing exams in physical mode again, they will not be able to release this lethargy to this study.” More buses on the road immediately: Some bus owners say the reopening of schools and colleges has caused them to decide to increase the frequency on all routes except in the Esplanade and the V sector, where the response is bad.
The coordination committee of the Minibus operator said they had completed a route that would see augmentation of 10% -20% to start the service from 7 o’clock next Monday.
Tapan Banerjee from the Board with Syndicate Bus said they would run several buses in the morning because there was a “positive feedback about students”

About the author

news2in