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CBSE proposes open-book exams for Classes 9 to 12, pilot run in November

In an open-book exam, students are allowed to carry their notes, textbooks, or other study material and refer to them during the examination

CBSE proposes open-book exams for Classes 9 to 12, pilot run in November
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The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) is considering Open Book Examinations (OBE) for students of Classes 9 to 12 in line with the recommendations of the new National Curriculum Framework released last year, The Indian Express has learned.

According to sources, CBSE has proposed a pilot run of open-book tests in a few schools for English, Mathematics and Science for Classes 9 and 10 and English, Mathematics and Biology for Classes 11 and 12 later this year to evaluate time taken by students to complete such tests and stakeholders’ response.

In an open-book exam, students are allowed to carry their notes, textbooks, or other study material and refer to them during the examination.

However, OBEs are not necessarily easier than closed-book exams; often they are more challenging.

This is because an open-book test does not assess a student’s memory but her understanding of a subject and ability to analyse or apply concepts. It is not merely jotting down content from a textbook onto the answer script.

The Indian Express has learned that the pilot is proposed to be conducted in November-December this year and based on the experience, the Board will decide whether this form of assessment should be adopted across all its schools for Classes 9 to 12.

The pilot will be focused on assessing higher-order thinking skills, application, analysis, critical and creative thinking, and problem solving abilities.

CBSE is planning to wrap up the design and development of the OBE pilot by June and has decided to consult Delhi University (DU) for the same.

The DU introduced open book tests, despite opposition, in August 2020 during the Covid pandemic which had disrupted the academic calendar.

Students had approached Delhi High Court against this move on the ground that it would be “discriminatory” towards those who do not have access to the Internet and infrastructure the underprivileged and PwD category students, specially the visually challenged.

The court later permitted DU to hold the OBE for final-year undergraduate and postgraduate students. Regular students were given three hours to complete the examination and an additional hour for scanning answer sheets and uploading them, where PwD students got six hours for the examination.

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