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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

West Bengal Board of Secondary Education introduces secret code in Madhyamik question paper

The action was taken due to the circulation of purported question papers in previous editions of the state-run class 10 board exams, which were discovered to be fake each time

PTI Calcutta Published 01.02.24, 07:11 PM
Representational Image

Representational Image File photo

The West Bengal Board of Secondary Education has implemented codes for each Madhyamik question paper to prevent the circulation of its images on social media during exams.

The action was taken due to the circulation of purported question papers in previous editions of the state-run class 10 board exams, which were discovered to be fake each time.

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According to a statement by the board on Thursday, the code will be concealed on every page of the question paper, which will be distributed to candidates after exams begin at 9:45 am on February 2.

The statement warned all examinees not to engage in such prohibited behaviour, as the code hidden on each page of the question paper would make it impossible for anyone taking a picture of the paper to hide their identity.

A board official explained that the code can be deciphered from a still or video image, and since each question paper will have a distinct code, the person who took the picture can be identified.

Board president Ramanuj Ganguly said once the identity of the candidate is confirmed, they will not be allowed to continue with the entire exam, not just the particular paper.

Since 2017, fake images of English, physical science, life science, and geography papers have been circulated on social media within an hour of the exam starting. However, the board emphasised that these images did not match the original question papers.

Unlike in the past, Ganguly confirmed that internet connections near the exam centres will not be cut off this time, as they have implemented a thorough vigilance mechanism.

Approximately 8,76,113 candidates are expected to write their papers in 2,675 centres across the state. The exams will conclude on February 12.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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