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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education set to adopt semester system in 11th and 12th grades

WBBSE, however, has no plans to switch over to the semester system for classes 9 and 10, clarifies president Ramanuj Ganguly

PTI Calcutta Published 10.08.23, 07:06 PM
West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education headquarters.

West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education headquarters. File Photo

The West Bengal Council of Higher Secondary Education (WBCHSE) is planning to introduce the semester system in classes 11 and 12 from the 2024-25 academic session, officials said.

WBCHSE president Chiranjib Bhattacharya told PTI on Thursday that the council has drafted a proposal and submitted it to the government.

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The new state education policy, the draft of which was announced after the recent cabinet meeting, suggested having semester-based education at the higher secondary level besides splitting the exam into two phases.

"We have submitted a proposal to the government already. It aims at bringing the two-year exam system under the four-semester module, conducting two board exams after the third and fourth semesters and holding the third semester exam in multiple-choice question (MCQ) mode," he said.

West Bengal Board of Secondary Education, however, has no plans to switch over to the semester system for classes 9 and 10, WBBSE president Ramanuj Ganguly told PTI.

"As things stand now, the existing system of conducting madhyamilk (secondary examination) will continue. We don't have any intention to introduce the semester system till the tenth standard," he stressed.

The draft policy, made by an "empowered committee specific to the state of West Bengal," had accepted the recommendation which suggested retaining the existing 4+4+2+2 structure.

As per the 4+4+2 formula, a student will spend four years in foundation, another four years in upper primary (preparatory stage), two years (classes 9 and 10) in secondary. The draft policy suggested two years at the higher secondary level to be entirely semester-based.

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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