CBSE Class 12 Political Science Exam Analysis: ‘Barring few questions the paper was easy’ – Times of India


Latest Education news – Board Exam Results, Admit Cards, Exam Paper Analysis and Question Papers | Times of India

NEW DELHI: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) successfully conducted the Class 12th Political Science paper on March 20, 2023, across India and abroad. The paper started at 10:30 am and ended at 1:30 pm. Students were asked to report at the exam venue on or before 10 am.
The exam consists of two parts — Sections A to E, each containing questions that require students to write short answers, and essays, and analyze case studies.
In the paper, all questions were compulsory. In Section A, questions numbers 1-12 were multiple choice questions of one mark each. In Section B, questions numbers 13-18 were of two marks each. Answers to these questions were to be written under 50 words each. In Section C, questions numbers 19-23 were of four marks each. The word limit to write answers to these questions was 100 words each while in Section D, questions numbers 24-26 are passage, cartoon and map-based questions. In the last section of the paper i.e., Section E, question numbers 27-30 were of 6 marks each. Answers to these questions should not exceed 170 words. There was an internal choice in 6 marks questions.
“Overall, the difficulty level of the paper was moderate with some critical thinking questions; These were especially visible in the MCQ marker questions. Case study-based questions were scoring. Also, the Paper aligned with the sample paper shared by CBSE. Students who would have read the NCERT textbook & Additional resources thoroughly would benefit from it & had no factual errors. It was a perfect culmination & integration of analysis, application & memory-based questions. The question paper was set in a way which provoked reasoning and thoughtfulness among the Learners.,” writes Abhishek Sharma, PGT, Political Science, DPS Raj Nagar Extension
“As per the initial reaction of the students, the paper was quite easy, especially the Map questions. Time management was a must as the paper was a bit lengthy and although a few questions were tricky and required critical thinking and deep understanding of the topics. Overall, the exam is well-designed and covers a wide range of topics, including the nature of democracy, different forms of government, political parties and pressure groups, international relations, and global issues. The questions were from the syllabus, mostly similar to what the board provided in the sample papers,” Ms Bhawna Grover, PGT Political Science, MRG School.
“Political science Paper was well balanced with moderate difficulty level. Questions were direct and within the syllabus and as per the pattern of the sample paper provided by the CBSE,” said Gitanjali Sinha, PGT political science, DPS Indirapuram.




Source link

Sanjay Sharma

#CBSE #Class #Political #Science #Exam #Analysis #Barring #questions #paper #easy #Times #India

By bpci

Leave a Reply