Haryana board requires most ‘recall’, UP board most ‘understanding’: NCERT PARAKH on state board questions
Atul Krishna | July 29, 2024 | 09:41 PM IST | 3 mins read
NCERT PARAKH’s analysis of private and state board question papers compares difficult levels – easy, medium or hard – and whether questions require rote learning.
Get the updated HBSE Class 12 Syllabus 2025-26 with subject-wise topics and marking scheme to plan your preparation and score better in board exams.
Download EBookNEW DELHI : The question papers set by the Board of School Education Haryana, Bhiwani (HBSE or BSEH) requires the most “recall” of information – essentially, rote learning – and the ones set by the Uttar Pradesh Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad (UPMSP or UP board) require the most “understanding”, according to analysis of question papers by PARAKH, a unit of the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT).
New: HBSE Class 12 Syllabus 2025-26
Latest: HBSE Class 12 Sample Papers
Also See: Aakash iACST Scholarship Test. Get Instant Scholarship
After 10+2: 50+ Entrance Exams | Best Courses
For the analysis, the Performance Assessment, Review, and Analysis of Knowledge for Holistic Development (PARAKH) compared the question papers set across 32 state boards and drew up a comparison of the weightages to questions of three difficulty levels – easy, medium and hard – in some of them.
The analysis found that the Chhattisgarh Board of Secondary Education (CGBSE) had assigned the most marks to easier questions (47.62%) and the Tripura Board of Secondary Education to ‘hard’ questions (66.67%).
However, the Chhattisgarh Board had one of the highest percentage of difficult questions with 44.44% and very few medium-difficulty ones.
In the draft report, Establishing Equivalence Across Education Boards, made public on July 29, suggested limiting the weightage of the Class 12 public exam to 40% in the final board result and assigning the remaining 60% to Classes 9-11.
Question Papers Compared: Easy, medium, hard
The NCERT PARAKH analysis shows that the Board of Secondary Education Odisha and the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE) had assigned the largest weightage to easy questions after the Chhattisgarh board, with 40% and 38.39%, respectively.
5 Boards: % weightage to ‘easy’ questions
|
Board |
% easy questions |
|
Chhattisgarh Board of Secondary Education |
47.62 |
|
Board of Secondary Education Odisha |
40 |
|
CISCE |
38.39 |
|
Himachal Pradesh Board of School Education |
34.38 |
|
Tripura Board of Secondary Education |
33.33 |
In question papers set by the Board of School Education Uttarakhand (UBSE Ramnagar), medium difficulty questions carried as much as 97.44% of the marks, implying that a very small part of the paper - under 3% - was easy. Gujarat Board (86.27%) and Kerala board (73.08%) question papers assigned the second and third highest weightage to medium-difficulty questions.
5 State Boards: % weightage to ‘medium’ questions
|
Board |
% medium questions |
|
Uttarakhand Board of Secondary Education |
97.44 |
|
Gujarat Board of Secondary Education |
86.27 |
|
Kerala Board of Public Examination |
73.08 |
|
Punjab School Education Board |
67.09 |
|
Nagaland Board of Secondary Education |
59.2 |
Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education, or MSBSHSE , (53.57%) and the Goa Board of Secondary Education (44.66%) were the other states with the largest percentage of hard questions.
5 State Boards: % weightage to ‘hard’ questions
|
Board |
% hard questions |
|
Tripura Board of Secondary Education |
66.67 |
|
Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education |
53.57 |
|
Goa Board of Secondary Education |
44.66 |
|
Chhattisgarh Board of Secondary Education |
44.44 |
|
West Bengal Board of Secondary Education |
33.33 |
Rote learning
The Board of School Education Haryana Bhiwani ( HBSE ) had the largest percentage of questions – 64.71% – requiring information recall followed by the Goa Board of Secondary Education (57.89%) and Himachal Pradesh Board of School Education (53.13%). The Board of Secondary Education Odisha also had more than 50% of questions that required information recall.
The PARAKH report recommended that questions that require recall of information should be reduced as it promotes “rote memorisation”, something that the National Education Policy (NEP 2020) aims to reduce.
The Uttar Pradesh Madhyamik Shiksha Parishad (87.76%), the Nagaland Board of Secondary Education (73.02%), and the Tripura Board of Secondary Education (61.76%) had the most questions that required “understanding” of concepts.
The Board of Secondary Education Manipur (50%), West Bengal Board of Secondary Education (45%), and the Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education (41.86%) had the highest percentage of questions that require application of ideas.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Assign 40% weightage to Class 12 exam in final result; have ‘on-demand exams’: NCERT PARAKH report
NCERT PARAKH’s draft report recommends weightage to performance in Classes 9-11 for computing final state board 12th result, creating a cadre of paper setters; 4 credits to online modules.
Atul Krishna | 3 mins readFeatured News
]- ‘Bitter experience’: DU’s 4th-year students face sudden rule changes, limited options, teacher shortage
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Private medical college sues for institute-level admissions, NRI quota expansion
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Medical college ‘confined, forced’ him to retract fee complaint, says aspirant
- MahaDBT, CAP Integration: Maharashtra students to get scholarship approvals at admission, no renewals needed
- Maharashtra: 11,000 faculty posts lie vacant; Officials say governors, finance division at fault
- BTech Courses: AI, computer science fuel enrolment boom to 5-year high, but may soon kill jobs, say experts
- Lights fade at Calcutta University’s unique Department of Applied Optics and Photonics due to staff shortage
- CBSE Board Exam 2026: Two exams for Class 10 ‘exhausting’ for teachers, cause more anxiety for students
- In poll-bound Bihar, NEP is leaving university students with endless exams, but no results or classes
- Agriculture courses in enrolment crisis: 10 Maharashtra colleges shut, over half seats vacant in 44 institutes