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The petition has been moved by the associations of unaided private schools against the order passed by a division bench of the Karnataka High Court on March 15. Karnataka High Court’s March 15 order had allowed the holding of the board exams by staying an order of the single bench of the HC which had quashed the State Government circulars prescribing the board exams for Class 5 and Class 8.
The petitioners have argued that changing the assessment method by conducting State-level ‘board exams’ instead of school-level assessments will adversely impact the students and the teachers. Further, they have contended that no discussions with the stakeholders, parents, children, or schools had been undertaken before issuing the circulars.
However, the state government has argued that there is no Board examination. There is only a minor change in the process of assessing children and 80 percent of the total 100 marks being given to students is based on the continuous internal assessment made by the respective schools from the beginning of the academic year. It is only for the remaining 20 percent marks for the final assessment process that question papers are prepared at the state level and evaluation of the paper is done at taluk and block levels.
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The single-bench decision was stayed by a division bench on March 15, with a caveat that the results will be subject to the outcome of the matter. Further, the division bench of Justice G Narendar and Justice Ashok S Kinagi directed that state government shall ensure that no questions are framed from subjects that are outside the prescribed syllabus and the results shall be communicated to school and not put out in public and would be subject to the final decision in the appeal.