Biology, asked by mithunsatish0703, 6 months ago

in a text tube there's a substance to absorb CO2 and worms and a narrow tube in the mouth of the test tube in which there's ink which prevents air passage. Where will the ink move aft some time and why? and name the gas in the test tube that remained same throughout the experiment.​

Answers

Answered by aaravd20
0

Answer:

The National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 initiated a new phase of development of syllabi and textbooks for all stages of school education. In this phase, a conscious effort has been made to discourage rote learning and to enhance comprehension. This is well in tune with the NPE-1986 and Learning Without Burden-1993 that recommend child centred system of education. The textbooks for Class IX were released in February, 2006 and for Class X in December, 2006. Overall the books have been well received by students and teachers. NCF-2005 notes that treating the prescribed textbooks as the sole basis of examination is one of the key reasons why other resources and sites of learning are ignored. It further reiterates that the methods used for teaching and evaluation will also determine how effective these textbooks prove for making children’s life at school a happy experience, rather than source of stress or boredom. It calls for reforms in examination system currently prevailing in the country. The position papers of the National Focus Groups on Teaching of Science, Teaching of Mathematics and Examination Reforms envisage that the question papers, set in annual examinations conducted by the various Boards do not really assess genuine understanding of the subjects. The quality of question papers is often not up to the mark. They usually seek mere information based on rote memorisation, and fail to test higher-order skills like reasoning and analysis, let alone lateral thinking, creativity and judgment. Good unconventional questions, challenging problems and experiment-based problems rarely find a place in question papers. In order to address the issue, and also to provide additional learning material, the Department of Education in Science and Mathematics (DESM) has made an attempt to develop resource book of exemplar problems in different subjects at secondary and higher-secondary stages. Each resource book contains different types of questions of varying difficulty level. Some questions would require the students to apply simultaneously understanding of more than one concept. These problems are not meant to serve merely as questions bank for examinations but are primarily meant to improve the quality of teaching/learning process in schools. It is expected that these problems would encourage teachers to design quality questions on their own. Students and teachers should always keep in mind that examination and assessment should test comprehension, information recall, analytical thinking and problem-solving ability, creativity and speculative ability. 

Explanation:

Answered by intelligentharsh9999
0

Answer:

DONT KNOW

Explanation:

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