English, asked by bidiptobose4724, 9 months ago

Write a letter to the editor for a student's auxities haver ends after clearing the board examinations of 12there is certainly of getting a admission in college and a course of one's choice the cutoff percent in a good colleges rises every year there are there hardly any openings for average students

Answers

Answered by itzJitesh
2

Answer:

Anushka Dey, 18, did everything right. She didn't watch television, didn't hang out with her friends, studied for four hours every day and scored 95 per cent in her Class XII Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) exams. From Kolkata, Dey hoped her stellar marks would land her at one of the top colleges in Delhi University. But the stratospherically high first cut-off list at the Shri Ram College of Commerce (SRCC) at 96.75 per cent left her stranded. Dey will now move to St Xavier's College, Mumbai, to pursue the course of her choice, Economics. She's not the only one who thinks it's the end of the world. Delhi toppers Urmi Uppal and Vishal Dewan both scored 97.6 per cent but were unable to get into the course and college of their choice. Kapil Sibal, Union Human Resource Development (HRD) Minister, has called the impossible cut offs irrational and Vineet Joshi, chairman of the premier national examination body, CBSE, has admitted that Class XII scores are not the correct marker for selection for higher education.

Marks have been inflated, even as testing standards have been simplified. If you are 17 and can find an error with a sentence such as, "We were late and it is getting dark" or "Now we both was running", or write a hypothetical dialogue when clues and even an example is given, you will probably do well in a Class XII CBSE English exam. In the history paper, you can score an easy 25 marks in a section called sourcebased questions, where answers are based on short extracts given. Understandably, the percentage of students scoring above 90 per cent in CBSE has gone up by 162.5 per cent from 16,563 to 21,665 between 2008 and 2011. And even more stunningly, the number of students scoring above 95 per cent has gone up from 1,202 to 2,097 in the same period.

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