CBSE students report higher marks after re-evaluation


CBSE Students Report Higher Marks After Re-evaluation

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Board Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE)
Established 1962 (under CBSE Act / Societies Registration Act)
Parent Ministry Ministry of Education, Government of India
System introduced On-Screen Marking (OSM), Class 12, academic year 2026-27
OSM vendor Coempt Eduteck (private company)
Result date (Class 12, 2026) 13 May 2026
Pass % 2026 85.2%
Pass % 2025 88.39%
Decline ~3.19 percentage points
Re-evaluation applicants >1,60,000 (1.6 lakh)
Re-evaluation results released 22 June 2026 (~1.39 lakh candidates)
Revised re-evaluation fee ₹100 per answer script (reduced post-controversy)
Officials removed CBSE Chairman Rahul Singh; Secretary Himanshu Gupta
Security agency alerted CERT-In (Indian Computer Emergency Response Team)
Re-evaluation portal relaunch 2 June 2026

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Administrative

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Ethical / Governance

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. CBSE was established under the CBSE Act, 1962; it is a registered society under the Ministry of Education.
  2. On-Screen Marking (OSM) was introduced by CBSE for Class 12 examinations in the academic year 2026-27.
  3. The OSM system vendor was Coempt Eduteck, a private company.
  4. CBSE Class 12 pass percentage fell from 88.39% (2025) to 85.2% (2026) — a drop of ~3.19 percentage points.
  5. Class 12 results 2026 were declared on 13 May 2026.
  6. Over 1.6 lakh candidates applied for re-evaluation of Class 12 answer scripts in 2026.
  7. Re-evaluation results for approximately 1.39 lakh candidates were released on 22 June 2026.
  8. Re-evaluation fee was reduced to ₹100 per answer script after student protests.
  9. The re-evaluation portal was relaunched on 2 June 2026.
  10. Security vulnerabilities in the OSM portal were reported to CERT-In (under IT Act, 2000, Section 70B) by ethical hacker Nisarga Adhikary in February 2026.
  11. CBSE Chairman Rahul Singh and Secretary Himanshu Gupta were removed following Ministry of Education review.
  12. Reported OSM issues included: blurred scans, missing pages, missing maps/graphs, and wrong marking scheme applied to wrong question set.
  13. CERT-In (Indian Computer Emergency Response Team) is the nodal agency for cybersecurity incidents in India, established under Section 70B of the IT Act, 2000.
  14. OSM answer sheets are accessed by students via the DigiLocker portal. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: Governance, transparency, accountability; education policy; role of regulatory bodies. - GS-IV: Ethics in public administration; accountability of public officials; whistleblower protection.

Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Education"; "Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability." - GS-IV: "Probity in Governance"; "Corporate governance."

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "The CBSE on-screen marking controversy of 2026 highlights the risks of hasty digitisation of public examination systems. Critically examine the governance failures and suggest systemic reforms." (GS-II, 250 words) 2. "Discuss the legal and ethical obligations of public examination boards when third-party technology vendors are entrusted with sensitive student data and evaluation infrastructure." (GS-IV, 150 words) 3. "The role of CERT-In in addressing cyber vulnerabilities in government-contracted digital systems has come under scrutiny. Evaluate its mandate, powers, and limitations under the IT Act, 2000." (GS-II/GS-III, 250 words)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 Framework driving digitisation and reform of school assessment systems
CERT-In & Cybersecurity Framework (IT Act, 2000) Directly implicated in the OSM security breach response
Right to Education Act (RTE), 2009 Statutory basis for equitable education; relevant to fairness in assessment
National Testing Agency (NTA) controversies (NEET 2024) Parallel case of examination administration failure; same governance dimension
DigiLocker & MeitY digital public infrastructure Platform used for OSM result dissemination; raises data privacy questions
Public Procurement Policy in India (GFR 2017) Coempt Eduteck contract raises procurement due diligence questions
Whistleblower Protection Act, 2014 Relevant to ethical hacker's vulnerability disclosure and official non-response
Article 14 & Article 21 — Fundamental Rights in Education Constitutional basis for challenging arbitrary/unfair examination practices

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: CBSE is under the Ministry of Education — not the Ministry of Skill Development or Ministry of Human Resource Development (HRD Ministry was renamed in 2020).
  2. OSM ≠ Online Exam: OSM involves scanning physical answer books and evaluating them digitally — students still write on paper; this is NOT a computer-based test.
  3. Confusing CBSE with NTA: NTA (National Testing Agency) conducts entrance exams (NEET, JEE); CBSE conducts Class 10 and 12 board examinations — both are under MoE but are separate bodies.
  4. CERT-In powers: CERT-In can direct organisations to report incidents but cannot compel vendors to patch vulnerabilities on a fixed timeline — a common misconception about its enforcement powers.
  5. Re-evaluation vs. Verification of Marks: "Verification of marks" checks totalling/transfer errors; re-evaluation involves fresh marking of answer scripts — these are distinct processes with different fee structures and timelines.

11. Sources