CBSE Class 12 Students in Nagpur Allege Discrepancies in OSM Evaluation
Nagpur CBSE Students Allege OSM Evaluation Discrepancies

Nagpur: Several CBSE Class 12 students and their parents in Nagpur have expressed serious concerns regarding this year's board evaluation process. They allege discrepancies in marks after answer sheets were assessed under the On Screen Marking (OSM) pattern instead of the traditional spot-evaluation method. Students claim that the new system has led to missed answers, unchecked diagrams, and unexpectedly low scores across multiple subjects, soon after results were declared this week.

Student Experiences and Allegations

A student told TOI that she was shocked after receiving a compartment in Chemistry despite scoring well in her other subjects. "I was confident about my paper and did not expect a compartment at all. My marks in the remaining subjects are good, which made the result even more surprising," she said. Another student, who consistently topped in Economics during school examinations, said she expected to score above 95 but eventually scored in the 80s. "Most of the subjects in which I had graphs or diagram-based answers showed unexpectedly low marks. It feels like some portions may not have been evaluated properly," she alleged.

Pattern Observed Across Schools

Students further claimed that the trend was visible across several schools, with high-performing candidates scoring significantly lower than expected while average students fared comparatively better. "A few toppers ended up scoring less than students who usually performed average in internal examinations. That has raised doubts among many students regarding the evaluation process," another student said.

Wide Pickt banner — collaborative shopping lists app for Telegram, phone mockup with grocery list

Parents Demand Transparency

Parents too questioned the OSM system and demanded greater transparency. Pravin Dalvi, relative of a student, alleged that the scanning-based evaluation may have failed to capture portions written outside designated margins. "If any content in the margins or entire pages were left out, students would lose marks over nothing," he said, demanding re-evaluation.

Next Steps for Students

Many students are now planning to apply for verification of marks and photocopies of answer sheets. They hope that a thorough review will rectify any errors and ensure fair assessment. The CBSE board has yet to respond to these allegations, but students and parents are urging for immediate action to address their concerns.

Pickt after-article banner — collaborative shopping lists app with family illustration