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Worried By Rising COVID Cases, Students Use Memes to Seek Postponement of CBSE Exams

Ismat Ara
Apr 13, 2021
As per the date sheet for CBSE board exams 2021, the class 10 exams are scheduled between May 4 and June 7 and the class 12 exams, between May 4 and June 15.

New Delhi: Panic has been a byproduct of the lack of sufficient medical facilities for patients as the number of COVID-19 patients rise steeply in the country. Amidst this, students and even politicians have been demanding cancellation of the CBSE class 10 and 12 board examinations. 

As per the date sheet for the CBSE board exams 2021, the class 10 exams are scheduled between May 4 and June 7 and the class 12 exams are scheduled between May 4 and June 15.

CBSE, however, has assured the students that all necessary precautions will be taken during the exams to ensure safety. Dr Sanyam Bhardwaj, CBSE’s controller of exam, recently advised students to continue their preparation and not believe rumours, which is indicative of the fact that CBSE has not yet considered postponing the exams. However, students are not convinced.

Protesting students have taken to the internet to explain why the exams must be either conducted online or postponed in the wake of the second wave of coronavirus. Some of the hashtags being used by students are #CancelBoardExams2021, #PahlJaanPhirExams (Life over exams) and #Justiceforstudents.

Maharashtra education minister Varsha Gaikwad on Monday announced the postponement of SSC (class 10) and HSC (class 12) exams conducted by the state board. Gaikwad, on her official Twitter handle, also said the government will write to CBSE, ICSE and other boards to reconsider their exam dates as well.

A meme fest

CBSE students, demanding postponement, took to Twitter and posted memes to explain their predicament. Here are some examples:

 

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi in a tweet said that CBSE must reconsider its decision to conduct exams amid the second wave of the coronavirus. “In the light of the devastating Corona second wave, conducting #CBSE exams must be reconsidered. All stakeholders must be consulted before making sweeping decisions. On how many counts does GOI intend to play with the future of India’s youth?” he wrote.

 

Earlier, Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra had also written a letter to education minister Ramesh Pokhriyal to reconsider board exam dates amid a rising number of COVID cases. 

 

Vadra added that lakhs of students and parents were anxious about what would happen if they got together in exam centres for the CBSE board exam during the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. She said that apart from the students, the teachers, invigilators and parents who will come in contact with the students would also be at risk.

Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal has also requested the Centre to consider cancelling the CBSE board exams 2021 for classes 10 and 12. “Six lakh children in Delhi are going to write CBSE exams. Nearly one lakh teachers will be a part of it. These can become major hotspots leading to the large-scale spreading of Corona. Children’s lives and health is very important to us. I request Centre to cancel CBSE exams,” Kejriwal said.

Also read: What Changed and What Didn’t in One Year of a Pandemic and Lockdown

Not all fun and memes

However, not all students are using funny memes to express their fear and insecurities related to the board exams. Some are also posting information and listicles to help their cause.

A Twitter user posted a list of reasons why the government should cancel the board exams. “Cases are rising,” is the first reason cited in the listicle. Other reasons include the cancellation of exams by countries such as Saudi Arabia and Mexico. Lack of facilities among poor students is also cited as one of the reasons.

“We are going to vote in 2024” and “We are the future generation and if there is no WE there will not be a future,” are the other reasons mentioned in the listicle.

 

Lack of safety measures for travelling to exam centre

Prerna Roy, a resident of West Bengal’s Asansol, studies in Sunabeda Public School of Koraput district of Orissa. She is currently in class 12 and preparing for her board exams scheduled for next month. But her biggest worry is travelling from West Bengal to her examination centre in Odisha. 

“It will take me at least four days to reach my exam centre by train. The usual train that I used to take would take only two days but it is currently suspended. Now we will have to change two to three trains to get there,” she told The Wire.

She lives with her mother and younger brother. “Because my father is not alive, my uncle will have to go with me to Odisha for the exams. He is 40 plus and is at risk of getting the virus. He may not agree to take me for the exam, why will he put his life at risk? I may have to leave my exams if they do not get postponed,” Roy said, crying.

“Since my mother is a housewife, I must get into college soon and start earning money so I can run the household without having to depend on others,” she added.

She also said that if the government did not raise any objection to the ill-equipped online classes being conducted for the past one year, they should move the examinations online too.

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