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CBSE's On-Screen Marking System Faces Scrutiny Over Errors and Glitches

Created at 11 Jun · 3:26 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

CBSE's new digital On-Screen Marking (OSM) system for Class 12 exams has faced criticism due to technical issues, blurred scans, and alleged result discrepancies. Teachers reported insufficient training time, while students questioned the vendor's past controversies and the accuracy of digital evaluations.

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Key Numbers

40 crorepages scanned by CBSE
30,000pages with quality issues
0.01%pages with quality issues
68,018answer scripts requiring re-scanning
13,583scripts undergoing manual evaluation after re-scanning
1 lakhpenalty for vendor downtime (per 15 minutes)
4 lakhstudents applying for scanned copies
23%candidates applying for scanned copies
6.3 lakhre-evaluation requests processed
20 lakhanswer scripts evaluated by VTU
3 lakhstudents evaluated by VTU
193colleges under VTU

Who's Involved

CBSE
Central Board of Secondary Education, introduced On-Screen Marking system
Manash Pratim Gohain
Times of India reporter
COEMPT Eduteck
Company appointed for evaluation, faced past controversies
Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU)
University that previously implemented on-screen evaluation

↳ Why This Matters

The widespread issues with CBSE's new On-Screen Marking system highlight the significant challenges in digitizing large-scale examination processes, impacting student results and trust in educational assessment systems.

Key facts

  • CBSE implemented On-Screen Marking (OSM) for Class 12 exams to digitize the evaluation process.
  • Teachers reported insufficient training and faced challenges with digital assessment of handwritten scripts.
  • Students alleged result discrepancies, citing issues like blurred scans, missing pages, and unchecked answers.
  • CBSE stated that a small percentage of scanned pages had quality issues and initiated re-scanning.
  • The board enhanced data security and imposed penalties on vendors for system downtime.
  • Over 4 lakh students requested scanned copies of their answer books, and 6.3 lakh re-evaluation requests were processed.

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) introduced On-Screen Marking (OSM) for its Class 12 examinations this year, aiming to modernize the evaluation process through a digital platform. The system was designed to reduce human errors, enhance transparency, and securely store answer scripts for potential re-evaluation.

However, the rollout, which occurred just a week before the examinations, faced immediate criticism from teachers who felt unprepared for the new digital system. This was followed by widespread allegations of result discrepancies, technical glitches, portal crashes, and concerns regarding data privacy. The selection of COEMPT Eduteck as a vendor, a company reportedly involved in evaluation-related controversies in other states, also drew scrutiny.

CBSE reported that approximately 40 crore pages were scanned, with about 30,000 pages (0.01%) presenting quality issues such as blurred scans, missing pages, or unreadable content. Teachers also reported difficulties in assessing handwritten responses and diagrams digitally, along with eye strain from prolonged screen use and portal performance issues.

Despite the system's design to automatically total scores and prevent missed answers, some students claimed discrepancies in their marks, including lower-than-expected scores and unchecked answers. CBSE has not released a technical audit report detailing system-wide causes for these issues.

In response, CBSE stated that 68,018 answer scripts required re-scanning, and 13,583 of those underwent manual evaluation after repeated scanning failures. To bolster security and prevent disruptions, the board transferred all scanned data to its own servers and implemented strict service-level agreements with vendors, including penalties for downtime. Examiner sessions were also monitored.

The digital platform allowed students to access scanned copies of their evaluated answer scripts, with over 4 lakh students applying for these copies and approximately 6.3 lakh re-evaluation requests being processed.

While CBSE described itself as the first national examination body to adopt OSM, the technology had been implemented by Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU) in Karnataka two years prior for its undergraduate examinations. OSM has previously been adopted by various technical and health-science universities to manage large volumes of answer scripts and expedite result declarations.

Frequently asked questions

OSM is CBSE's digital evaluation system that replaces traditional paper-based marking with the digital assessment of scanned answer scripts.

Problems included blurred or missing scans, technical glitches, portal crashes, difficulties for evaluators, and alleged discrepancies in student marks.

CBSE re-scanned thousands of answer scripts, transferred data to its own servers, and imposed penalties on vendors for downtime.

Yes, Visvesvaraya Technological University (VTU) in Karnataka implemented on-screen evaluation two years before CBSE, and other technical and health-science universities have also used it.

What Happens Next

01CBSE will continue to process re-evaluation requests.
02Further scrutiny may occur regarding vendor selection and system implementation.

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Cadence

How It Developed

CBSE introduced On-Screen Marking (OSM) for Class 12 board examinations to modernise evaluation.
Teachers criticized the system, citing insufficient time to learn the new digital process.
Allegations of result discrepancies, technical glitches, and portal crashes emerged.
Concerns were raised about the appointment of COEMPT Eduteck due to past controversies.
Students reported issues such as blurred scans, missing pages, and unchecked answers.
CBSE stated that approximately 0.01% of scanned pages had quality issues.
The board initiated re-scanning for over 68,000 answer scripts.
CBSE transferred data to its own servers and imposed penalties on vendors for downtime.

Sources

T1
What’s on-screen marking, and where did CBSE go wrong?The Economic Times

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