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Online Desk
Following widespread criticism from
students and parents over holding the Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC)
examinations amid heavy rainfall and severe waterlogging, the government has
taken a policy decision to stop conducting public examinations during the
monsoon season from next year.
Abdul
Khaleque, Secretary of the Secondary and
Higher Education Division under the Ministry of Education, said that the
ministry is revising the public examination calendar under the instruction of
the Education Minister. Under the proposed schedule, SSC and equivalent examinations will be held in January, while HSC and equivalent examinations will be
conducted between March and April. The goal is to gradually restore the
public examination schedule to align with the normal academic calendar.
He said that conducting examinations
during the rainy season creates significant difficulties for students, parents,
and administrators alike. The revised calendar is intended to prevent such
challenges in the future.
Education Minister Dr. A N M Ehsanul Haque Milon also
informed Parliament that the government is working on a new examination
timetable. He said the initiative aims to restructure the academic year in line
with international standards, reduce the loss of instructional time, and
restore normal academic activities.
Bangladesh's public examination
schedule underwent major changes following the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2020 HSC examination was cancelled,
and students were awarded auto-pass.
The HSC examinations were later held in December
2021, November 2022, August 2023, and late June 2025. This year, the
examinations were initially scheduled to begin on June 7, but were postponed to July 2 following demands from students and parents, placing the
exams in the middle of the monsoon season.
Education experts say weather
conditions and disaster risks should be key considerations when determining the
national examination schedule. Professor
Mohammad Mojibur Rahman of the Institute of Education and Research at
the University of Dhaka said it is unacceptable for students to wade through
waist-deep water to reach examination centres, as such conditions undermine
equal and fair testing opportunities.
Jesmin
Taslima Banu, Convener of the Inter-Education
Board Examination Controllers' Committee, said changing the schedule of the
ongoing examinations is administratively very difficult because nearly 1.3 million candidates are
participating.
Meanwhile, Professor Syed Akhtaruzzaman, Chairman of the Dhaka Education
Board, said the examinations had originally been planned for June 7, but were postponed by nearly a
month in response to requests from students and parents, resulting in this
year's exams being held during the peak of the rainy season.