Tamil Nadu Class 12 Board Exams Begin: Over 8.27 Lakh Students Appear

The Tamil Nadu Higher Secondary public examinations for the 2025-26 academic year commenced on March 2, with over 8.27 lakh candidates registered to appear. The exams are being conducted across 3,412 centers with extensive security, including over 4,900 flying squads to prevent malpractice. Notably, 281 inmates from prisons across the state are also appearing, highlighting efforts towards educational access and rehabilitation. In Chennai district alone, over 64,000 school students and 3,000 private candidates are taking the exams at 250 centers.

Key Points: TN Class 12 Board Exams 2025: 8.27 Lakh Students Appear

  • 8.27 lakh total candidates
  • Exams from March 2-26
  • 3,412 exam centers statewide
  • Over 49,000 invigilators deployed
2 min read

Over 8.27 lakh students to appear for TN Class 12 board exams from today

Over 8.27 lakh students begin Tamil Nadu Class 12 board exams from March 2. Exams to be held at 3,412 centers with strict anti-malpractice measures.

"All precautionary measures are in place to conduct the examinations smoothly and fairly across Tamil Nadu. - Officials"

Chennai, March 2

The Tamil Nadu Directorate of Government Examinations has announced that the Higher Secondary public examinations for the academic year 2025-26 will be held from March 2 to March 26, while the SSLC examinations will take place from March 11 to April 6 across the state.

A total of 8,27,475 candidates will appear for the Class 12 board examinations beginning Monday. This includes 7,99,692 regular school students and 27,783 private candidates.

The examinations will be conducted at 3,412 centres statewide under elaborate security and monitoring arrangements. In line with recommendations under the State Education Policy, the government has discontinued the Class 11 public examination system. However, re-examinations for students who had not cleared the earlier Class 11 public exams will be conducted from March 3 to March 27 at 2,615 centres.

As many as 25,051 candidates -- including 19,107 school students and 5,944 private candidates -- will write the arrear examinations. Notably, 281 inmates lodged in prisons across Tamil Nadu will also be appearing for the Higher Secondary public examinations this year, reflecting the state's continued emphasis on educational access and rehabilitation.

To ensure the smooth conduct of examinations, more than 49,000 teachers will be deployed daily as room invigilators across centres. In addition, over 4,900 flying squads have been constituted to prevent malpractice and maintain transparency in the examination process.

In Chennai district alone, 64,359 students from 578 Higher Secondary schools -- comprising 30,663 boys and 33,696 girls -- will appear for the Class 12 examinations at 250 centres. Additionally, 3,157 private candidates will write their exams in the district.

Extensive logistical arrangements have been put in place in Chennai to ensure secure handling of question papers and answer scripts.

Five question paper storage depots, five answer script collection centres and 65 distribution routes have been established. Around 6,150 personnel, including 250 chief invigilators, 250 departmental officers, 550 flying and stationary squad members, 4,100 room invigilators, scribes and 1,000 non-teaching staff, have been deployed for examination duties in the district.

Officials stated that all precautionary measures are in place to conduct the examinations smoothly and fairly across Tamil Nadu.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good to see the focus on access - 281 inmates also getting a chance to write the exam is a positive step for rehabilitation. Education truly is a great equalizer.
A
Arjun K
That's a massive number of students! Over 8 lakh. The logistical challenge must be enormous. Kudos to the 49,000+ teachers and staff managing this. Hope the paper distribution is smooth.
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Sarah B
While the scale is impressive, I hope the focus isn't just on preventing cheating but also on reducing the immense stress these exams cause. The pressure on 12th standard students in India is unreal.
V
Vikram M
Discontinuing the Class 11 public exam is a sensible move under the new policy. It should allow students to focus better on the crucial Class 12 boards. Best of luck to all candidates!
K
Karthik V
Seeing the detailed breakdown for Chennai district shows how micro-managed the process is. 64,359 students, 578 schools, 250 centres... it's a well-oiled machine. Hope the re-exam candidates also get a fair shot.

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