Sun, 17 May 2026
Education News Updated May 17, 2026 · 15:26

CBSE Class 12 Results: Education Ministry Rules Out Marking Errors in Digital Evaluation

The Education Ministry has ruled out any marking errors in CBSE Class 12 exams, attributing the process to the digital On-Screen Marking system. Secretary Sanjay Kumar addressed student concerns over declining pass percentages and alleged errors. He explained that 98 lakh answer sheets were scanned with three-level security, ensuring accuracy. Only 13,000 illegible sheets required manual checking, and the system has eliminated totalling mistakes.

"Special attention given to security level...": Education Ministry official says no scope for marking errors in Class 12 exam paper

New Delhi, May 17

Amid students expressing concern over errors in checking of the answers of the Class 12 examination this year, a Ministry of Education official on Sunday said that the digital marking process was not new for the CBSE.

Addressing a press conference in the national capital, Secretary, Department of School Education and Literacy, Sanjay Kumar said that special attention has been given to checking the Class 12th exam answer sheets, underlining that there was no scope for marking errors.

Kumar highlighted that several students have concerns regarding the marking or totalling and highlighted that the answer sheets were checked using the digital On-Screen Marking (OSM) system.

"As you are aware, the Class 12 results recently declared by the CBSE were marked using an On-Screen Marking (OSM) system this time. Following this, certain concerns have been raised--specifically, students feel that the overall pass percentage has declined. Indeed, the pass percentage has dropped by 3 per cent compared to the previous year, falling from 88 per cent to 85 per cent. Some students feel that they should have received higher marks than those actually awarded to them," he said.

First introduced in 2014, the OSM system is not a brand-new concept. However, it was deemed unfeasible to continue at that time due to technical limitations, but it has been reintroduced this year.

"I would like to emphasise that On-Screen Marking is neither a novel concept nor is this the first time it has been implemented. The CBSE first initiated the OSM system in 2014; however, at that time, due to technical infrastructure limitations, it was deemed unfeasible to continue the process immediately. We have successfully reintroduced it this year," he said.

Kumar said that the answer sheets were scanned to make their PDF copies, underlining that a three-level security was maintained during the scanning.

"This time, when the 12th class exams were conducted, the answer sheets were scanned, and their PDF copies were made. The total number of answer sheets of 98 lakh students who took the examination was scanned, and three levels of security were also maintained in scanning. One advantage of this has been that the mistakes that sometimes used to happen in totalling have been completely eliminated. This decision was taken, and teachers were trained in this," he stressed.

He further added that around 13,000 answer sheets were not decipherable due to the very light colour of the ink during the scan. The same copies were checked by the teachers manually.

"Ultimately, it was also found that in the end, we had about 13,000 such answer sheets, which we found that no matter how many times we scanned them, there was some illegibility in them because the ink used was of very light colour, so after scanning, we were not able to make that legible. The teachers were told that the 13,000 answer sheets were taken out and checked manually, and after checking manually, the marks obtained on those were introduced by us," he said.

He reiterated, "I would like to say that special attention has been given to the security level and the issues, so that the marking done through on-screen marking is accurate."

— ANI

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Reader Comments

K
Kavya N
Pass percentage dropping from 88% to 85% is a big deal for many families. I understand the official's point about digital marking, but students are genuinely upset. We need transparency—maybe sample re-verification by independent panels could restore trust.
R
Rohit P
Three-level security for scanning is good, but why didn't they test the system on a smaller scale first? 98 lakh students affected! And 13,000 manual checks? That's still a lot. Hope CBSE considers feedback from students and teachers before next exams.
S
Sneha F
Digital marking is the future, but we can't ignore human errors in scanning. My nephew's marks dropped by 12 points compared to his expectations. He says his answers were correct. The official says "no scope for errors," but students feel otherwise. 🤔
A
Arjun K
I appreciate the effort to digitize, but the 3% drop is worrying. Maybe students need clearer marking schemes from the start. Also, OSM was tried in 2014 and abandoned—hope lessons from that are applied now. Let's support our students!

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