CBSE Class 12 Topper Anamika Chauhan Dreams of Becoming a Judge

Anamika Chauhan, a student from Mainpuri, Uttar Pradesh, topped her district in the CBSE Class 12 exams with 99% marks in the humanities stream. She aspires to become a judge and credits her success to her parents, teachers, and principal. Chauhan advises other students to limit mobile phone use and focus on studies for success. The overall CBSE Class 12 pass percentage this year dropped to 85.20%, with girls outperforming boys.

Key Points: CBSE Class 12 Topper Anamika Chauhan Aims to Be Judge

  • Anamika Chauhan tops Mainpuri district with 99% in humanities
  • She aims to become a judge
  • Credits parents, teachers, and principal for support
  • Advises students to limit mobile phone use and focus on studies
2 min read

Want to become a judge, says CBSE Class 12 Manipuri district topper

Anamika Chauhan, Mainpuri district topper in CBSE Class 12, scores 99% and aspires to become a judge. She credits parents and teachers.

"I aspire to become a judge. - Anamika Chauhan"

Mainpuri, May 13

Anamika Chauhan, who emerged as the district topper of Uttar Pradesh's Mainpuri in the Central Board of Secondary Education's class 12 board exam, on Wednesday said that she aspires to become a judge.

The CBSE class 12 board exam results were declared on Wednesday, recording an overall passing percentage of 85.20 per cent.

A student of Balaji Global school in Mainpuri and the daughter of an advocate, Chauhan topped with 99 per cent in the humanities stream.

"I would like to give the credit for this success to my parents, teacher and principal sir. They guided me so well, due to which I could score 99 per cent," Chauhan told IANS.

She mentioned that her teachers urged the students to solve sample papers after completion of the syllabus.

"I solved sample papers both at home and at school. My parents and principal sir also supported me a lot."

Chauhan said that apart from school hours, she devoted four to five hours to her studies in a day.

"I aspire to become a judge," she said.

In a message to other students, she urged them to strictly restrict the use of mobile phones and focus on studies.

"Studies are the only thing that will take you ahead in life," she asserted.

Her father said: "I am a lawyer by profession and honestly, I don't have much contribution in teaching her. All the credit goes to her mother and teacher, especially her mentor, who has taught her since kindergarten."

A key highlight of this year's CBSE class 12 results is the sharp drop in the passing percentage of students, as compared to last year.

According to estimates, the passing percentage of the current academic session stands at 85.20 per cent, sliding 3.19 per cent from 88.39% last year, thereby bringing the spotlight on the reasons behind the alarming decline.

The Class 12 results also show girls surpassing boys, both in terms of passing percentage and stellar performance.

According to the board results, the pass percentage for girls stood at 88.86 per cent, while for boys, it was recorded at 82.13 per cent, giving a lead of 6.73 per cent over boys.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
It's good to see students from smaller towns shine. But I wish the article discussed the sharp drop in pass percentage more – 85% is alarming compared to last year. Are our schools falling behind? Anamika's success is individual brilliance, but systemic issues remain.
V
Vikram M
She studied only 4-5 hours daily and still scored 99%? That's discipline! Many students study 10 hours but lack focus. Her advice about limiting mobile phone use is spot on for today's generation. We need more role models like her in UP.
S
Sneha F
बहुत खूब! (Very good!) A girl from Mainpuri dreaming of becoming a judge – that's the India we want to see. Her parents and teachers deserve equal credit. Just one thought: I hope the legal profession becomes more accessible for women from small towns. The judiciary needs diverse voices.
J
James A
Impressive performance! The humanities stream often gets less attention compared to science, but Anamika proves its value. Law is a noble career choice. I hope her journey inspires other students who feel pressured to only pursue engineering or medicine.
R
Rohit L
Congratulations to her! But I'm concerned about the overall decline in pass percentage. Is it because of tougher exams or poor teaching? Also, girls outperforming boys again – shows the gender gap in education is narrowing, but boys need more support too.

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