Key Points

The Tamil Nadu School Education Department has launched an innovative daily practice program targeting government school students in Chennai. By providing consistent one and two-mark practice questions, the initiative aims to boost exam readiness and learning outcomes. Monthly assessments will help identify and support students who need additional help, with a specific focus on schools with lower pass percentages. Despite criticism from educationists about a marks-driven approach, the government remains committed to improving academic standards.

Key Points: TN Schools Launch Daily Practice to Boost Class 10 and 12 Scores

  • Daily one and two-mark questions designed to reinforce subject knowledge
  • Monthly assessments will identify and support slow learners
  • Block-wise analysis to target underperforming schools
  • Initiative aims to improve Chennai's board exam rankings
2 min read

TN launches daily practice sessions for Class 10, Class 12 students in low performing schools

Tamil Nadu education department introduces daily practice questions to improve government school students' exam performance and learning outcomes

"Headmasters have been tasked with ensuring students engage with practice questions regularly - Education Department Official"

Chennai, June 4

To improve pass percentages in Class 10 and 12 public examinations, the Tamil Nadu School Education Department has rolled out a new initiative to provide daily practice questions to students in government schools across Chennai.

As part of the plan, students will be given one-mark and two-mark questions every day to help reinforce subject knowledge and develop exam readiness.

Senior education department officials said a panel of top educators will prepare the questions, which will be distributed to schools for daily sessions.

“Headmasters and assistant headmasters have been tasked with ensuring that students engage with these practice questions regularly. The goal is to develop consistent study habits and improve familiarity with the syllabus,” said a senior official from the department.

To complement this effort, monthly assessments will be conducted to identify “slow learners”. Those students will then receive focused remedial training to help close learning gaps.

In addition, the department will pay special attention to schools that recorded lower pass percentages in the most recent board exams. “A block-wise analysis will be carried out to identify underperforming schools,” said Pugalendhi, a senior official involved in the initiative.

“Headmasters and assistant headmasters of such schools will receive counselling and guidance on how to improve student outcomes. These measures will be implemented with urgency over the next two to four months,” he said.

The intervention follows disappointing performances by Chennai’s government schools in this year’s board results. The city ranked 37th in the SSLC (Class 10) examinations with a pass percentage of 82.84, and 35th in the Higher Secondary (Class XII) results with 87.86.

However, the initiative has drawn criticism from educationists who warn against a purely marks-driven strategy. Prince Gajendra Babu, general secretary of the State Platform for Common School System, said the approach mimics the private school model without addressing deeper educational needs.

“Prioritising marks over meaningful learning sends the wrong message,” he said. “Students should be encouraged to understand the purpose of education. Once that is achieved, improved results will naturally follow. The focus should first be on strengthening infrastructure and ensuring government schools offer facilities on par with private institutions,” he said.

Despite the criticism, the government plans to aggressively pursue the strategy in the coming months to bridge academic gaps and raise overall learning standards in state-run schools.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

K
Karthik R.
This is a much-needed initiative! As someone who studied in a Chennai govt school, I know how students struggle with exam patterns. Daily practice will build confidence 👍 Hope they also focus on English medium schools where pass percentages are often lower.
P
Priya M.
Good step but will it reach rural areas properly? My cousin teaches in a village school near Madurai - they don't even have proper blackboards. First fix basic infrastructure, then talk about daily questions. Otherwise this will just be another file in the education department.
R
Rajesh K.
Why only focus on marks? In my daughter's private school, they have labs, sports, and personality development. Government school students deserve equal opportunities, not just exam drills. This seems like a shortcut solution without addressing real quality issues.
S
Sangeetha V.
As a teacher, I welcome this! Students need structured practice. But please train teachers too - many of us struggle with new teaching methods. And increase salaries so good teachers stay in government schools �
A
Arjun S.
Finally some action! But 2-4 months is too short to see results. This should be continuous for at least 2 years. Also, what about students who work part-time? Many govt school children have family responsibilities. Need flexible timings for remedial classes.
M
Meena L.
Good initiative but where are the digital tools? In this age, students should get mobile apps with practice questions. Many have smartphones even in poor families. Government should partner with edtech startups for better reach.

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