Plus Two exams begin in Kerala, SSLC exams in the afternoon
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Schools have made arrangements for implementing the COVID-19 protocols.
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Students appearing for the SSLC examination being screened at entrance at Cotton hill GHSS in Thiruvananthapuram on Thursday. | Photo Credit:
S. Mahinsha
Schools have made arrangements for implementing the COVID-19 protocols. The Plus Two higher secondary examinations for this academic year kicked-off on Thursday morning in compliance with COVID-19 protocols.
The Plus Two students are appearing for the Sociology, Anthropology, Electronic Service Technology (Old), Electronic Systems papers.
Though 4,46,471 students in all are to take the Plus Two examinations in 2004 centres, the first day’s papers will see only around 70,000 students reach 933 exam centres across the State. The Science and Commerce papers will get under way on Friday.
High focus on safety for SSLC, Plus Two exams
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Isolation rooms, PPE kits arranged; classes sanitised post-polls
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Isolation rooms, PPE kits arranged; classes sanitised post-polls The SSLC and Plus Two higher secondary examinations, which for a few lakh students brought to an end an academic year marked by education disruptions, began on Thursday in compliance with COVID-19 protocols.
The Plus Two students appeared for the Sociology, Anthropology, Electronic Service Technology (Old), Electronic Systems papers.
Though 4,46,471 students are to take the Plus Two examinations in 2,004 centres, the first day’s papers saw only around 70,000 students reach 933 exam centres across the State. The Science and Commerce papers will get under way on Friday.
Half of the seats in Kerala’s local bodies are reserved for women, while top elected posts are kept aside for women for alternate terms. The last mayor being popular leader V K Prasanth, it was the turn of a woman to hold the post. The two women leaders the CPM had projected as mayor candidates both lost the election.
Despite being active in politics for years, Arya had to keep her academic life apart. Both her college and the school she studied in, Carmel Girls’ Higher Secondary School, are Church-run institutions that don’t look favourably on campus politics. Arya expects she won’t be able to attend classes regularly once she takes up her new assignment. “But all my teachers and friends are really helpful. I will figure out a way to continue my studies as well,” she says.