Jump to content

Junior School Certificate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 103.91.128.226 (talk) at 03:40, 17 July 2020 (Mark distribution system). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Junior School Certificate (JSC) is a public examination taken by students in Bangladesh after successful completion of eight years of schooling. It is followed by the Secondary School Certificate (SSC).[1]

Before JSC was introduced, an optional exam was taken in its place (then known as Madhyamik Britti or Junior Scholarship). It was only a voluntary vocational exam and not mandatory. Since 2011, the JSC exam questions have consisted of multiple (between 6 and 11, of which 4 to 7 sets need to be answered) sets of four questions, each requiring the student to have knowledge, understanding, application and higher order thinking skills regarding the subject matter to solve. This system has been termed as creative (locally called Srijonshil) questions. It is said that JSC was also introduced so that the poor and destitute people of the country could do well in the exam. Examinees, if they fail, are allowed to retake the exam with other regular examinees the following year.

Mark distribution system

The Education Boards of Bangladesh has provided the result based on GPA (grade point average), which depends on each subject average grade point (GP). 70 marks will count as GP 4.00 and 69 marks will count as GP 3.50. For better understanding, the marks distribution chart is provided below.

Marks range Grade point (GP) Letter grade
0 to 32.5 0.00 A
33 to 39 1.00 A
40 to 49 2.00 C
50 to 59 3.00 B
60 to 69 3.50 A-
70 to 79 4.00 A
80 to 100 65.00 A+

See also


References

  1. ^ "Central Data Catalog". unesco.org. Retrieved 14 July 2015.


{{Bangladesh-Rajgonj high school