The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has said that Punjabi will be used on board tests every other year starting next year. Punjabi politicians were afraid that the language might not have been included in CBSE’s draft test style, which is why this reason was given.

The subjects that are being taught have not changed.
A top official at CBSE said that the classes that are being taught now will not change. “The list is just a guide.” Next year, there will be a Punjabi language test. “Under the two-board examination system, all subjects taught today will continue,” a staff member said.
Punjabi has been added to the CBSE curriculum, which is a good thing because it calms down students, parents, and government leaders who were upset that it wasn’t there before. The two-board test method will help students get better grades, feel less stressed, and make sure that the system for grading is more adaptable.
Thoughts on and criticism of politics
Harjot Singh Bains, who is the education minister of Punjab, had criticised CBSE before for supposedly leaving Punjabi out of the new test format that the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 called for. That Punjabi should be the official language of Punjab and a language taught in all CBSE schools in the country, was what he said.
Also speaking out against the move was the leader of the Akali Dal, Parambans Romana. He called it a plan to make the Punjabi language less important. “Why wasn’t Punjabi part of the new lessons?” Does this mean we should stop talking? “BJP leaders need to answer this,” he told us.
The fact that different leaders and teachers didn’t like the phrase shows how important it is to protect cultural past and identity. A lot of experts have told us that we need a fair program that works with the educational goals of our country and takes into account different languages.
Putting Punjabi into the new draft
There were languages like Sanskrit, Urdu, Marathi, Gujarati, Kashmiri, and Tamil on the letter that CBSE sent out, but at first, Punjabi wasn’t there. That’s right, CBSE has now announced that Punjabi will be put back to the updated plan for the 2019–2020 school year.
This is in line with CBSE’s promise to have fair and welcoming school rules. They believe that giving kids more regional languages to choose from will help them do better in school and improve their language skills.
Changes that CBSE is making to exams
Class X exams were also changed in a big way by CBSE on Tuesday. Starting with the 2025–26 school year, there will be two more board tests. The NEP 2020 goal is to make school less stressful and give kids a chance to do better. This project fits with that goal.
There will be no longer be any stress for students because they will have a second chance to do better on a big test. This change is meant to make things easier for them. This new way of giving exams will also help students understand classes better and remember less, which has been a problem in Indian schools for a long time.

What Does the Two-Board Exam System Really Mean?
Since CBSE now has board exams every two years, students should do better on their tests since they have more freedom in how they study. This plan says that students can take their tests again and get better grades if they don’t do well the first time.
This move should also make board tests less stressful. Students have been worried and upset for a long time because they only have one very hard board test a year. CBSE wants to make learning better for students by giving them two tests so they can focus on getting ideas instead of just remembering them.
What Role Do Regional Languages Play in the CBSE?
Indian has a lot of different languages, as shown by the fact that Punjabi and other local languages are taught in CBSE. This is a way to make sure that kids from different language groups can learn their own languages along with the national program.
Experts say that learning in your home language is the best way to improve your brain growth and do well in school. After being taken off the list, Punjabi has been put back by CBSE. This means that Punjabi students and students from other Punjabi-speaking groups will be able to improve their culture and language while also learning for national tests.
That being said
Adding Punjabi to the new two-board test plan that starts next year is a good move by CBSE. It answers the worries that lawmakers, teachers, and students have raised. This choice fits with the NEP 2020’s main goals of freedom, inclusivity, and student well-being, and it also makes regional languages more important in school.
By giving exams on two boards, CBSE hopes to make studying less stressful for students and make their experience better overall. By bringing back Punjabi, the board shows that they care even more about supporting language diversity and fair school rules. No matter what language a child speaks, the main goal should still be to make sure that the school system is fair and helpful for all of them. source (ANINEWS)
For more exciting updates, subscribe to Apexadpros and follow us on Instagram for regular insights!