Bengaluru (PTI): Karnataka Minister Madhu Bangarappa said on Friday that, starting this academic year, the government will replace the marks system for the third language in the SSLC (class 10) exam with a grading system that will not impact a student's overall results.
He said that until now, the Secondary School Leaving Certificate exams had a total of 625 marks, including 100 marks for the third language. With this decision, the total will be reduced to 525 marks.
"We had decided to make this change after the assembly session. The session concluded yesterday, and I met CM Siddaramaiah this morning. He has spoken about a two-language policy in the state at several events in the past. From this year onwards, until there is a policy change or another decision is taken, the third language will be graded only," Bangarappa said.
Speaking to reporters, the Minister for School Education and Literacy said the 100 marks previously allotted for the third language will be graded and will not impact a student's overall results.
Noting that Hindi is not the only language taught as a third language in the state, the minister said: "While Hindi is the most commonly taught third language in Karnataka, Kannada organisations and activists have expressed concern that it is being imposed. They also pointed out that Kannadiga children find it difficult to read and write Hindi. This decision aims to ease that burden."
He added that any decision to immediately remove the third language would affect Kannadiga teachers who teach these languages.
"I'm not referring to Hindi alone; there are about 13–14 languages taught as third languages in the state, including Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Sanskrit, Marathi, Tulu, and others," he said.
Stating that the third language exams will now be graded A, B, C, or D, Bangarappa said an official order in this regard will be issued soon.
He said there is no pass or fail in the third language exam. "It will be graded, but it will not count toward a student's passing marks. However, students will still be required to take the exam," he added.
Declining to comment on whether a two-language policy will be implemented in the state, the minister said such matters are to be decided by the government, cabinet, and Assembly, and he would not discuss them at this time.
In response to a question, Bangarappa said that 1.64 lakh students had failed the third language exam last year, of whom 1.48 lakh failed in Hindi. "This highlights the pressure on students… they likely struggled in other subjects as well," he added.
Let the Truth be known. If you read VB and like VB, please be a VB Supporter and Help us deliver the Truth to one and all.
Washington: A group of hackers with alleged links to Iran has claimed that it breached the personal email account of FBI Director Kash Patel and published related material online, according to a Reuters report.
The group, identifying itself as Handala Hack Team, said on its website that Patel had been added to its list of targets. It also released photographs and documents said to be from his inbox.
A United States Justice Department official confirmed that Patel’s email account had been compromised and said the material circulating online appears to be genuine.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has not issued an immediate response to the development. The hacker group also did not respond to media queries.
Handala describes itself as a pro-Palestinian hacker collective. Western cybersecurity researchers have previously linked the group to Iranian government-backed cyber units.
The group had earlier claimed responsibility for a cyberattack on Michigan-based medical devices company Stryker on March 11, alleging that it had deleted a large amount of company data.
According to the report, the email address said to have been accessed by the hackers matches one that had surfaced in earlier data breaches documented by dark web intelligence firm District 4 Labs.
A review of the leaked material suggests that it contains a mix of personal and professional emails dating between 2010 and 2019.
