ENGLISH - CLOZE TEST FOR UPCOMING BANK & OTHER COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION
The excellence of a school education system must be (1) by the creative individuals it produces. That principle can be the only meaningful guide for the Central Board of Secondary Education, as it once again (2) its testing system to make the Class X Board examination compulsory for all students from 2018. It is wrong to believe that students in the CBSE system are not being assessed (3)sufficient rigour: the Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation (CCE) method that it follows is (4) at identifying learning difficulties periodically and instituting remedial measures, rather than raising stress with a make-or-break public examination at the secondary level. This philosophy (5) students master various topics and discover their aptitude in the course of a year, eliminating the chances of a single rote-learning test that could produce an aberrant result. The gains of such a system should not be thrown away in the quest to bring about ‘uniformity’ in the Class X education pattern across the country. If anything, it is learning outcomes and creative brilliance assessed (6) non-ritualistic aptitude tests that should rate the capacity of an educational board. Such an approach would also encourage teachers to innovate conceptually, rather than drill students to face an examination.
Directions (1–10): In the following passage there are blanks, each of which has been numbered. These numbers are printed below the passage and against each, five words are suggested, one of which fits the blank appropriately. Find out the appropriate word in each case.
The excellence of a school education system must be (1) by the creative individuals it produces. That principle can be the only meaningful guide for the Central Board of Secondary Education, as it once again (2) its testing system to make the Class X Board examination compulsory for all students from 2018. It is wrong to believe that students in the CBSE system are not being assessed (3)sufficient rigour: the Continuous and Comprehensive Evaluation (CCE) method that it follows is (4) at identifying learning difficulties periodically and instituting remedial measures, rather than raising stress with a make-or-break public examination at the secondary level. This philosophy (5) students master various topics and discover their aptitude in the course of a year, eliminating the chances of a single rote-learning test that could produce an aberrant result. The gains of such a system should not be thrown away in the quest to bring about ‘uniformity’ in the Class X education pattern across the country. If anything, it is learning outcomes and creative brilliance assessed (6) non-ritualistic aptitude tests that should rate the capacity of an educational board. Such an approach would also encourage teachers to innovate conceptually, rather than drill students to face an examination.
The
argument in favour of a compulsory Class X Board examination made by Union
Human Resource Development Minister Prakash Javadekar is that its absence
discriminates against candidates of State boards. In fact, the Minister (7) his intent of returning to a
compulsory Board examination well before the CBSE governing body formally
announced it. The logic, however, is flawed. Uniformity militates against
creative educational methods and a test that is no more than a straitjacket (8) the initiative of teacher and student.
The CBSE would, therefore, do well to avoid homogenisation, and retain
sufficient scope for true learning. This can be done by giving the CCE system —
which the Board calls a balance between incessant tests and a single annual
assessment — equal weightage, even if all students take a Board examination for
Class X. As the CBSE puts it, over-dependence on a single examination (9) the learner of motivation and
opportunities for reflection on his or her work. It also does not find favour
with the National Curriculum Framework 2005 that emphasised greater flexibility
for teachers to decide on how to train students in concepts and help them learn
at their own pace. What India
needs is a school-level assessment method to identify actual learning that
would (10) barriers to students freely migrating
across State boards.
1).
a) created
b) assessed
c) extended
d) allowed
e) monitored
2).
a) tweaks
b) makes
c) produces
d) looks
e) traces
3).
a) over
b) from
c) by
d) with
e) under
4).
a) aimed
b) focused
c) alerted
d) intended
e) proposed
5).
a) motivates
b) makes
c) helps
d) provides
e) allows
6).
a) over
b) from
c) for
d) sudden
e) through
7).
a) forced
b) announced
c) required
d) made
e) completed
8).
a) increases
b) decreases
c) makes
d) crushes
e) reduces
9).
a) deprives
b) puts
c) creates
d) besides
e) under
10).
a) avoid
b) exclude
c) extend
d) increase
e) remove
ANSWERS:
1. b
2.
a
3. d
4. a
5.
c
6. e
7. b
8.
d
9. a
10. e
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