Junior School Certificate
Encyclopedia
The Junior School Certificate, also known as JSC, is a public examination taken by students in Bangladesh
after successful completion of eight years of schooling. It is followed by Secondary School Certificate
(SSC).
Many students are doing better in this exam. Before this was only a vocational exam and not must be given exam. Moreover in 2011 JSC is being taken in full Creative(Srijonshil) questions. Only 1 number of question out of every 10 number of questions is from the book and all 9 aren't perfectly in book. Onudhabon isn't at all. Proyog is depended on the caption but it needs some uncommon(less unseen) information. Usually in Proyog there's a math, a problem to be solved, a way to invent, positive reason, negative reason etc. Uchotor Dokhota is very hard. But if one reads book very minotely and revise those frequently then one can easily get an A+ in JSC. In Sylhet district, teachers are very serious about this. They take extra care and they make exams much more hard. So that students be more serious about JSC. JSC is really very easy if one have all sorts idea of tiny little NCTB book. JSC was also made if the poor can do well in the exam and the examinees are given extra chances if they fail.
Bangladesh
Bangladesh , officially the People's Republic of Bangladesh is a sovereign state located in South Asia. It is bordered by India on all sides except for a small border with Burma to the far southeast and by the Bay of Bengal to the south...
after successful completion of eight years of schooling. It is followed by Secondary School Certificate
Secondary School Certificate
The Secondary School Certificate, also known as SSC, is a public examination taken by students in Bangladesh, Pakistan and in the states of Tamilnadu, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Goa in India after successfully completing at least ten years of schooling. It is followed...
(SSC).
Many students are doing better in this exam. Before this was only a vocational exam and not must be given exam. Moreover in 2011 JSC is being taken in full Creative(Srijonshil) questions. Only 1 number of question out of every 10 number of questions is from the book and all 9 aren't perfectly in book. Onudhabon isn't at all. Proyog is depended on the caption but it needs some uncommon(less unseen) information. Usually in Proyog there's a math, a problem to be solved, a way to invent, positive reason, negative reason etc. Uchotor Dokhota is very hard. But if one reads book very minotely and revise those frequently then one can easily get an A+ in JSC. In Sylhet district, teachers are very serious about this. They take extra care and they make exams much more hard. So that students be more serious about JSC. JSC is really very easy if one have all sorts idea of tiny little NCTB book. JSC was also made if the poor can do well in the exam and the examinees are given extra chances if they fail.
See also
- Secondary School CertificateSecondary School CertificateThe Secondary School Certificate, also known as SSC, is a public examination taken by students in Bangladesh, Pakistan and in the states of Tamilnadu, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Goa in India after successfully completing at least ten years of schooling. It is followed...
(SSC) - Higher Secondary (School) CertificateHigher Secondary (School) CertificateThe Higher Secondary Certificate, also known as HSC, is a public examination taken by students in Bangladesh, Pakistan and in the states of Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Maharashtra and Goa in India after successfully completing at least twelve years of schooling, that is two years...
(HSC) - General Certificate of Secondary EducationGeneral Certificate of Secondary EducationThe General Certificate of Secondary Education is an academic qualification awarded in a specified subject, generally taken in a number of subjects by students aged 14–16 in secondary education in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and is equivalent to a Level 2 and Level 1 in Key Skills...
(GCSE)