The Department of Pre-University Education (DPUE) is taking all necessary steps to prevent the leakage of question paper and curb the fake question paper mafia that fool students and make money during examination period.
A senior official said that the department will begin to caution students to use social media carefully. It will soon issue a circular asking colleges across the State to conduct parent-teacher meetings to educate them on the consequences of getting involved in paper leakage.
According to the Karnataka Education (Amendment) Act 2017, amended last year, any person involved in buying, selling, or procuring or inducing a person to get the question paper through any means will be penalised. Students possessing the question paper may also land in the soup. The maximum penalty may extend to imprisonment of up to five years or a fine, which may extend to Rs. 5,00,000, or both.
This is for the first time that the rules will be enforced as the amendment came into force midway when the 2017 examinations had commenced.
An official said the purpose of the exercise is to ensure that students are careful.
“Students may get messages on social media, such as WhatsApp, during exam time. We want students to report these matters to their principals, who should in turn, report it to the department so that the authenticity of the papers can be examined. Very often, many of these papers doing the rounds are false ones,” the official added.
The kidnapped schoolboy was rescued by the police and reunited with his parents. Son of a gift shop owner from Basavanagudi area in Bengaluru, Chirag has reportedly told police that decided to make some quick money to spend on cricket betting and gambling after learning kidnap tricks from the ‘Crime Patrol’. According to police, Chirag reached a private school around 3pm on Tuesday on a Bounce rental bike and zeroed in on a fourth standard student who was walking out of school. He told the boy he was his father's friend and that he required help to search for a relative who had gone missing. The boy believed Chirag and rode pillion on the bike. Chirag then engaged the boy in conversation and learnt about his father's business and got his mobile phone number. He then made a call to the boy's father, demanded Rs 5 lakh and warned him against approaching cops. However, the boy's father alerted Cottonpet police and special teams were formed to crack the case. While Cottonpet inspector Venkatesh TC's squad verified CCTV footage in and around the school, Chamarajpet inspector BG Kumaraswamy's team started tracking the suspect's mobile phone movements. An hour later, the suspect's location was traced to a hotel on the Lavelle Road-St Mark's Road stretch. Police rushed there, rescued the boy and arrested Chirag.
Comments
Z+ catagory should arrange for question papers :-P
Whatever be the method, people will find loopholes and leak questions
Better to conduct open book exams.
Exams should be in online mode
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