The controversy surrounding the scanned copies of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) Class 12 examinations shows no signs of abating. Complaints regarding technical glitches in the portal, payment delays, overcharging of fees, and blurred scanned copies remain unresolved; meanwhile, several students have now alleged that their Class 12 answer sheets have been swapped. This has sparked a fresh wave of controversy. Students claim that the scanned copies they received after applying for them do not belong to them. They allege that their answer sheets were interchanged under the Online Marking System (OMS), resulting in them receiving lower marks.
Let us examine this entire matter in detail. Specifically, let us understand what the students have said regarding the alleged swapping of answer sheets, and explore why concerns regarding their low marks have escalated.
**Vedant Alleges Low Physics Marks; Claims Scanned Copy Does Not Feature His Handwriting**
A student named Vedant has posted on the social media platform X regarding the CBSE Class 12 scanned copies issue. Vedant alleges that he received low marks in Physics, prompting him to apply for a scanned copy of his answer sheet; however, the scanned Physics copy he received does not belong to him. He notes that the handwriting in the Physics copy is not his, whereas the scanned copies for his other subjects clearly feature his own handwriting. He points out that a comparison of the handwriting in the Physics scanned copy against that of his other subjects would easily reveal the discrepancy.
Vedant has raised a pertinent question: What exactly did CBSE evaluate under my roll number within the OMS? Was it my actual answer sheet that was evaluated, or was it someone else's? Vedant asserts that this is no longer merely a matter of re-evaluation; it could potentially indicate a serious error—such as an answer-sheet exchange or a tagging mix-up—within CBSE's OMS framework.
**Mohit Faces the Same Issue**
A similar complaint has been lodged by another student named Mohit Tyagi. Mohit Tyagi states that he applied for a scanned copy of his Chemistry answer sheet, but the copy he subsequently received does not belong to him. Students' Futures at Risk Due to Low Scores
A decline has been recorded in this year's CBSE Class 12 results. Many students have received low marks in Chemistry, Physics, and Mathematics—specifically, scoring less than 75 percent. Among them are numerous students who have secured qualifying scores in the JEE for admission to IITs and NITs, yet failed to meet the Class 12 eligibility criterion of passing with at least 75% marks. Consequently, a crisis now looms over their careers.
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