CBSE confirmed that marks were reduced in subjects for which students had not applied for revaluation, prompting an independent investigation and corrective measures.
The Central Board of Secondary Education confirmed that marks were reduced in subjects for which students had not applied for re‑evaluation.The error was identified after the board released the 2022‑2023 revaluation results and has prompted an official investigation.
The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) announced on 3 July 2026 that a subset of students who sought revaluation of their answer sheets for the 2022‑2023 academic year received lower scores in subjects they had not requested to be re‑examined [1]. The discrepancy emerged when the board published the final revaluation outcomes on 28 June 2026, prompting complaints from students across multiple states [2]. The board’s headquarters in New Delhi issued a statement confirming the irregularities and stating that an internal probe had been launched [3].
The affected cohort includes approximately 12,000 candidates who applied for revaluation in mathematics, physics, chemistry, or biology but reported score reductions in unrelated subjects such as English and history [4]. Parents, school administrators, and education NGOs have lodged formal grievances with the board and the Ministry of Education, requesting a transparent review of the process [5]. Preliminary findings from CBSE’s technical team suggest a data‑mapping error in the software that consolidates revaluation results, potentially combined with manual entry mistakes during the final aggregation stage [6].
Scope and Nature of the Revaluation Errors
CBSE’s revaluation procedure for the 2022‑2023 cycle involved the collection of original answer scripts, double‑checking by senior examiners, and the entry of revised scores into a centralized database [7]. According to the board’s operational manual, only subjects for which a student files a formal revaluation request should be reassessed and have their marks altered [8]. In the current case, the board’s audit revealed that 9.3 % of the processed applications displayed unintended modifications in at least one non‑requested subject [4].
The error appears to be confined to the final data‑integration phase, where revised scores from individual subject teams were merged into a master file for each candidate. An internal memo obtained by The Hindu indicates that a scripting error caused the system to overwrite original marks with placeholder values when a subject’s revaluation status was flagged as “pending,” even if the student had not selected that subject [9]. The board has temporarily suspended the release of any further revaluation results pending a comprehensive system review [3].
According to the board’s operational manual, only subjects for which a student files a formal revaluation request should be reassessed and have their marks altered [8].
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CBSE Revaluation Process Found to Downgrade Marks in Unrequested Subjects
On 4 July 2026, the CBSE chairperson, Dr. N. K. Singh, convened an emergency meeting with senior officials from the Ministry of Education and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to assess the breach [10]. The Ministry has directed the formation of an independent committee comprising former judiciary members, IT auditors, and education experts to examine both technical and procedural lapses [11].
CBSE has pledged to revert all affected scores to their original values unless a legitimate revaluation request was filed for the subject in question [12]. The board also announced a compensation scheme for students whose college admissions or scholarship applications were impacted, offering fee waivers for future examinations and priority processing of any pending appeals [13]. A timeline released by the board projects that the corrective actions and final verification will be completed by 30 September 2026 [14].
Immediate Impact on Students and Institutions
The downgrade in unrequested subjects has immediate consequences for students applying to undergraduate programs that rely on aggregate marks, such as engineering and medical courses [15]. Several candidates reported that their revised scores fell below the cut‑off thresholds for institutions like the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) [16]. Schools across Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and overseas CBSE affiliates have issued notices to inform students of the ongoing investigation and advise them to monitor the board’s updates [5].
Higher education counselors are advising affected students to submit formal appeals to CBSE and, where necessary, to request provisional admissions based on original scores [17]. Scholarship bodies, including the National Scholarship Portal, have temporarily paused the disbursement of merit‑based awards pending verification of corrected marks [18]. The incident has also prompted a broader discussion among policymakers about the need for enhanced audit trails and third‑party verification in large‑scale examination systems [19].
What: CBSE confirmed that marks were lowered in subjects not requested for revaluation during the 2022‑2023 cycle.
The board also announced a compensation scheme for students whose college admissions or scholarship applications were impacted, offering fee waivers for future examinations and priority processing of any pending appeals [13].
When: The error was disclosed on 3 July 2026 after the revaluation results were released on 28 June 2026.
Impact: Students may face altered admission outcomes; the board is reverting scores and launching an independent investigation.
Sources
CBSE Issues Statement on Revaluation Anomalies – *The Hindu*
Revaluation Results Show Unrequested Score Changes – *Times of India*
CBSE Operational Manual for Examination Revaluation – CBSE Official Document
Technical Audit Report on Revaluation Data Integration – CBSE Internal Memo
Ministry of Education Forms Independent Committee – *Indian Express*
Student Appeals Surge After CBSE Score Downgrade – *NDTV*
National Scholarship Portal Holds Disbursements – *Business Standard*
Independent Review Panel Appointed for CBSE Errors – *The Economic Times*