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CBSE revamps Class 10 exam structure
Gear up for the new exam format; score more with smart preparation
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Published
1 month agoon

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has announced a revamped and more structured format for the Class 10 Board Exams 2025–26. The exams will begin from February 17, 2026, and students who have just completed their half-yearly tests should now shift their focus to full-fledged Board preparation. The updated pattern emphasises competency-based assessment alongside traditional descriptive evaluation.
For detailed information, visit: www.cbse.gov.in
Overall Exam Framework
- Total Marks per Subject: 100 marks
- Theory Paper: 80 marks
- Internal Assessment: 20 marks (covering periodic tests, assignments/projects, practical work, and portfolio/class participation).
- Theory Paper Format:
- Competency-based Questions: 50% (MCQs, case-studies, source-based)
- Objective-Type (short, factual responses): 20%
- Descriptive (short & long answers): 30%
- Additional Features:
- Two Board exams per academic year in 2025–26, offering flexibility to schools.
- A nine-point grading system is being introduced for final evaluation.
Mathematics

The pattern for both Basic and Standard Mathematics remains largely unchanged, but with clear section-wise division and chapter-wise weightage:
- Sections and Marks:
- A: MCQs + Assertion-Reason (Q1–Q18; 1 mark each)
- B: Very Short Answers (Q21–25; 2 marks each)
- C: Short Answers (Q26–31; 3 marks each)
- D: Long Answers (Q32–35; 5 marks each)
- E: Case-Study Based Questions (Q36–38; 4 marks each — sub-parts 1, 1, 2)
- Internal choices available: 2 questions each from B, C & D; all questions in Section E offer choice.
- A: MCQs + Assertion-Reason (Q1–Q18; 1 mark each)
- Chapter-Wise Weightage (out of 80):
- Number Systems – 6
- Algebra – 20
- Coordinate Geometry – 6
- Geometry – 15
- Trigonometry – 12
- Mensuration – 10
- Statistics & Probability – 11
- Number Systems – 6
Science
The Science paper now splits clearly into three subject-wise sections, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, offering balanced coverage:
- Structure: 39 compulsory questions, divided into:
- Section A (Biology): Q1–Q16 — 30 marks
- Section B (Chemistry): Q17–Q29 — 25 marks
- Section C (Physics): Q30–Q39 — 25 marks
- Section A (Biology): Q1–Q16 — 30 marks
- Question Types:
- Very Short Answer / MCQs (1 mark)
- Short Answers (2–3 marks; 40–60 words)
- Long Answers (4–5 marks; 100–120 words)
- Assertion-Reason (1 mark)
- Diagram / Experiment / Case-Based (3–4 marks)
- Very Short Answer / MCQs (1 mark)
- Internal choices given in some questions; no overall option to skip a section.
- For visually impaired candidates, diagram-based questions will be substituted appropriately.
- Unit-Wise Distribution (Total 80 Marks):
- Chemical Substances – Nature & Behaviour: 25
- World of Living: 25
- Natural Phenomena: 12
- Effects of Current: 13
- Natural Resources: 5
- Chemical Substances – Nature & Behaviour: 25
Social Science
The Social Science paper is reorganised into four discrete subject sections, History, Geography, Political Science, and Economics, making it more streamlined:
- Structure: 38 compulsory questions across four sections; each section carries 20 marks.
- Question Types:
- Very Short Answer: 2 marks each (~40 words)
- Short Answer: 3 marks each (~60 words)
- Long Answer: 5 marks each (~120 words)
- Case-Based Questions: 4 marks each (three sub-questions, ~100 words total)
- Map-Based Questions: total 5 marks (History Q9 – 2 marks; Geography Q19 – 3 marks)
- Very Short Answer: 2 marks each (~40 words)
- Internal choice is provided in select questions only.
- Visually impaired candidates will receive alternate textual questions in place of map/visual ones.
- Effective Unit-Wise Weightage:
- History (India & Contemporary World II) — ~18 + 2 (map)
- Geography (Contemporary India II) — ~17 + 3 (map)
- Political Science (Democratic Politics II) — 20
- Economics (Understanding Economic Development) — 20
- History (India & Contemporary World II) — ~18 + 2 (map)
The CBSE’s revised 2025–26 Class 10 board exam pattern balances competency-based objective assessment, descriptive analytical evaluation, and internal continuous assessment. With clearly defined subject-wise structures, section-wise weightage, and consistent marking schemes, students can now plan their study strategically; practising MCQs, case-studies, short answers, descriptive writings, and creative compositions.
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Abhilasha Munjal is a Senior Correspondent with Apeejay Newsroom. She has completed her Bachelor's degree in English from Delhi University. Abhilasha holds vivid knowledge about content and has predominantly covered local as well as trending stories in the digital media.