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CBSE Class 10 exam changes in UAE: What students and parents need to know

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The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) has announced a special assessment scheme for Class 10 students in the region after several exams were cancelled due to the ongoing regional conflict.

If you’re a student or parent wondering how results will now be calculated, here’s a simple breakdown.

Why were exams cancelled?

CBSE cancelled the remaining Class 10 board exams on March 5, 2026, after reviewing the situation across several countries, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, and Iran.

However, exams held between February 17 and 28 were completed successfully.

How will marks be calculated?

Your result depends on how many exams you were able to take:

If you appeared for all exams

  • Your result will be based on your actual marks

If you appeared for 4 exams

  • Missing subjects = average of your best 3 subjects

If you appeared for 3 exams

  • Missing subjects = average of your best 2 subjects

If you appeared for only 2 exams

  • All remaining subjects = average of those 2 subjects

What about internal assessment?

  • Internal assessment marks (already submitted by schools) will remain unchanged
  • These will be included in your final result as usual

If you changed your exam centre

  • If you moved to another country and took exams there
    Your result will be based on your actual performance

Can students improve their marks?

  • Yes. You will get a chance to improve your scores by appearing in the second board exams
  • This will follow CBSE’s regular improvement policy

When will results be announced?

  • Results for Middle East students will be declared along with all CBSE students

Points to remember

  • This assessment scheme is final
  • No special exams will be held outside CBSE’s policy
  • CBSE’s decision will be final and binding

What about Class 12 students?

  • CBSE has said that the Class 12 assessment plan will be announced separately

CBSE is using a fair average-based system to ensure students are not disadvantaged due to missed exams. If you wrote more papers, your result reflects more of your actual performance. If you wrote fewer, averages are used to fill the gaps, while still giving you a chance to improve later.

With over 35 years of experience in journalism, copywriting, and PR, Michael Gomes is a seasoned media professional deeply rooted in the UAE’s print and digital landscape.

Education

Abu Dhabi cracks down on remote learning: Parents to get rapid alerts for students’ absence

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As students across the UAE continue their education via digital platforms, the Abu Dhabi Department of Education and Knowledge (Adek) has issued a stern reminder: Remote or distance learning is not a reduced version of schooling.

New directives released this week mandate that private schools in the capital implement stricter, step-by-step systems to track student attendance. The move comes as the Ministry of Education recently extended distance learning until April 17, citing safety concerns linked to ongoing regional developments.

Adek’s updated policy emphasises that the change in physical location does not lower the bar for learning outcomes or teacher quality. Schools are now required to:

  • Notify parents within 120 minutes of the start of the school day if a child’s absence is unexplained.
  • Differentiate clearly between authorised and unauthorised absences.
  • Identify patterns early to support student well-being and academic responsibility.

The authority outlined three specific categories for authorised absences: medical cases, family emergencies, and documented travel. Other exceptional circumstances, such as official duties or participation in approved events, may also be considered with proper documentation.

The shift to more rigorous online tracking coincides with a week of severe unsettled weather amid the regional crisis.

As the situation is reviewed on a weekly basis, parents are encouraged to maintain a structured daily routine and use official school channels to report any absences within the mandatory two-hour window.

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KHDA releases new 2026 guide to end remote learning stress for Dubai parents

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In a move to protect family well-being and clarify the boundaries of home-based education, the Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA) has launched a comprehensive new manual: The Parent Guide to Supporting Your Child During Distance Learning.

The core message of the guide is a massive relief for parents: You are not expected to be the teacher.  The Responsibility Split: Who Does What?

The KHDA is drawing a firm line in the sand to prevent parental burnout.

  • The school’s job: Teaching, planning lessons, delivering content, monitoring progress, and providing academic support.
  • The parents’ job: Providing a calm environment, maintaining consistent routines, and keeping the lines of communication open with the school.

Five priorities for success

The guide outlines five key pillars to help caregivers manage learning without feeling overwhelmed. While the full document is on the KHDA website, the strategy focuses on progress over perfection.

Tailored advice by age group

The KHDA recognises that a five-year-old and a 15-year-old have vastly different needs:

Early years and primary students: Younger children require hands-on support. The KHDA recommends focusing on short, simple activities rather than long blocks of screen time. Consistent routines and frequent, reassuring breaks are essential to prevent overstimulation.

Secondary and senior students: While older students are more independent, they are susceptible to “engagement fatigue.” They still require a clear daily structure and regular check-ins from parents to prevent them from feeling overwhelmed or losing focus on advanced coursework.

Students of determination: The guide provides targeted advice for students with additional learning needs, focusing on managing anxiety and behavioural barriers. It emphasises the need for a direct, transparent link between parents and the school’s inclusion team to ensure IEP (Individual Education Plan) goals are met at home.

The wellness check

A significant portion of the 2026 guide is dedicated to mental health. It provides practical steps to identify if a child is struggling with “engagement fatigue” or family pressures, offering a roadmap for parents to seek help from the school early, before the student falls behind.

How parents can access the guide

Dubai parents are encouraged to download the digital handbook directly from the KHDA website (https://web.khda.gov.ae). It serves as a living document that will be updated as distance learning technologies continue to evolve through 2026.

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Abu Dhabi schools on notice: ADEK unveils 3-tier penalty system for remote learning failures

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Private schools in the UAE capital now face a strict new enforcement framework as the Department of Education and Knowledge (ADEK) moves to standardise the quality of remote education. Under a new three-tier classification system, schools failing to meet distance learning standards could face everything from written warnings to high-stakes license reviews.

The move aims to ensure that learning from home is not a second-class experience for students across Abu Dhabi.

The three levels of violations

Level 1: Administrative Lapses (The 48-hour warning) Minor procedural errors fall into this category. These are “behind-the-scenes” issues that don’t immediately harm the student’s day.

  • Examples: Delays in uploading attendance, straying from approved timetables, or late lesson plans.
  • The Penalty: A written notice to the school’s coordinator with a 48-hour deadline to fix the issue. The violation is permanently recorded in the school’s compliance history.

Level 2: Impact on student wellbeing (Fines and meetings)
This level targets schools where the quality of education or student welfare is directly compromised.

  • Examples: Lack of live interaction during lessons, poor monitoring of student welfare, or repeated complaints from parents.
  • The Penalty: Formal warning letters, mandatory hot seat meetings with ADEK leadership, financial penalties, and surprise follow-up inspections.

Level 3: Critical breaches (License at risk)
The most severe tier covers negligence and dishonesty.

  • Examples: Falsifying data, student safety incidents caused by negligence, or failing to deliver live teaching for extended periods without ADEK approval.
  • The Penalty: Maximum financial fines, direct administrative oversight by ADEK, public disclosure of the school’s status, and potential license reviews.

Quick tips for parents

For parents, this framework provides a formal teeth to their feedback. If a school is consistently skipping live sessions or failing to interact with students, ADEK now has a clear legal ladder to climb to force improvements. Here are a few things parents could do:

  • Keep a log: If your child’s school frequently misses live sessions, keep a dated log.
  • Communicate first: ADEK often looks for substantiated complaints, meaning you should try to resolve the issue with the school principal first.
  • Check compliance: Parents can soon expect Public Disclosure of schools that fall into Level 3, allowing for better-informed enrolment decisions for the 2026-2027 academic year.

ADEK stated that the framework is designed to strengthen accountability and ensure that distance learning remains aligned with student welfare.

By establishing clear rules on live teaching and attendance, the department is ensuring that the flexibility of remote learning does not come at the cost of educational excellence.

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