Every year, classrooms change a little. But this time, the shift feels more deliberate. The CBSE
reforms for 2026–27 address areas many of us in teaching have quietly hoped would change.
A student once told me, “Ma’am, I know the formula but not when to use it.” These reforms address exactly that:
▸ Three-Language Policy: Students study three languages, at least two Indian. English is classified as a foreign language. This begins at Class 6, extending to Class 10 by 2030–31.
▸ Maths & Science Restructured: The old Basic–Standard split is being replaced. All students take a common 80-mark exam, with an optional 25-mark Advanced paper for deeper, analytical thinking — scored separately, not added to the percentage.
▸ Competency-Based Exams: 50% of questions will now be case-based, source-based, or application-based. The remaining 50% includes MCQs (20%) and short/long answer questions (30%).
▸ AI & Computational Thinking: Now a compulsory module for Classes 9–10, assessed internally. Expected to become a board exam subject by 2029.
▸ Vocational Education: Subjects like financial literacy, coding, and design thinking are now mandatory in Classes 9–10, with board-level exams planned from 2027–28. After years of working with students, I feel this shift was long overdue.
It will take time to adjust — but if it moves learning from memorisation to understanding, it’s worth it.
A student once told me, “Ma’am, I know the formula but not when to use it.” These reforms address exactly that:
▸ Three-Language Policy: Students study three languages, at least two Indian. English is classified as a foreign language. This begins at Class 6, extending to Class 10 by 2030–31.
▸ Maths & Science Restructured: The old Basic–Standard split is being replaced. All students take a common 80-mark exam, with an optional 25-mark Advanced paper for deeper, analytical thinking — scored separately, not added to the percentage.
▸ Competency-Based Exams: 50% of questions will now be case-based, source-based, or application-based. The remaining 50% includes MCQs (20%) and short/long answer questions (30%).
▸ AI & Computational Thinking: Now a compulsory module for Classes 9–10, assessed internally. Expected to become a board exam subject by 2029.
▸ Vocational Education: Subjects like financial literacy, coding, and design thinking are now mandatory in Classes 9–10, with board-level exams planned from 2027–28. After years of working with students, I feel this shift was long overdue.
It will take time to adjust — but if it moves learning from memorisation to understanding, it’s worth it.





