New Delhi: The "very tough" Class 12 CBSE mathematics question paper that saw many   students in tears on Thursday figured in parliament, with a Congress   member asking the government to consider the issue "seriously". Students   and teachers demanded that the board again hold the exam.
              
              Raising   the issue during zero hour, K.V. Thomas, the Congress member from   Ernakulam in Kerala, said the maths exam will affect the future of many   students in the country.
              
              "The government should take it   seriously. In future, when question papers are being set, efforts should   be made to rope in experienced and senior people," he said.
              
              Many students who took the Class 12 math exam and their teachers said Wednesday's question paper was of "IIT entrance level".
              
              "The   mathematics exam was very tough. The questions asked in the exam were   not direct. It was way beyond our level and was equivalent to the   IIT-JEE test," said Somil Pahuja, who could not attempt many of the   questions.
              
              Somil said the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) should re-conduct the exam.
              
              Vertika Mishra said most students came out from the exam hall crying.
              
              "All   of us were left depressed after taking the exam. We are now very   skeptical of doing well, though maths is my favourite subject and I   always score well," Vertika told IANS.
              
              "I don't think I shall be able to score more than 50 percent in the paper," she said.
              
              Vertika also demanded that the CBSE board conduct the examination again.
              
              Teachers too said the exam was very difficult in comparison to previous years' tests, and that their students were very upset.
              
              "The   paper was tough. Most of the students could not attempt it well and are   depressed. The pattern of the questions asked in the exam was way   different from the normal pattern of CBSE. Either CBSE should conduct   the exam again or adopt a liberal attitude during evaluation of the   answer sheets," mathematics teacher Rakesh Sharma told IANS.
              
              A CBSE spokesperson said the board had not yet thought in terms of re-conducting the maths exam.
              
              "CBSE   has not yet clarified whether they would re-conduct the exam. Like   every year, the paper was set from the book (NCERT). The pattern of the   paper was a little changed this year," spokesperson Ishaan told IANS.
              
              According   to students and teachers, this year's mathematics paper had around 50   percent of questions based on Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS),   compared to earlier years when it was around 10-20 percent.
            
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