An SMC member said some students tend to take long leaves or drop out during the board examination period for various reasons. (Photo | Express Illustrations)
Tamil Nadu

School Management Committee member to monitor attendance of Class 10, 12 students in Tamil Nadu

The objective is to trace students who are long absentees or have dropped out and thereby ensure they appear for the board examination.

Express News Service

COIMBATORE: The school education department has directed headmasters of government high and higher secondary schools to select a member from the School Management Committee (SMC) to monitor the attendance of Class 10 and 12 students who will appear for the board examinations this year. The objective is to trace students who are long absentees or have dropped out and thereby ensure they appear for the board examination.

"Some students tend to take long leaves or drop out during the board examination period for various reasons. Parental support is low for such students. To address this, Class 10 and 12 students will be closely monitored to prevent long absences and ensure they appear for the exams. For this, a SMC member will be selected on November 7," an educational officer in Coimbatore told TNIE.

"The member should check once a week whether students are attending school regularly. In addition, the class teacher should inform the member if any student takes leave for more than five days or remains absent for a long period. The member will then visit the student's home, inquire about the reasons for their absence, and take steps with the headmaster's support to bring the student back to school," he explained.

Iran says it has 'necessary will' to end war, but seeking guarantees for lasting peace

China, Pakistan outline five-point plan to end US-Israel war on Iran

Is the NSS a factor in the upcoming Kerala elections? Or have they entirely lost their relevance?

Security for NC office in Srinagar withdrawn fortnight after assassination attempt on party chief

Rupee posts biggest annual decline in 14 years, tumbles 9.55% in FY26

SCROLL FOR NEXT