Bites Fil Beit: Betingan bel modzarela wel lahma mafrooma – Eggplant with mozzarella and minced meat    Book review: The trials of the 'reformist current' in the Muslim Brotherhood    Mubarak in court again as prosecutors appeal release    Beckham looks to the future to improve Chinese game    Egypt appoints new stock market head    Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Digs In For Trouble Ahead    UAE will try 30 Emiratis, Egyptians for illegal Brotherhood cell    In northern Iraqi city, Al-Qaida gathers strength    Jon Stewart in Cairo for Bassem Youssef's El-Bernameg    Europe Stocks Slide After Fed Meeting    Oil Prices Struggle On Energy Demand, Fed Worries    Dollar Climbs In Fed's Wake, Extends Gains Vs. Yen    Renewed Political Violence In Egypt's Fayoum Leaves 27 Injured    Egypt's Morsi, Brotherhood Seek Allies; Army Mulls 'Possible 30 June Scenarios'    Egypt Development Needs 'Specialists Not Islamists': UNFPA Cairo    League matches postponed for security reasons    Zamalek to face Ismaily in warm-up for Egypt League final phase    Egypt defeats Mozambique in World Cup qualifiers    Egypt's largest steel producer obtains LE2.8 bn loan from local banks    Egypt 'realistic' ahead of World Cup    Greek coalition parties meet to try to settle state TV row    The Best Books On Egypt: Start Your Reading Here    Islamists Press Blasphemy Cases In A New Egypt    Morsi meets religious leaders    Acer Sees Tablet, Notebook PC Shipments To Be Flat In Second Quarter    Ahli excited with Bidimbou coup    Egypt pound officially hits LE7-to-dollar mark    Global study: Access to technology boosts profitability    Presidency launches website documenting 1 year of Morsy    'Lives have been saved' by NSA programs: Obama    UAE puts Egyptians, Emiratis on trial for forming Brotherhood branch    Egypt's Cairo Opera House: What's next?    Discovering Egypt: A museum gem of Central Cairo    Journalists Syndicate: Al-Shorouk''s problems resolved    Minister insists on resignation over Luxor appointment    Mahmoud Khaled exhibits at Nile Sunset Annex    The Arab world through the eyes of a clown    Space and society    The emergence of Christianity in Egypt    Spain, Brazil – favourites for Egyptians    Explore the architectural heritage of Downtown Cairo    Australia fans celebrate World Cup entry with Sydney party    Luxor governor reassures nervy tourism sector    Rousseff salutes Brazil protests, cities cut bus fares    Sharon Stone: Middle East Peace Process ‘Like Going To The Gym'    Gangs Of Cairo? Egyptian Minister Fights Culture War    Karzai suspends talks with US on security deal    Russia participates in Hurghada int'l fest    







Thank you for reporting!
This image will be automatically disabled when it gets reported by several people.




Your friends recommend

Army, police to protect Thanwaeyya Amma exams
Published in Almasry Alyoum on 12 - 06 - 2010

Nearly half million of Thanwaeyya Amma (secondary school) students started on Saturday their examinations in 1358 government-supervised exam centers throughout Egypt.Thanwaeyya exams, scheduled to end on 27 June, are traditionally seen as anxious times for Egyptian families because their results will determine chances of their offspring to join universities due to the state centralized selection mechanism based on overall grade performance.
Education Minister Ahmed Zaki Badr has implemented new regulations to directly supervise the 2010 examination process.
Unlike previous years all Thanaweyya Amma students will take their exams outside their schools, a new measure which is believed to combat attempts of cheatings.
School teachers are also obliged to proctor exams, with absent teachers subjected to possible reduction in bounces if they failed to show up without providing legitimate excuses.
Governors have been delegated with the responsibility of adopting the necessary procedures to prevent the leakage of exam questions. The Armed Forces will transport exam sheets and answer booklets to Upper Egyptian governorates in order to have exam papers distributed at the same time across Egypt.
Security forces will transport exam sheets and answer booklets in armored vehicles to prevent leakage of exams. Officers will be responsible for carrying exams sheets in sealed metal boxes to exam centers.
The newly adopted measures are meant to address a 2008 scandal where some parents in the southern city of Minya were charged with purchasing leaked examination papers.
Translated form the Arabic Edition.


Clic here to read the story from its source.
Report inappropriate advertisement
Please help us to block an inappropriate advertisement by telleing what was the website it links to :





Thank you for reporting!
We will review the advertisement in order to ban it.