The two samples of Miss Farah Hameed Dogar's answer sheets reveal
another aspect of scandalous jacking up of her marks.
The answer sheets were made part of the Islamabad High Court's
recent judgment to prove “irregularities” that were
cited as the reason for the re-assessment of her papers. In one
case pertaining to the paper of Physics II, despite her answer
being incorrect, Miss Farah was given two marks while that part
carried only one mark. In case of Urdu paper, despite making four
mistakes in a two-line answer, she was given two marks out of
three.
After this correspondent secured the question papers of Physics
II and Urdu for the Federal Board HSSC-II Examinations 2008 and
compared the same with the two samples, as reproduced in the IHC
judgment, it is also revealed that the judgment pointed out a
wrong answer for the Physics II answer reproduced in the verdict.
On page 13, the judgment said: “On visual examination of
Physics-II paper, answer to question No 5(b) is given below: -
“No, the plates of capacitor is not of different sizes;
however to decrease the electrostatic factor a dielectric medium
is putted in between them.”
Then the judge wrote: “The examiner crossed the question
and awarded zero mark. Later on, he gave one mark. On re-evaluation
(re-assessment), another mark was added.” It means that
in this particular question of the paper, the candidate got two
marks.
The question paper, however, shows that the above answer pertains
to XIV (b) of Q.2, which reads as: “A capacitor is connected
across a battery: (b) Is this true even if the plates are of different
sizes?” It carries total one mark as part XIV, having three
sub-parts - a, b and c - had total three marks. Against the answer
reproduced above, the candidate, when reassessed, got two marks
against the part that carried only one mark. It means even if
Miss Farah's answer was 100 per cent correct, she would not have
got more than one mark, but she got two.
Q.5(b) as referred by the IHC is irrelevant to the answer reproduced
and reads as: “What is meant by half life of a radioactive
element? How can it be determined from the decay constant of radioactive
element?” And if the answer reproduced is considered as
answer to Q.5(b), it is straightaway incorrect.
The Chairman Department of Physics, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad,
Dr Hoodbhoy, when contacted, said that in the Physics II sample
in which Miss Farah was given two marks after the controversial
reassessment, she actually deserved zero.
“I have seen the question sent to me which reads: “A
capacitor is connected across a battery,” as well as the
answer given by the examinee, said to be Ms Farah Dogar. The answer
is incorrect and deserves zero mark,” Dr Hoodbhoy conveyed
to The News in his written answer sent through an e-mail.
In Urdu paper, according to the judgment, one mark was awarded
in answer to a question, reproduced in the judgment, while after
re-assessment, the candidate was given an additional mark. The
question paper of Urdu, as obtained by The News, shows that the
question - 2(i) - that asked Babar's toughness carries total three
marks, out of which Miss Farah got two marks despite making two
spelling mistakes and two mistakes of idioms. In a language paper,
spelling and grammatical mistakes are taken seriously, but in
Miss Farah's case, after one mark, she was given two marks.
In both the sample answers, reproduced in the judgment, the judge
pointed out in both the cases that the examiner initially gave
zero mark, but reviewed his own assessment later and gave one
mark to each question. Through re-assessment, marks in both the
questions were jacked up to two marks each.
After reproducing the two samples and the details of numbers originally
given and revised, the judge said: “I do find some of the
irregularities in other papers too. In such a situation, when
the chairman examined the answer books of the papers in dispute,
he made a decision, rightly so to direct re-assessment.”
Overlooking the scandalous flaws discussed above, the judge ruled:
“There is nothing wrong in the marks increased in re-evaluation
by the experts in the field and no exception can be taken by this
court to the procedure adopted by (the) chairman and the re-evaluation
made by examiners.”
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