Minister of Education and Technical Education announced on Tuesday that the success rate for this year’s secondary school-leaving (Thanaweyya Amma) exams stands at 81.5%. This comes after a series of changes to precautionary anti-cheating measures and exam safety procedures due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Egypt’s Minister of Education and Technical Education, Tarek Shawky, announced on Tuesday that the success rate for this year’s secondary school-leaving (Thanaweyya Amma) exams stands at 81.5%.
He added that 490,322 students successfully passed the exams, with girls performing slightly better than boys by a margin of 3%.
Shawky, who gave his approval to the results for the 2020 Thanaweyya Amma exams, said that about 18% of students who sat the exams gained an average score of over 95%.
Speaking at a press conference, Shawky added that the academic year, including the examinations system, was efficiently administered across the country, despite the unusual circumstances due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).
The Ministry of Education and Technical Education has received about 1,074 complaints during the Thanaweyya Amma exam period. Most of these were from Giza, Menoufia, and Cairo governorates.
Shawky confirmed that the complaints included 450 reports of attempted cheating using mobile phones, and 41 cases of photocopying exam papers which were published on social media. The minister asserted that the students involved in these cases were referred to prosecution and they have been barred from sitting the exams for two years.
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