Dina Jouni, Ibrahim Selim, Lamia Al-Harmoudi, Saeed Ahmed (Al-Ittihad)
Today, twelfth grade students will conclude their end-of-year exams for the 2023-2024 academic year in government schools and private schools that implement the Ministry of Education’s curriculum today. Students in the advanced and elite tracks will take the chemistry subject, while general track students will be examined in biology or chemistry.
Students expect the exam results to be announced in the period between July 13 and 15, according to the timetable approved by the Emirates Foundation for School Education for the third and final semester of the current academic year.
The make-up tests will begin on June 20 and continue until June 26, 2024, while the retake tests for the end of the academic year will start from next July 8 until July 12, 2024.
The vacation for successful students who will not be subject to make-up exams and retakes begins on the first of next July, while the summer vacation for administrative and educational staff begins on July 15.
Yesterday, the twelfth grade students took the exams at the end of the third semester in the Islamic education subject, which is considered the “easiest” for them. The students, Lamia Al-Raisi, Khawla Al-Shehhi, and Hind Al-Sawaleh, indicated that the questions were very easy, and that none of the students in the committees in which they were examined faced any difficulties in understanding and answering the questions, stressing that the examination paper did not deviate from the academic units they studied during the semester.
Today, Friday, the exams for the 2023/2024 academic year conclude, with students in the twelfth grade “advanced” taking the exam in chemistry, while students in the twelfth year taking the exam in biology.
In Abu Dhabi, yesterday, the twelfth grade students took the exam in the Islamic education subject, which contained many questions that required thinking and concentration, and relied on interpretations of the verses included in the exam from Surat Al-Nur and Surat Al-Naml. The students’ opinion of the exam varied between average and above average, as the questions were based on a number of questions with similar answers and choosing from among them, while some said that the exam was a little difficult.
Yousef Zayed Al Zaabi, Abdullah Al Kuwaiti, Yousef Eidah, Yousef Tariq and Hadi Kamal said: The exam is neither easy nor difficult, but the similarity of the options requires focus and precision in choosing. The exam includes Quranic verses, required interpretations, meanings of words, interpretations, and anything related to the verses.
Sharjah students: No difficulties
A number of 12th grade students in Sharjah expressed their complete satisfaction with the level of exams they passed during the past days, praising the work of the members of the exam committees and the organization mechanism in them, as the committees in general have not witnessed any significant challenges or difficulties since the start of the exams.
They also confirmed that the Islamic Education exam questions were to some extent appropriate, and they had been trained on a large part of them, and that there were no complaints from students about the exam questions, and Mohammed Al Shamsi from the twelfth grade in Sharjah confirmed that the exam questions were appropriate. To some extent, there were no challenges in terms of the time available for either paper or electronic tests. I hoped that the final test would also be easy and far from difficult questions, so that the conclusion would be pleasant.
Ajman Students: The questions are clear
A number of twelfth grade students in Ajman schools confirmed that the questions of the Islamic education test passed smoothly, stressing that the questions were easy, clear and suitable for everyone, and they did not face any difficulty in answering them.
Student Ibrahim Othman Al-Amir, general track in Ajman, said that the questions came electronically, and in one period, and he was able to answer them all without any problems, pointing out that the questions were clear and simple and did not require thinking.
Student Saleh Hassan Youssef, general track in Ajman, said that the questions for the Islamic Education test were identical to the models they were trained on during their studies, and came to all student levels, as everyone expressed their satisfaction with the ease of the questions and the adequacy of the time allotted for the test.
Umm Al Quwain Students: Simple and straightforward
Most of the 12th grade students in Umm Al Quwain schools expressed their satisfaction with the ease of the Islamic Education test questions, which were direct and simple, and they were able to complete the test in a short time.
The student, Mansour Muhammad Al-Taniji, from the elite track in Umm Al Quwain, said that the questions were not difficult, and were suitable for all levels of students, and that the time was sufficient, and he did not face any technical problems during the test, indicating that the ease of the test greatly relieved him psychologically.
Sultan Muhammad Sultan, general track in Umm Al Quwain, said that the ease of the questions keeps the student away from anxiety and thinking when entering the committee, due to his fear of the difficulty of the test, pointing out that he was able to answer all the questions and review them in a short time.
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