CBSC ( Central board of secondary education ) Class 12th Bengali sample question papers (academic year 2025-2026)

✅ Why the sample paper and marking scheme help

  1. Familiarity with exam format – The sample paper shows you exactly how many sections there are (for example, objective + descriptive), how many marks each part carries, etc. Shiksha+2CBSE Academic+2

  2. Understanding of what the board expects – The marking scheme tells you how many marks each question or sub-part is worth, how detailed the answer should be (value-points), and helps you understand where examiners are looking for specific things like grammar, content, coherence, etc. CBSE Academic

  3. Time management practice – Knowing the structure and marks helps you practise the paper under timed conditions and allocate your time sensibly for each section.

  4. Targeted revision – By solving the sample paper and then checking against the marking scheme, you’ll see which types of questions you struggle with (say, unseen comprehension vs creative writing) and can focus on those.

  5. Confidence & reduced exam anxiety – Repeated exposure to the style of questions and how they’re marked builds confidence so you’re less nervous in the real exam.


📝 How to study using the sample paper + marking scheme

Here’s a step-by-step plan you can apply (for your Bengali paper preparation):

  1. Download both documents – Make sure you have the sample question paper and the marking scheme for Class 12 Bengali (Session 2025-26). For example, there is a marking scheme available published by CBSE. CBSE Academic+1

  2. First pass: Solve like exam day

    • Set aside the full time (3 hours for the paper) and attempt the sample paper without looking at the answers.

    • Treat it like a real exam: no notes, timed, and simulate exam conditions (quiet space, no interruptions).

  3. Second pass: Self-check with marking scheme

    • Use the marking scheme to evaluate your answers. Check how many marks you would get for each answer.

    • For long/descriptive answers, see what content/value-points the scheme expects. Compare with your answer: did you cover those?

    • For short/MCQ etc, check accuracy and make note of mistakes.

  4. Analyse your performance

    • Identify which types of questions you missed or took too long on (e.g., grammar section, creative writing, unseen passage).

    • Note weak areas: maybe vocabulary/grammar, maybe literary interpretation, maybe time taken.

  5. Targeted revision

    • Use your weak areas list to revise specifically: e.g., practise more comprehension passages, revise grammar rules, review literary texts from the syllabus.

    • Use extra practice papers or past year questions for those weak parts.

  6. Repeat under timed conditions

    • After revision, take another full-length sample paper (or past paper) and repeat steps 2–3. See improvements.

    • Use the marking scheme again for self-check.

  7. Exam day strategy based on pattern

    • Because the sample paper reveals the structure (for example: Part A objective type, Part B descriptive) and marks per section, plan your exam day: which section you’ll attempt first, how much time you’ll spend, etc.

    • For example, if the unseen comprehension is 10 marks, you might allocate about 25–30 minutes to it, etc.


🔍 How the marking scheme adds extra value

  • It shows how marks are distributed across sections: e.g., how many marks for MCQs, how many for long answers. For the Bengali paper: total marks 80, time 3 hours. CBSE Academic+1

  • It shows what “value-points” or key ideas the examiner expects in an answer. So you know what to include in your answers to get full marks. CBSE Academic

  • It lets you gauge depth of answer: For long answer questions, you’ll see how much explanation/detail is needed.

  • It helps you write concisely and avoid fluff: if you know only certain points get marks, you can focus on those rather than writing irrelevant material.

  • It helps you self-correct: After you mark yourself, you can see where you lost marks and what you missed.


🎯 Tips specific to Bengali subject paper

  • For comprehension/unseen passage: practise reading Bengali passages and answering MCQs or short‐answer questions on them. Time yourself.

  • For grammar section: revise common grammar aspects (as per your syllabus) and practise grammar questions.

  • For literature section: Make sure you know your prescribed text (poems, prose) and are ready for questions about themes, characters, literary devices. The marking scheme will help you see what depth is required.

  • For creative writing (letters, essays etc): Practice writing in Bengali, and check how many marks the scheme awards for structure, language, content.

  • Simulate full paper at least 2–3 times before the exam.

HERE THE SAMPLE PAPERS OF BENGALI SUBJECT CBSC 12TH 2026


SAMPLE PAPER


MARKING SCHEME 


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