Incorrect information in the new handbooks for the academic time 2023 is being fixed by the National Curriculum and Textbook Board( NCTB) authorities. 


In April, a streamlined interpretation is anticipated to be made available. According to NCTB representatives, the streamlined handbooks will not be handed to pupils in print form until the first day of 2024, but they will be published on the NCTB website in April. According to NCTB Member( Curriculum) Prof Moshiuzzaman, if any fresh variations are demanded during this time, they will be made following a thorough evaluation.



The appointment of two panels on the crimes was blazoned by the Ministry of Education on the same day. A commission of specialists will be in charge of making the changes, and a commission of investigators will decide whether the crimes were committed on purpose or by accident. Education Minister Dr Dipu Moni responded to a question about the composition of the two panels by saying," There will be health, religious, and professional specialists on one of the panels.


They will look over everything for crimes and fix them. "A substitute panel made up of experts and properly trained government representatives will be established to determine whether the wrongdoings were committed on purpose or accidentally. Will be taken after a disquisition, she pledged, If there's any evidence of negligence. The minister continued by saying that the two panels' specifics would be revealed on Sunday.


Does the error-detecting system bear an upgrade?


The NCTB officers claim that the text class body conducts ongoing exploration to identify grammatical and spelling faults, outdated information, and structural and factual excrescencies. still, preceptors still hold the NCTB responsible for failing to catch some crimes in handbooks over time. For the academic time 2023, the class 6 English text contains several grammatical and spelling faults, while the history text contains factual inaccuracies.


It's falsely claimed in a chapter of class 9 and 10 texts" Bangladesh History and World Civilization" that the Pakistan Army tortured and destroyed Bangladesh from March 26 to December 16, 1971. The Pakistan Army did, in fact, start Operation Searchlight on the evening of March 25 of that time. The NCTB corrected nine crimes, including the bones noted above, on January 17. When communicated, NCTB Chairman Prof. Md. Farhadul Islam claimed that despite multitudinous rechecks and assessments by subject experts, literal deformations have been present in handbooks two times.



He proceeded," A clarification from the subject expert has been turned in and is being analyzed." In 62 educational institutions across the nation, including 51 secondary seminaries, nine madrasas, and two specialized institutes, the new class was enforced last time as part of a trial program. In March, a platoon from the NCTB will go to the seminaries to collect opinions from the pupils, preceptors, parents, and other interested parties. 


The authors' panel will be given instructions to address crimes, substance, and other material issues in the new class by April grounded on the data and compliances supplied. Before, NCTB representatives informed this journalist that the new academy handbooks mustn't support any form of prejudice. The authorities, still, won't apply any reforms that are solely motivated by religious persuasions. 


NCTB Chairman Prof. Md. Farhadul Islam responded that there was no problem with staffing when questioned why so numerous miscalculations had been ignored. In order to avoid crimes and contestation, he continued," We have the plan to release a new text as a dummy in the public sphere, and it'll be submitted to some picky educational institutions for editing and to descry miscalculations."