The Bhutan Certificate of Secondary Education (BCSE) is the high-stakes Class 10 board examination administered by the Bhutan Council for School Examinations and Assessment (BCSEA). Written in English (Dzongkha excepted), it serves as the entry threshold to higher secondary school, government scholarships and government-funded tertiary education, and consistently shows the largest rural-urban performance gaps in the Bhutanese school system.
The Bhutan Certificate of Secondary Education (BCSE) — commonly referred to as the BCSE-X or "Class X exam" — is the national board examination written by Bhutanese students at the end of Class 10, the final year of basic education. It is administered by the Bhutan Council for School Examinations and Assessment (BCSEA), an autonomous body under the Ministry of Education and Skills Development.[1]
The examination is the principal gate through which students move into Higher Secondary School (Classes 11 and 12), into Technical Training Institutes, and — through scholarship competition — into government-funded tertiary education at the Royal University of Bhutan and abroad. The English subject is consistently the highest-scoring paper while Mathematics has been the lowest, with the BCSE 2024 cohort recording about 95 per cent pass in English and around 35 per cent pass in Mathematics.[2]
The BCSE is the senior of three centralised assessments BCSEA administers. The Class XII Bhutan Higher Secondary Education Certificate (BHSEC) sits above it; the Bhutan Certificate of Basic Education for Class VI sits below it. Together these three examinations form the assessment spine of Bhutanese school education.[3]
History
For most of the late twentieth century, school-leaving examinations in Bhutan were administered through Indian boards — the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education (ICSE) for Class X and the Indian School Certificate (ISC) for Class XII — under the Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations (CISCE) in Delhi, reflecting the close historical link between Bhutanese and Indian school systems. The Bhutan Board of Examinations (BBE) was set up to localise this assessment function, and was succeeded by the Bhutan Council for School Examinations and Assessment under the Education Sector Strategy reforms.[4]
By the mid-2010s the BCSE had been fully indigenised, with the syllabus, question papers and standard-setting procedures developed by the Royal Education Council and BCSEA jointly. The BCSE today is set, conducted and graded entirely within Bhutan, although BCSEA continues to engage with international assessment bodies for benchmarking and quality assurance.[1]
Structure
BCSE is a two-year course of study beyond Class VIII, with terminal external examinations at the end of Class X. All papers are written in English except for Dzongkha, the national language, and any foreign-language papers offered for foreign candidates. The standard subject load is generally five subjects: Dzongkha, English, Mathematics, Science (which may be offered as Physics, Chemistry and Biology individually at higher grades) and a social-studies paper covering History and Civics, with electives such as Economics, Geography or Information and Communication Technology offered at participating schools.[5]
BCSEA also publishes annual O-Grade and Examination-Administration documents that set out the procedures for conduct of the examination, marking, scrutiny and result declaration. Past papers are made publicly available on the BCSEA website to support student preparation.[6]
Recent Results
The BCSE 2024 results, declared in February 2025, gave an overall pass percentage of 74.56 per cent, described in local reporting as the best Class X result in four years. The class topper was Tashi Dhendup of Zilukha Middle Secondary School with 95 per cent. The English subject pass percentage was almost 95 per cent, while Mathematics recorded around 35 per cent — a long-standing pattern in BCSE outcomes that has driven a series of remediation efforts in mathematics teaching.[2]
Result patterns continue to reveal substantial disparities between urban and rural schools and between dzongkhags. The Ministry of Education and Skills Development has used these annual results, along with the Class VI BCBE and Class XII BHSEC outcomes, as inputs into school-improvement planning, teacher-deployment decisions and the design of curriculum-reform priorities under the post-2020 education-reform agenda and the Bhutan Baccalaureate framework.[7]
References
- Bhutan Council for School Examinations and Assessment — official site
- Class ten pass percentage at 74.56% — BBS
- BCSEA declares classes X and VI exam results — BBS
- BCSEA Background — Bhutan Council for School Examinations and Assessment
- BCSE 2022 Press Release — BCSEA
- BCSEA Operational Guidelines for Examination Administration 2025 — BCSEA
- Class X and VI result declarations — Ministry of Education and Skills Development, February 2025
See also
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