MUMBAI: Rote learning by
students and the Institute of Chartered Accountants in India's decision
to have a "stringent grace marks" policy could be the reason behind the
shocking dip in the final chartered accountancy (CA) results announced
on Wednesday. Only 3.11% of the 32,536 candidates cleared it, the lowest
pass rate in recent years.
Several
students found the question papers on the tougher side. Even topper
Gaurav Shrawagi claimed the accounts paper was tricky. "One had to read
the questions carefully before attempting them," he said. Delhi's Mridu
Garg, who came second, also said, "It was more practical-oriented."
But
ICAI president Subodh Agrawal reiterated that the results reflected
students' performances and their way of studying. "Students need to
focus on their articleship training very sincerely. They are supposed to
study carefully the material provided by the institute to score better.
Practical knowledge is the plus-point of articleship," said Agrawal.
Kirti Agrawal, secretary of the Nagpur branch of the western region of
ICAI, had also pointed out that students tried to memorize study
material without understanding the basic concept. "Sheer reading without
understanding and over-dependence on private coaching have scaled down
the results. Students need to focus on how to acquire knowledge," she
had said.
According to experts, the institute's
"sudden decision to be strict with grace marks also led to the low pass
rate". CA Arun Giri, who writes a blog on ICAI affairs, said, "Now they
have seem to have decided to give grace marks only in rare cases, such
as when there is a mistake in a question paper." But a sudden clampdown
on grace marks will definitely affect candidates," said Giri.
When
asked about the strict grace-mark policy, ICAI president Subodh Agrawal
did not wish to comment. as "several policy issues were decided from
time to time."
The
president of ICAI, Subodh Agrawal, however, reiterated that the results
reflect students' performances. "Students need to focus on their
article-ship training very sincerely and also read the study material
provided by the institute to score better. Practical knowledge is the
plus point of article-ship," said Agrawal.
Those
in the industry, however, seem to be happy with the low pass percentage
as "the low number will ensure quality CAs". Professor J K Shah, who
runs a chain of CA coaching schools, said, the low success rate is a
good sign for the industry.
"The
ICAI has corrected the problem in their exam system. Recently, the pass
percentage was on the higher side, leading to an excessive supply of
CAs. Qualified CAs were getting a starting package of not more than Rs
5,000-10,000 per month, Several were jobless," he said. Shah added there
were more CAs coming out in the market than what met the eye. "The
success rate of students who cleared individual groups was also as high
as 25-30%. So if a student cleared group I, and clears the group II
subsequently, he also is a CA. This year, the pass percentage in
individual groups also is in single digit, which will keep a check on
the quality," he added.
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