What CBSE Language Arts really asks of us
Second period on Monday, my Class VIII English group had a slick American passage about school lunches—tight prose, wrong fit. The questions leaned on author’s craft jargon, not the CBSE-style blend of literal, inferential, and vocabulary-in-context. In CBSE, Section A wants concise evidence and reference-to-context; Section B expects formats (notice, letter, analytical paragraph) with function-first clarity; Section C rewards value-point coverage with text-rooted justification. If a handout ignores that rhythm, my students get fluent but not exam-ready.
I sort resources into two piles: on-topic (nice theme) and curriculum-fit (matches CBSE vocabulary, marks, and answer length). Fit means British spellings, extract-based stems like “Which word in the passage…” and “What does the phrase suggest?”, and mark guidance that nudges 30–40 word shorts and 100–120 word longs. Literature questions must respect NCERT chapters—Class IX “Beehive”/“Moments” or Class X “First Flight”/“Footprints Without Feet”—with evidence lines my kids can actually cite. I keep a living list in the ClassPods language arts community so I’m not reinventing Monday every week.