The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) will allow CTET candidates to edit their applications from March 19 to March 26. The Board gives one-time chance to candidates, who have registered for the exam, for editing their application form.
"The candidates shall be permitted to make on-line correction in their following particulars i.e. name, father and mother name, date of birth, category, differently abled category, Paper opted (i.e. Paper I or Paper II), Subject for Paper II, First choice of Centre, language I and/or II opted, Address of correspondence and the name of the Institution/College/University from where he/she has obtained his/her B.Ed Degree/Diploma in Elementary Education etc.," the exam notice reads.
"This facility will be provided only once. Fee once remitted shall not be refunded or adjusted for future test under any circumstances," the notice also reads.
The exam is scheduled to be held on July 5.
CTET will be held in 112 cities across the country. It will be an OMR-based test. The exam will be bilingual, i.e. the questions will be in English and Hindi and will be held for two papers where paper I will be for primary classes (class 1 to 5) and paper II will be for upper primary classes (class 6 to 8).
The Ministry of Human Resource Development has entrusted the responsibility of conducting the CTET to the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE). The Central Teacher Eligibility Test (CTET) is held for recruitment of teachers from class 1 to class 8.
Click here for more Jobs News
CBSE Warns Against Body Organising Sports In Its Name CBSE Brainstorms When And How To Conduct Board Exams Twice A Year CTET 2024: Central Teacher Eligibility Test Answer Key To Be Out Soon, Check Details Why BJP Lost Lok Sabha Polls In Uttar Pradesh - 6 Reasons In Party Report World's Largest Isolated Tribe Makes Rare Appearance In New Footage "Re-Exam Only On Concrete Footing": Supreme Court On NEET-UG Row Nissan X-Trail Unveiled Ahead Of India Launch "Avoid Travel": India Issues Advisory For Nationals In Bangladesh Amid Unrest 'Dark Comets' May Pose Bigger Threat Than Previously Thought To Earth Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.