St. Anne’s Girls High School in Bengaluru accused of exam scam to falsely boost SSLC results

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Chaitanyesh
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St. Anne’s Girls High School in Bengaluru accused of exam scam to falsely boost SSLC results
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  • St. Anne’s Girls High School allegedly transferred students to a govt school to boost SSLC results
  • Nine students failed due to missing internal marks; FIR filed against school staff
  • Similar academic fraud was previously reported at Little Lilies School

A disturbing case of academic fraud has emerged from St. Anne’s Girls High School in Vasanth Nagar, Bengaluru, where the school allegedly manipulated student admissions to portray a 100% SSLC board exam result. The incident has drawn sharp criticism from parents and echoes a similar controversy reported earlier at Little Lilies School in Mahalakshmi Layout.

Also Read:Bengaluru: Little lilies school’s ranking obsession derails students’ futures

In a deceptive move, the school reportedly transferred about 10 students, primarily average-performing ones to a government institution, Corporation Girls School in Cleveland Town, without informing their parents. The students were allegedly enrolled as orphans or economically disadvantaged to qualify for admission while parents continued to pay tuition to the private school.

The malpractice was discovered when nine of the students failed the SSLC exams due to the absence of internal assessment marks, an essential part of the evaluation process. Without proper academic support or documentation, the students were left stranded academically.

Enraged by the revelation, parents filed a First Information Report (FIR) at High Grounds Police Station against the school’s principal and two teachers. Despite the registration of the FIR, parents allege that police have not taken any decisive action, prompting protests and calls for stricter accountability.

Parents and students have expressed outrage, accusing the school of ruining their academic future and demanding justice. This incident closely mirrors the scandal involving Little Lilies Education Society, where students were also exploited under the guise of private admissions.

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