The Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC) and equivalent examinations of 2026 are set to begin across the country tomorrow, July 2, with 12,70,583 students preparing to sit for one of the nation's most significant academic milestone.
 
This year's figures tell a compelling story: female students have outpaced their male counterparts in participation and the humanities stream has emerged as the single largest group of examinees.
 
A Landmark in Participation

According to the Inter-Education Board Coordination Committee, a total of 12,70,583 students is registered under 11 education boards. Of them, 621,969 are boys and 648,614 are girls, meaning 26,645 more girls will take part in the exams than boys, indicating a continuation of a trend seen in recent years with female enrolments rising.
 
The students from 9,439 institutions will sit for the exams across 2,697 centers nationwide.
 
Prof Syed Akhtaruzzaman, Chairman of Dhaka Education Board and President of the Inter-Board Coordination Committee, told BSS here recently that the growing participation of girls is a highly positive sign for our education system.

"However, the slight decline in boys' participation will be examined. Teaching-learning gaps in past years may have contributed to this trend," he noted.
 
Board-wise Picture
 
The nine general education boards account for 10,69,714 candidates with 4,92,406 boys and 5,77,308 girls.
 
Across the nine general education boards, the distribution of examinees paints a diverse picture. 

Dhaka Board stands at the top with more than 3,03,000 candidates, including over 1,37,000 boys and 1,63,000 girls, reflecting the capital's dominance in student numbers.
 
Close behind, Rajshahi Board has around 1,41,000 examinees, with boys slightly outnumbering girls about 73,000 boys compared to 68,000 girls.
 
In Jessore, the total number of candidates is just over 1,17,000, where girls hold a slight edge with 60,205 compared to 57,005 boys.
 
Dinajpur Board follows with 1,13,479 examinees, again showing a female majority counts 59,043 girls against 54,436 boys.
 
Moving to the port city, Chattogram Board has nearly 100,000 candidates, with significantly ahead 56,506 girls compared to 43,182 boys.
 
A similar pattern is seen in Cumilla where out of 94,802 examinees, girls number 57,196, far surpassing the 37,606 boys.
 
In Mymensingh, the total number of candidates stands at 73,037, with girls slightly ahead at 38,724 compared to 34,313 boys.
 
Sylhet Board also reflects this trend and of its 71,611 candidates, 43,066 are girls, while boys number 28,545.
 
Finally, Barishal Board has the smallest cohort, with 58,664 examinees, including 31,759 girls and 26,905 boys.
 
Humanities Take the Lead

The most striking feature of this year's statistics is the dominance of the humanities stream.
 
Of the general board candidates, 617,697 are from humanities, nearly half of the total.
 
Science has 279,237 candidates, while business studies have a number of 169,683 candidates in total.
 
Describing the scenario, Professor Akhtaruzzaman explained that many students opt for humanities to complete education quickly and enter the workforce.
 
He added that science enrolment is hampered in rural colleges due to fear of difficulty, shortage of teachers and lack of laboratory facilities.
 
Madrasa and Technical Boards

Alongside general boards, madrasa and technical board exams will also begin at the same time on July 2.
 
This year Madrasa Board has a total of 92,905 candidates of which 52,011 boys and 40,894 girls. The exams have been planned to be takn across 461 centers countrywide.

Under the Technical education board, a total of 107,964 candidates of which 77,552 boys and 30,412 girls, will take part in HSC equivalent exam this year across 610 exam centers.
 
Within madrasa streams, humanities dominate with 84,616 candidates, while science has only 7,626 students and Mujabbid division counts 663.
 
Regular and Irregular Examinees

Of the total, 947,943 are regular candidates (2024-25 session) while 310,881 are irregular candidates who failed in previous years.
 
Among them, 195,106 failed in one subject, 64,670 in two subjects, and 6,740 applied for improvement exams.
 
A new uniformity

To reduce the discrimination among the educational boards and give more fair and equal results to students, the administration has moving toward uniformity from this year in preparing the question.
 
Noting the initiative, Prof S.M. Kamal Uddin Haydar, Secretary of Dhaka Education Board, said, "From this year, all nine general boards will conduct HSC exams with uniform question papers. From next year, madrasa and technical boards will also adopt common papers for general subjects."
 
Security Measures
To ensure fair exams, the education ministry and all education boards have taken maximum precautions. Question papers will be stored in treasury offices and verified three days before exams.

On exam days, papers will be transported under police escort with strict protocols for opening sealed packets only after confirmation codes are received.

In this regard, Inter-Education Board Coordination Committee President said country's nine general education boards will administer the HSC examinations using a single and uniform set of question papers and boards have taken the highest level of precaution in distributing and safeguarding the question papers.

Humanities / Education / Bangladesh

While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.

Copyright © 2026 THE BUSINESS STANDARD
All rights reserved.