Siddiqui of DJ Sindh Government Science College received 981 marks out of total 1,100, securing 89.18 percent marks and sixth position. He was the only young male among other top five position holders.
Karishma Kumari of DA Degree College for Women in Phase VIII clinched overall first position with 999 marks (90.82 percent) while Rimsha Irfan from Sir Syed Government Girls College Nazimabad bagged the second position with 988 marks (89.82 percent).
Hira Iqbal Naviwala of Aga Khan Higher Secondary School bagged the third position with 985 marks, 89.55 percent.
The top six position holders blamed poor service of K-Electric and stated that prolonged electricity failures had disturbed their studying schedule at a number of occasions. All of them have declared Dow University for Health Science as their first choice for a professional college.
They said syllabus could be improved with the help of seasoned educationists and remarked that government colleges needed a lot of more attention from the competent authorities. They also claimed that education standard in the city had been decreasing for various reasons.
Karishma Kumari said it seemed that the Cambridge system of education was way ahead of other educational boards.
Rimsha Irfan received a warm welcome from the chief guest, the chief secretary of Sindh, Muhammad Siddiq Memon, when the guests were informed that her father earned minimum wage and her mother was a government school teacher. She said she had worked hard and getting the second position was a pleasant surprise for her.
Hira Iqbal asked the government and educationists to find out the reasons due to which the country’s education system had failed to deliver results while expressing her interest in teaching as a profession.
Cash reward
The BIEK chairman Muhammad Akhtar Ghori announced cash rewards of Rs50, 000, Rs30, 000 and Rs20, 000 for the first, second and third position holders, respectively. He said that board had delivered the result a month before the deadline of the education steering committee.