CBSE Class 10 Maths Exam Analysis 2024: The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) on March 11 conducted the standard math and basic math paper of Class 10. Students and experts found both papers as easy to comprehend and well-balanced. The difficulty level of the CBSE Math Class 10 questions was easy to moderate. The CBSE standard mathematics question paper for Class 10 was moderate and encompassed all the necessary skills outlined in the syllabus, Anjani Rai, Coordinator, VidyaGyan School Bulandshahr (UP) said. Students added that there were no unexpected or unfamiliar questions that could unsettle examinees. However, students encountered difficulty with a case study question from the Real Number chapter, and found it to be tricky. "In Section A, the questions were straightforward and easy and only 1 or 2 were a bit tricky. In Section B and C, the questions were short and easy to solve as they were expected. Section D was surely the easiest as we had solved majority questions in classes. Section E, however, had case based questions which needed logical thinking," Nishita Kalita, Class 10 student from DPS, Duliajan, told indianexpress.com. Another student, Tanush Rajpurohit, from Billabong High International School, Malad said: "Section A was pretty easy with direct and easy questions with not very lengthy calculation. No question was of a new kind. Questions in Section B were very straightforward. In section C - the three-marker questions were pretty simple with no lengthy calculations and easy concepts. In section D, all five markers were easy and one question was directly asked from NCERT textbook. The statistics of five marks were not lengthy or calculative. Section E had case-based questions which were as expected very easy and direct. Overall, I found the paper to be in the range from easy to moderate and not lengthy. Even competency-based questions were easy.” The multiple-choice questions (MCQs) were notably straightforward and would likely result in high scores for students, Kiran Sharma TGT- Mathematics, Manav Rachna International School Sector-51 Mayfield Garden, Gurugram said. Some experts have also pointed out that not all questions were from the textbook, but the questions were largely based on the format of sample papers. "Some questions weren't exactly from the textbook, but they were simple enough for students to handle without much trouble. Most questions were easy to answer if students had studied well. Even the questions that were a bit different didn't need too much thinking. It was a direct assessment that allowed students to demonstrate their understanding of various mathematical concepts," said Charu Agrawal, HOD Mathematics, Shiv Nadar School Gurugram. As per Ajay Pal Singh, Principal of Bhai Parmanand Vidya Mandir, the CBSE basic mathematics paper featured logical questions that required a comprehensive understanding of the chapters. While section A presented easy level questions, section B was comparatively simpler and sections C and D posed an above-average challenge. Section E had a moderate difficulty level questions, he explained.