CAREERS

Taking Class 10 Boards and Confused About What’s Next? Read This First.

Every year, somewhere between the last exam and the result, the same conversation happens in lakhs of Indian households. The marks aren’t even out yet and someone is already asking: Science or Commerce? Engineering or medicine? What if you don’t get 90%?

The CBSE Class 10 Phase 1 exams will wrap up on March 11, 2026, and results are expected in May. For the 23 lakh-odd students who appeared this year, the next few weeks are going to feel like a waiting room with a lot of unsolicited advice in it. Most of that advice will be about marks. Almost none of it will be about the things that actually matter.

Here is what nobody tells you clearly enough.

Marks open doors. They don’t tell you which one to walk through.

Schools use your Class 10 boards’ scores to gate-keep stream selection. Many require above 70% for Science, and individual subject scores in Maths and Science matter even more than your aggregate. That part is real and worth knowing.

But marks being a qualifier is different from marks being a guide. A student who scrapes into Science because their parents pushed for it, with no interest in Physics or Chemistry, is going to spend two years miserable and then face Class 12 boards from that place. That is not a small thing. Class 12 boards marks are what actually determine college admissions. The stream you choose now shapes what those two years look like.

So before the result even comes, the first honest question isn’t “what did I score” but “what do I actually like spending time on?” Not what sounds impressive. Not what your cousin chose. What makes you lean forward when you’re studying it versus what makes you check how many pages are left.

The Science stream is not the only road to a good career.

This one needs to be said plainly because a generation of Indian families still hasn’t fully absorbed it.

Science with PCM (Physics, Chemistry, Maths) leads to engineering. Science with PCB (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) leads to medicine. Both are respected, both are hard, and JEE and NEET are genuinely brutal competitive exams that require two years of serious preparation on top of regular school. If you are going into that lane, go in with your eyes open about what the next two years will actually involve.

Commerce, on the other hand, is not a fallback. It opens doors to CA, finance, economics, management, entrepreneurship and business law. Some of these are among the better-paying careers in India right now. A CA who clears all three levels by their mid-20s is in a stronger financial position than most engineering graduates.

Arts and Humanities is where most people undersell the options. Law, journalism, psychology, civil services, design, urban planning, foreign languages, teaching and mass communication are all built on this foundation. UPSC toppers routinely come from Humanities. So do some of the most interesting careers.

The stream you choose is the start of a direction, not a destiny. But it matters enough to choose honestly.

Talk about affordability before it becomes a crisis.

This is the conversation families rarely have in advance, and it causes real damage when it hits later.

Coaching for JEE or NEET at a serious level costs anywhere from Rs 1 to 2 lakh a year at reputable institutes, and that’s before books, test series and the cost of repeating a year if needed. Many students spend a year or two after Class 12 boards preparing again if they don’t clear. That’s two to three years of family expense with no income, followed by a four-year engineering or five-year medicine degree.

Commerce and Humanities streams generally carry lower additional costs, and some of the professional qualifications in those tracks (CA, for example) can be pursued while working.

None of this means Science is the wrong choice if that’s genuinely where a student’s interest lies. It means the family needs to have the real conversation about what the next six to eight years of education will cost before locking in a direction. A student who has to drop out midway because the money ran out is worse off than one who chose a stream with a clearer, more affordable path from the beginning.

Aptitude and interest are not the same thing.

This is a subtler point but a real one. Some students are good at Maths because they’ve been drilled at it since Class 5, not because they find it interesting. Some students genuinely love Biology but freeze up under the pressure of NEET preparation because the exam and the subject are very different things.

If there’s access to a proper career counsellor before finalising stream selection, use it. Not the type that hands you a list of possibilities, but one who can sit down with a student and ask them direct questions about their thoughts and interests. For boards students in Classes 10 and 12, CBSE even provides free psycho-social therapy throughout the boards season. It’s something worth knowing.

The ideal option, if a formal counsellor is unavailable, is to have a specific discussion with a working expert in the sector the student is considering. Not a relative who will tell you that “engineering is very good,” but someone who will explain what a typical Tuesday in that field looks like.

You can change direction. But not without a cost.

Schools do sometimes allow stream changes after Class 11 admissions, if seats are available. Moving from Commerce or Arts to Science is almost impossible mid-way because of the subject foundation gap. Moving from Science to Commerce or Arts is easier but still disruptive.

The point is not that changing is impossible. It’s that the pressure to decide quickly, once results are out, pushes students toward choices made on incomplete information. If you genuinely don’t know yet, say so. Take the extra week. Talk to people. The admission process has more flexibility than parents in panic mode often believe.

One last thing. The Class 10 result is not a verdict on a student’s intelligence or their future. It’s a data point about how they performed in specific subjects in a specific exam format at a specific age. CBSE itself stopped publishing merit lists precisely to stop students being reduced to a number in a competition they didn’t ask to be in.

What comes next is a real decision that deserves real thought. Not panic, not comparison and not the assumption that one stream is inherently better than another. The students who do well in Class 12 and beyond are almost always the ones who made a choice that made sense for them, not the ones who chose what made sense to everyone else.

Riddhi Thakur

Riddhi is a journalism graduate who’s always felt more at ease asking the questions than answering them. For her, writing is a way to make sense of the noise, the silences, and everything in between. She’s drawn not just to the headlines, but digging into the quieter stories, the ones that often go unnoticed but deserve to be heard.

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