Railway Accounts Department Examinations

Showing posts with label LDCE 2026. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LDCE 2026. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Normalization in Railway LDCE Examinations - First time


The “normalisation process” mentioned in the Railway Board letter click for RB Letter is a statistical adjustment method used when an exam is conducted in multiple sessions/days 📊.

👉 Why is it needed?

When the same exam is held on different dates (like 24 May & 31 May), the difficulty level may not be exactly the same:

  • One paper may be slightly tough

  • Another may be slightly easy

👉 Without correction, candidates writing the easier paper may get an unfair advantage.


✅ Simple Meaning 

Normalisation = Adjusting marks so that all candidates are treated fairly, regardless of which day they wrote the exam.


🔍 Practical Example

Example 1: Two Exam Days

  • Day 1 (24 May) → Paper is tough

    • Average marks: 40/100

  • Day 2 (31 May) → Paper is easy

    • Average marks: 60/100

Now compare two candidates:

  • Candidate A (Day 1): scored 50

  • Candidate B (Day 2): scored 60

👉 At first glance, B looks better.
👉 But actually:

  • A scored above average in a tough paper

  • B scored average in an easy paper

✅ After normalisation:

  • A’s marks may be increased

  • B’s marks may be slightly reduced or adjusted

👉 So that both are judged on a common scale


Example 2: Real-Life Analogy 🎯

Think of it like this:

  • One teacher sets a very difficult question paper

  • Another sets an easy paper

If we compare raw marks directly, it is unfair.
So we adjust marks based on overall performance of each group.


⚙️ How it works (Conceptually)

Railways (like RRB exams) use:

  • Average marks of each session

  • Highest marks

  • Distribution of scores

👉 Then apply a formula to bring all candidates onto a uniform level

(Exact formula is technical — not needed for exam purpose)


🎯 Key Takeaways (Exam-Oriented)

  • Used when exam is conducted in multiple shifts/dates

  • Ensures fairness & parity

  • Based on relative performance, not just raw marks

  • Common in RRB, SSC, Banking exams


⚠️ Important Insight for LDCE Candidates

👉 Don’t worry about:

  • Which date you get

  • Whether paper is tough or easy

👉 Focus on:

  • Performing better than others in your session

Because finally, your rank depends on normalised score, not raw score ✔️


LDCE 2026 Exam - Revised Dates 24th May & 31st May 2026

 

Click for LDCE 2026 Exam Revised Dates - Railway Board Letter dated 02.04.2026