For many families in Hyderabad, State Board is the practical choice — local languages, textbook alignment, and smoother continuity. But parents still ask the same question: "My child is doing okay in school, but will they manage board exams confidently, English-medium problem statements, and later the jump to Intermediate and entrance exams?" That is exactly where structured tuition matters — not for more homework, but for foundations and exam-writing.
The Telangana SSC Class 10 Maths syllabus covers 14 chapters. Even when students "know formulas," the usual score drop happens in algebraic reasoning (steps 2-4 of a solution), geometry proof structure, and trigonometry identities used in multi-step problems.
The TS SSC Maths exam is divided into Paper I and Paper II, with 50 marks per paper: 40 marks for theory and 10 marks for internal assessment per paper.
| Component | Paper I | Paper II |
|---|---|---|
| Theory marks | 40 | 40 |
| Internal assessment | 10 | 10 |
| Total per paper | 50 | 50 |
A student can lose a full grade not because they "don't understand," but because they cannot finish the paper in time, they do not present steps clearly, or they are inconsistent in internal assessment tasks. Recent Telangana SSC results reported a 92.78% pass rate in 2025 and around 91.31% in 2024 — but a high pass rate does not answer the parent question: "Will my child score high enough to choose the next step confidently?" That requires targeted practice on high-yield chapters and exam writing.
Choosing between CBSE and the Telangana State Board (TSBIE) is a big decision. CBSE is standardized across India, focusing on conceptual clarity and aligning with national exams like JEE and NEET. The Telangana State Board has a rigorous syllabus that covers considerable depth, but teaching in many local schools often leans toward rote learning rather than practical application. If you are considering CBSE tuition, here is how the two boards compare.
| Aspect | CBSE Mathematics | Telangana State Board Mathematics |
|---|---|---|
| Syllabus depth | Standardized, conceptually driven, and highly integrated across grade levels. | Detailed in raw content, but heavily dependent on localized textbook formats. |
| Resource availability | Massive, nationwide availability of high-quality mock papers and resources. | Resources are primarily limited to state-specific publications like Telugu Academy books. |
| Medium of instruction | Universally standardized in English and Hindi. | Frequently incorporates regional languages, which aids local comprehension. |
| Career implications | Aligns seamlessly with premier national entrance exams (JEE, NEET). | Ideal for students prioritizing state-level universities and local entrance tests. |
Bottom line for parents: CBSE offers wider national mobility, while State Board aligns well with state-level entrance exams like EAMCET. Regardless of the board, the goal at Ankuram is to ensure students build deep problem-solving skills they need to succeed.
If your child is Telugu medium (or bilingual at home), they often have the maths ability but struggle with specific aspects of English-medium examination.
My approach: we do language-light maths practice first (pure calculation and structure), then shift to language-heavy word problems with clear templates. This builds confidence without overwhelming the student.
Students moving from State Board to CBSE or ICSE often need stronger algebra fluency, faster trigonometry manipulation, and higher expectations of "show your work." The exam formats are genuinely different, and without targeted bridge work the student can feel disoriented for months. See our CBSE tuition and ICSE tuition pages for details on those boards.
If the student's longer-term plan includes engineering or medical admissions, the exam logic changes at Intermediate level. The TG EAPCET-2026 instruction booklet describes a 3-hour (180 minutes) computer-based test with 160 multiple-choice questions: 80 Maths + 40 Physics + 40 Chemistry, each question carrying one mark. Eligibility is tied to the Intermediate (10+2) pattern with Mathematics, Physics, and Chemistry.
So for a Class 9-10 student, the right question is: "Are we building the algebra and trigonometry base that makes Intermediate + EAPCET manageable?" That is where I focus: foundations now, reduced panic later.
Students from local state board schools, such as Sarada High School and MGM International High School, often use Telugu Academy publications. While the intermediate maths syllabus has great depth, the teaching often leans on rote memorization. Students frequently find it difficult to translate theoretical knowledge into practical problem-solving scenarios. We explicitly target this gap, ensuring they develop the application-based reflexes needed for board exams and later for national entrance tests.
We teach State Board students with the same principles we use for international boards: diagnose first, correct misconceptions immediately, and practice exactly what the exam rewards.
Every new student begins with a 90-minute diagnostic assessment (₹750). This tells me whether the problem is concept gaps from earlier classes, exam-writing skills, or time management — and it decides the teaching plan.
The child must participate — there is no hiding in a batch of 3-5. Every student solves, every mistake is caught, and every doubt is addressed the same session.
Weekly goals plus revision loops ensure we stay aligned with the school pace while also filling foundational gaps. Our teaching method builds steady improvement, not last-minute cramming.
Real-time correction via WhatsApp photo submissions during live sessions means online students get the same level of scrutiny as in-person students. See our online maths tuition page for details.
Commonly listed chapters include Real Numbers, Sets, Polynomials, Linear Equations in Two Variables, Quadratic Equations, Progressions, Coordinate Geometry, Similar Triangles, Tangents and Secants, Mensuration, Trigonometry, Applications of Trigonometry, Probability, and Statistics.
It is typically described as Paper I and Paper II, with marks split across the two papers and internal assessment included alongside theory marks — 50 marks per paper total.
Yes. We build bilingual comprehension systematically: first maths structure and pure calculation, then word-problem translation speed and exam writing in English.
Reports for 2025 cited 92.78% pass rate, and 2024 cited around 91.31%, with girls outperforming boys in both years. However, a high pass rate does not reflect individual scoring — targeted practice is what separates a pass from a strong score.
The TG EAPCET booklet describes a 3-hour computer-based test with 160 MCQs: 80 Maths, 40 Physics, 40 Chemistry, one mark per question.
Yes. We run a bridge plan focused on algebra fluency, geometry proof structure, and exam-writing discipline so the student does not feel like they changed countries academically.
Start with the 90-minute diagnostic assessment (₹750) so we know exactly what to fix first.
Book a diagnostic test to understand your child's current level, identify chapter-specific gaps, and build the right State Board learning plan.
If your child may move to CBSE after Class 10, see our CBSE tuition in Jubilee Hills page for details on how we support the transition.
ICSE has a very different exam format with detailed step-by-step proofs. Read our ICSE tuition in Hyderabad page to compare.
Looking for online State Board tuition? View our online maths tuition plans →