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A lot of students ask us the same thing before joining: "What exactly will I study in B.Ed?" And honestly, that is the right question to ask before you commit two years of your life to a program.

So let us walk you through the full picture. Not just a list of subject names, but what actually happens inside the program, what the exam pattern looks like, and what you should know before you apply.

 

The Two-Year Structure: How It Works

B.Ed runs across four semesters. The first year is more about building your understanding of education as a concept. The second year pushes you into actual classrooms and real teaching situations.

Most people expect it to be like a regular degree where you sit in lectures and write exams. It is not. The practical side of this program is just as heavy as the theory, and for good reason. You cannot learn how to teach by only reading about it.

 

Year 1: The Subjects That Build Your Base

For the first year, you will learn about different topics related to understanding children, teaching, and the entire education sector. Some of the important topics are Childhood and Growing Up, Contemporary India and Education, Learning and Teaching, Language Across the Curriculum, and Pedagogy of the subjects you choose for schools.

Childhood and Growing Up is a topic that most students overlook at first glance. However, it involves knowledge of child development, emotional development, behavior patterns, and the impact of home conditions on learning. When you have to teach an entire class of thirty children someday, it offers you a true insight.

Contemporary India and Education deals with all aspects of India’s education sector, its history, evolution, policy changes, impact of the National Education Policy, and more. Though it may not be one of the most interesting courses, it holds immense importance once you join the school sector.

 

Year 2: Less Theory, More Action

The second year changes the emphasis. You learn about topics such as Creating an Inclusive School, Knowledge and Curriculum, Assessment for Learning, and Gender, School and Society. But what consumes most of your time is the school internship.

For sixteen weeks. This is the minimum period for which you have to teach in a school according to the B.Ed Syllabus 2026. Each day, you make lesson plans, conduct classes, get observed by your mentor, and receive criticism that may sting at first but ultimately helps you improve.

Courses such as the B.Ed program at Kurukshetra University are designed to meet the criteria of NCTE and schools in Haryana simultaneously. If you intend to teach in Haryana once you complete your studies, the content you learn remains pertinent to your future profession.

 

The Exam Pattern: What to Expect When Results Are Near

Theory papers carry 80 to 100 marks in the final exam and around 20 to 25 marks in the internal assessment. Internals come from class assignments, presentations, and tests throughout the semester. So you cannot just show up at the end and hope to pass.

Practicals work differently. Your portfolio, live teaching performance, viva-voce, and project submissions all count. You need to clear each component separately. The total marks across all four semesters usually fall between 1400 and 1600, depending on the university.

One thing students often do not realize: scoring well in practicals has a bigger impact on your final grade than most expect. Do not treat the internship as just a formality.

 

The Admission Side of Things

The B.Ed Admission Process 2026 in most North Indian states runs on merit. Your graduation percentage decides whether you make the list. The minimum requirement is 50%, with a 5% relaxation for reserved category students.

Applications typically open between June and August. You register on the university portal, submit your documents, and wait for the merit list to come out. After that, it moves quickly. Fee payment, verification, and seat confirmation all happen within a short window.

Missing a deadline or uploading the wrong document can cost you your seat. That is where a lot of students quietly lose their chance. If you want someone to track this process with you and make sure nothing slips, that is exactly what we do at Srishti Admission Point.

 

The TET Question Everyone Keeps Asking

Many students want to know whether they can teach in a school after B.Ed without clearing TET. The short answer is yes, in private schools. Private unaided schools are not legally bound to hire only TET-cleared candidates. Many of them are shortlisted based on interviews and teaching demos. A solid B.Ed degree and a confident demo lesson can get you a job.

But if you want a government school posting, a B.Ed without TET will not take you far. State-level TET or CTET clearance is mandatory for government recruitment. So while private school jobs remain accessible, clearing TET opens a completely different and much larger set of opportunities.

 

One Last Thing Before You Decide

B.Ed Syllabus 2026 is built to produce teachers who can actually handle a classroom, not just pass written exams. The combination of theory, internship, and practical evaluation is designed to challenge you, and it will.

If you are serious about getting into the right college with the right guidance, reach out to Srishti Admission Point. We have been helping students from Haryana, UP, Rajasthan, and Delhi navigate admissions since 2008, and we know where the process usually breaks down.

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