Class X Board Result
Official CBSE Statement of Subject-wise Marks for Nitya Dey — Roll No. 19207182. Issued by Delhi Public School Vindhyanagar, Singrauli, Madhya Pradesh. Date of Birth: 16/08/2009.
Every score, certificate, and award here belongs to a real student — taught not just mathematics, but the discipline, rigour, and confidence to compete at the highest levels.
A student's result is not just a number — it's proof that the right guidance, at the right time, can unlock potential that was always there.
— Ambresh YadavEvery concept is built from the ground up — no shortcuts, no rote memorisation. Students learn to derive answers, not just recall them.
NTSE, AMC, FERMAT, Caribou — the training goes beyond the syllabus. Problems are selected to stretch thinking, not just test it.
The biggest barrier in mathematics is fear. The first goal in every session is to make the student believe they belong in the room.
Every certificate on this page is real and downloadable. No fabricated testimonials — just results earned by real students.
Nitya's journey is a textbook example of what happens when a student decides to take complete ownership of their learning. When we began our sessions, her grasp of Mathematics and Science fundamentals needed reinforcement — but what was striking from day one was her willingness to ask "why" instead of just memorising "how." That single habit changed everything that followed.
Watching her build her foundation back, brick by brick, was genuinely satisfying. Concepts she once stumbled over became second nature. Her CBSE Class X board results — 70 in Mathematics Standard, 67 in Science, 73 in English, 72 in Social Science — reflect not luck but sustained, methodical effort. Anyone who has sat for CBSE boards knows there is no margin for error and no second attempt; what you score is what you earned.
What excites me most about Nitya is not just where she finished, but the trajectory she is on. Students who learn to work through difficulty in Class X — instead of around it — almost always exceed expectations in Class XI and XII. She has the mindset, the habits, and now the proof. I am confident the next chapter of her academic journey will be even stronger than this one.
Official CBSE Statement of Subject-wise Marks for Nitya Dey — Roll No. 19207182. Issued by Delhi Public School Vindhyanagar, Singrauli, Madhya Pradesh. Date of Birth: 16/08/2009.
Vikhya is the kind of student who reminds a mentor why they teach in the first place. She came to me curious — and left every session more confident than she had arrived. What stood out almost immediately was her capacity for precision under pressure. In mathematics — especially at the competitive Olympiad level — exams are won or lost by a single misplaced step. Vikhya developed the discipline to slow down, check her reasoning, and trust her process when others would panic.
Earning a Silver Award at the FERMAT Mathematical Olympiad 2024–2025 National Round is a genuinely outstanding result for a Primary 4 student. FERMAT is no easy competition — it draws some of the strongest young mathematicians in the country. To be recognised at the National level at this age is a marker of serious talent, not luck.
And then there is the Caribou Mathematics Contest, where she ranked 46th of 140 globally at the Grade 3/4 level — placing in the top third of international participants. Caribou is run by the Centre for Education in Mathematics and Computing, University of Waterloo. These results don't happen by accident; they happen because of months of focused, deliberate practice. I am genuinely proud of Vikhya, and I expect we will see her name again in higher and higher levels of competition.
Awarded for excellent achievement in the National Round of the FERMAT Mathematical Olympiad 2024–2025. One of the most competitive international mathematics competitions for young learners.
Achieved a global ranking of 46th out of 140 participants at Grade 3/4 level — placing in the top third of international participants. Run by the Centre for Education in Mathematics and Computing, University of Waterloo.
There are students who win competitions, and there are students who build a body of work. Agnitraya is the latter — and in two years of mentorship, watching him grow from a capable Secondary 2 student into a multi-competition international champion has been one of the most genuinely remarkable things I have witnessed as a mentor.
His record is not the result of talent alone — it is the product of relentless, systematic preparation and an intellectual curiosity that never switched off. He competed in seven major competitions across 2024–2026, earning medals and certificates from some of the world's most respected mathematical bodies: the Mathematical Association of America, FERMAT, SEAMO, TIMO, and WMI. Each competition tests a different dimension of mathematical ability — speed, depth, creativity, and endurance under pressure. Agnitraya excelled across all of them.
The headline that still stops me is his AMC 10 Top 10% certificate (2025) — followed by qualifying for and participating in the American Invitational Mathematics Examination (AIME) in both 2025 and 2026. The AIME is invitation-only, awarded to fewer than 5% of the hundreds of thousands who sit the AMC globally. That Agnitraya qualified as a young student from India — and then came back and qualified again the following year — is exceptional by any standard.
What I value most in him is not the medals but the mindset: the discipline to show up every day, the humility to learn from every problem he gets wrong, and the drive to keep raising the ceiling. I have no doubt that his best results are still ahead of him.
Excellent achievement in the National Round of the FERMAT Mathematical Olympiad 2024–2025. Secondary 2, Global Public School.
View Certificate ↗Scored in the top 10% of all participants on the American Mathematics Competition 10 — one of the world's most prestigious high school mathematics competitions.
View Certificate ↗Qualified to compete in the AIME — invitation-only, awarded to fewer than 5% of AMC participants globally. A landmark achievement for any student at this level.
View Certificate ↗Awarded Merit in the WMI India Preliminary Round — Grade 8, Global Public School. Certified by WMI Organizing Committee, March 29–30, 2025.
View Certificate ↗Attained Bronze in the Southeast Asian Mathematical Olympiad (Paper E) 2025 — placing among the top 40% of thousands of participants from the region and beyond.
View Certificate ↗Outstanding achievement in SECONDARY 3 at the Thailand International Mathematical Olympiad Final Round 2025–2026 — held 7th–8th February 2026 at Bangkok, Thailand. Cert No: 204710.
View Certificate ↗Participated in the AIME for the second consecutive year — confirming that 2025 was no fluke. Qualifying twice in a row for the AIME is a distinction held by a tiny fraction of students worldwide.
View Certificate ↗What I remember most about Manasvi is her methodical, patient approach to problem-solving. She never rushed — even when the clock was against her. In timed competitions like the AMC, where time management is often the difference between a Credit and a Proficiency, this quality became her superpower rather than a weakness. She learned to trust her reasoning, and that trust is exactly what separates students who panic under examination conditions from those who perform.
Earning the AMC Certificate of Proficiency from the Australian Mathematics Competition is an outstanding achievement. Proficiency is awarded to students who place in the top 20% of their division globally — a benchmark thousands of students aim for and only a small fraction reach. For Manasvi to achieve this in Year 8, Junior Division, in a competition that is sat by students from across India, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and beyond, is genuine evidence of mathematical strength.
Beyond the certificate itself, what stays with me about Manasvi is her quiet confidence. She doesn't need to announce her ability — she demonstrates it on the page. The ceiling for this student is very high indeed, and it has been a real privilege to be part of her journey. I expect she will continue to outperform her own expectations in the years ahead.
The AMC Certificate of Proficiency is awarded to students who achieve in the top 20% of their division globally — one of the highest non-prize recognitions given by the Australian Maths Trust. Awarded to Manasvi Gupta at Year 8, Junior Division. A globally respected mark of exceptional mathematical ability.
Whether you're preparing for CBSE boards, NTSE, or international mathematics competitions — the same structured, rigorous approach that produced these results is available to you.