{"id":7241,"date":"2026-04-23T00:56:05","date_gmt":"2026-04-22T19:26:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/from-chemo-sessions-to-a-score-of-96-6-in-cbse-class-10-aarav-vats-story-is-bigger-than-marks\/"},"modified":"2026-04-23T00:56:05","modified_gmt":"2026-04-22T19:26:05","slug":"from-chemo-sessions-to-a-score-of-96-6-in-cbse-class-10-aarav-vats-story-is-bigger-than-marks","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/from-chemo-sessions-to-a-score-of-96-6-in-cbse-class-10-aarav-vats-story-is-bigger-than-marks\/","title":{"rendered":"From chemo sessions to a score of 96.6% in CBSE Class 10, Aarav Vats\u2019 story is bigger than marks"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> <br \/>\n<\/p>\n<div>\n<div class=\"e9jwa\">\n<div class=\"vdo_embedd\">\n<div class=\"GfdvZ\">\n<section class=\"_bIDB  clearfix id-r-component leadmedia undefined undefined  E9tg9 \" style=\"top:0px\">\n<div class=\"_bIDB\" data-ua-type=\"1\" onclick=\"stpPgtnAndPrvntDefault(event)\">\n<div class=\"ypVvZ\">\n<div class=\"WGttI\"><img src=\"https:\/\/static.toiimg.com\/thumb\/msid-130441498,imgsize-59516,width-400,height-225,resizemode-4\/130441498.jpg\" alt=\"From chemo sessions to a score of 96.6% in CBSE Class 10, Aarav Vats\u2019 story is bigger than marks\" title=\"Aarav Vats scored 96.6% in the CBSE Class 10 exam while battling cancer\" decoding=\"async\" fetchpriority=\"high\"\/><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"Ta7d_ img_cptn\"><span title=\"Aarav Vats scored 96.6% in the CBSE Class 10 exam while battling cancer\">Aarav Vats scored 96.6% in the CBSE Class 10 exam while battling cancer<\/span><\/div>\n<\/section>\n<\/div><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>A board-exam result usually arrives wrapped in the familiar noise of percentages, cut-offs, school-wise tallies and the annual frenzy over who scored what. Aarav Vats\u2019 marksheet carries all of that, of course.<!-- --> It says he scored 96.6% in the 2026 CBSE Class 10 board examinations. But it also carries another, more hard-won story than just the percentage alone can tell. <a href=\"https:\/\/timesofindia.indiatimes.com\/topic\/aarav\" styleobj=\"[object Object]\" class=\"\" commonstate=\"[object Object]\" frmappuse=\"1\">Aarav<\/a>, a student of Amity International School, Saket, got to this score while undergoing treatment for lymphoblastic lymphoma, a rare and aggressive form of <a href=\"https:\/\/timesofindia.indiatimes.com\/astrology\/horoscope\/cancer\" styleobj=\"[object Object]\" class=\"\" commonstate=\"[object Object]\" frmappuse=\"1\">cancer<\/a>, and the months leading up to the examination were shaped by chemotherapy, physiotherapy, physical exhaustion and the far more intimate labour of learning how not to surrender to fear, alongside the all-too-natural exam anxiety.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"9\"\/>What makes Aarav\u2019s story moving is not merely that he did well despite adversity, a phrase so overused that it often drains real suffering of its original texture. It is that he seems to have met illness with a kind of unusual steadiness, and met studies with patience, method and a quiet refusal to let a diagnosis become the single fact around which his entire young life would now be arranged. That is where the story really lives, in the temperament that carried him to that 96.6%. And that temperament, as his own account shows, was carved out of something more than grit. It was shaped by teachers who adjusted to his hours, parents who never weaponised marks, and a mind that continued, even through illness, to stay curious about the world beyond the textbook.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"13\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>The diagnosis that tested, but didn\u2019t defeat Aarav<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"15\"\/>When Aarav first learnt about his condition, the full gravity of it did not land at once. That, perhaps, is one of the strange mercies of childhood. <!-- -->Sometimes, the mind does not rush to catastrophise with the speed adults normally do. \u201cWhen I first learnt about my condition, I didn\u2019t think about it too much because at that time I didn\u2019t realise how serious it was,\u201d he says. \u201cAfter about two months of chemotherapy, I read about it and told myself it wasn\u2019t something I should be scared of.<!-- --> I even told my parents that I understood my condition.\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"20\"\/>This mindset seems to return again and again through his account: Absorb what is happening, do not collapse before it, and move forward one day at a time. <!-- -->\u201cI kept a \u2018never lose hope, never give up\u2019 attitude,\u201d Aarav says. \u201cI followed what my doctors and my parents told me, and that helped me in my recovery.\u201d <span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"24\"\/>He now says the experience has changed the way he looks at both life and achievement. \u201cNow, I look at life a little differently. I feel health is more important. Studies are important too, but for me, being healthy matters more.\u201d This line is almost deceptively simple, but it carries the force of something learnt from the body\u2019s own trial.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"27\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>A routine built around treatment, fatigue and recovery<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"29\"\/>For many students, board preparation means longer hours, stricter schedules, fewer distractions. For Aarav, it meant learning how to fit academics into a day already claimed, in large measure, by treatment. \u201cIn the morning, I used to go for chemotherapy and physiotherapy,\u201d he says. \u201cBy the time I came home, I would be quite tired, so I would take a nap. After that, there was often another physiotherapy session.\u201d That is not the kind of timetable from which one expects a high board score to emerge.<!-- --> And yet, somehow, that is precisely what happened.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"33\"\/>What helped was flexibility, accommodation and a school that appears to have understood that discipline is sometimes best protected not by rigidity, but by kindness. \u201cMy teachers were very flexible with their timings,\u201d Aarav says. \u201cThey would take classes whenever I was available \u2014 sometimes in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon, and even late at night. They cleared my doubts whenever I needed, even around 11 pm.<!-- -->\u201d One can imagine the emotional effect of such availability on a child trying to keep pace with school while his body is being asked to endure far more than most children\u2019s bodies are ever asked to.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"37\"\/>He says he would typically study for around five to six hours a day \u2014 three to four hours through classes his teachers took for him, and another two or three hours spent learning from books, writing and practising questions. That number, on its own, may not sound extraordinary in India\u2019s exam culture. <!-- -->But in Aarav\u2019s case, the context changes everything. These were reclaimed hours, pieced together from fatigue, recovery, travel for treatment and the ordinary emotional drain that serious illness leaves behind.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"41\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>How Aarav studied when time was short<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"43\"\/>If illness altered the quantity of time available to Aarav, it also shaped the quality of his preparation. \u201cIn terms of studies, the biggest challenge was that I couldn\u2019t give as much time as I wanted because of chemotherapy and physiotherapy,\u201d Aarav says. <!-- -->\u201cI had to cover a large portion in a much shorter time and understand concepts quickly.\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"47\"\/>That emphasis on concepts became even more crucial because time itself had become scarce. \u201cSince I didn\u2019t have enough time to memorise everything, I focused more on understanding the concepts. I also practised sample papers and the questions given by my teachers.\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"49\"\/>The sample papers, in fact, seem to have played a decisive role in addressing one very practical difficulty: Speed. <!-- -->\u201cDuring my pre-boards and mid-term exams, my speed was quite slow, and I even had to leave some questions,\u201d he says. \u201cMy teachers advised me to focus on more sample papers, and that made a big difference. It helped improve my speed a lot. By the time I reached the board exams, I was able to attempt all the questions, and my speed was back to normal.<!-- -->\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"54\"\/>Notably, he did all this without relying on a conventional coaching ecosystem. <!-- -->\u201cI didn\u2019t really take any coaching or tuitions,\u201d Aarav says. \u201cMy school supported me a lot, so I didn\u2019t feel the need for it.\u201d He used some YouTube videos and AI to create practice tests and identify likely question types. But when he speaks of support, his language returns, again and again, to people rather than tools. \u201cAI,\u201d he says, \u201cmay transform education, but it cannot replace teachers and their experience.<!-- -->\u201d <span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"59\"\/>But beneath the flexibility of teachers, the support of technology and the absence of coaching, the real strength of Aarav\u2019s preparation lay in the way he approached difficulty.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"62\"\/>\u201cWhenever I find a concept, subject, or chapter difficult, I try not to stress about it,\u201d he says. \u201cI take it line by line and understand it slowly. Instead of memorising definitions, I prefer to write things in my own words.\u201d <span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"64\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"cdatainfo modify_cdata_list_style id-r-component \" data-pos=\"65\">\n<h2>The people who held him up<\/h2>\n<\/div>\n<div data-pos=\"0\" class=\"id-r-component iIpbx undefined  &#10;        \">\n<div><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\".\" msid=\"130441574\" width=\"\" title=\"For Aarav, the electric guitar gifted by his mother became one of the many small factors that helped him stay positive.\" placeholdersrc=\"https:\/\/static.toiimg.com\/photo\/83033472.cms\" imgsize=\"\" resizemode=\"4\" offsetvertical=\"0\" placeholdermsid=\"47529300\" type=\"thumb\" class=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/static.toiimg.com\/photo\/msid-130441574\/.jpg\" data-api-prerender=\"true\"\/><\/p>\n<p>For Aarav, the electric guitar gifted by his mother became one of the many small factors that helped him stay positive.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"68\"\/>It is tempting, in stories of individual achievement, to isolate the individual too sharply, to make resilience appear self-generated, as though courage rises in a vacuum. Aarav\u2019s account resists that myth. <!-- -->Again and again, his story returns to people.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"72\"\/>\u201cAs a student, I would say I\u2019m most influenced by my parents \u2014 my mother, my father \u2014 and also my brother and grandparents,\u201d he says. \u201cMy class teachers and the principal supported me a lot, so they\u2019ve all had a strong influence on me.\u201d So, behind that Board result stands a family that did not turn marks into a fresh burden, and a school that seems to have responded with practical, sustained support instead of token sympathy.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"75\"\/>There is one memory from school that captures this especially well. After a long gap following chemotherapy, Aarav returned to class to find that his teachers and classmates had surprised him with letters. The gesture is modest, but often that is how human grace announces itself. \u201cI did not feel insecure or different from others,\u201d Aarav recalls. \u201cIn fact, they made me feel very comfortable and I realised that friends are very important in life.<!-- -->\u201d What is very striking in this story full of medical terms, schedules and performance metrics, is that a child, after illness, is made to feel included in his everyday world.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"79\"\/>The support extended beyond the classroom too. \u201cWhenever I was physically or mentally exhausted, I would talk to my friends,\u201d he says. \u201cThey always encouraged me and reassured me that everything would be all right. My class teachers also spoke to me during those difficult times.\u201d <span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"82\"\/>Aarav\u2019s parents, too, seem to have understood that recovery is not only medical. \u201cThey made sure I stayed positive. They got me games, movies, and my mom gifted me an electric guitar. These helped me stay engaged and distracted in a positive way,\u201d Aarav says.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"84\"\/>Their support did not stop at helping their son stay cheerful through treatment, or at filling those hard days with games, films and an electric guitar so that illness did not swallow up every corner of his childhood. It also extended to something far less visible, but perhaps just as important in a country like ours, where <a href=\"https:\/\/timesofindia.indiatimes.com\/topic\/board-exam\" styleobj=\"[object Object]\" class=\"\" commonstate=\"[object Object]\" frmappuse=\"1\">board exam<\/a>s can turn homes into pressure chambers and parental anxiety often passes itself off as motivation. <!-- -->Aarav says his parents did not add to the Board exam pressure. \u201cThey told me that I just needed to pass. In fact, my father even said that 33 per cent was enough,\u201d he recalls with a smile. Sometimes it is not ambition but its absence gives a child the room to breathe and do his best. <span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"90\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>The courage he borrowed, and made his own<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"92\"\/>Courage, in Aarav\u2019s case, does not seem to come only from the people around him or the ordeal he has had to endure. Some of it also comes from the private worlds that teenagers inhabit, and from the fictional figures who quietly teach them how to keep going. <!-- -->&#8220;As a person, I think I\u2019m also influenced by the games I play and the characters in them,\u201d Aarav says. \u201cFor example, Leon Kennedy \u2014 he has this never-give-up attitude, and I really admire that.<!-- --> Characters from movies and games have influenced and have also kept me positive during this journey.\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"97\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>A mind turned to the stars<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"99\"\/>What saves Aarav\u2019s story from collapsing into a single-note narrative of courage is that he does not come across merely as \u2018the boy who battled cancer and topped\u2019. <!-- -->He also comes through, quite distinctly, as a student with changing interests and a mind already leaning towards questions larger than the next exam.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"103\"\/>Before Class 8, he says, biology was his favourite subject. Then physics took over. \u201cThis is a subject where you need to do a lot more than just memorizing,\u201d he says. \u201cYou need to understand so many concepts.\u201d He began reading about astronomy and space, physicists and their theories, even research papers. <!-- -->Somewhere in that movement from textbook learning to curiosity, one can already glimpse the ambition that now animates him: A future in astrophysics, perhaps in organisations such as ISRO or DRDO.<!-- --> \u201cI enjoy learning about the universe,\u201d he says. \u201cSo astrophysics feels like the right path for me.\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"108\"\/><\/p>\n<p><h2>A gentler definition of success<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"110\"\/> <\/p>\n<div data-pos=\"0\" class=\"id-r-component iIpbx undefined  &#10;        \">\n<div><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\".\" msid=\"130441611\" width=\"\" title=\"Aarav Vats\u2019 story reflects patience, discipline and quiet strength\" placeholdersrc=\"https:\/\/static.toiimg.com\/photo\/83033472.cms\" imgsize=\"\" resizemode=\"4\" offsetvertical=\"0\" placeholdermsid=\"47529300\" type=\"thumb\" class=\"\" src=\"https:\/\/static.toiimg.com\/photo\/msid-130441611\/.jpg\" data-api-prerender=\"true\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Aarav Vats\u2019 story reflects patience, discipline and quiet strength<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"113\"\/>Aarav now speaks of success in a way that feels both earned and unusually clear-eyed for someone his age. \u201cI don\u2019t think success is ever just about marks,\u201d he says. <!-- -->\u201cSkills matter a lot in life, and marks or degrees alone don\u2019t guarantee a successful career.\u201d Then he adds the line that perhaps best sums up all he has lived through. \u201cAt the same time, health is a big part of life. If you\u2019re not healthy, nothing else really works.<!-- -->\u201d<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"118\"\/>For a boy who has already learnt, far earlier than most, how fragile ordinary life can be, this is not the wisdom of a topper speaking after success. It is the steadier, harder-won clarity of someone who has discovered that achievement means little if health, hope and the will to keep going are not intact.<span class=\"id-r-component br\" data-pos=\"120\"\/><\/div>\n<p><br \/>\n<br \/><a href=\"https:\/\/timesofindia.indiatimes.com\/education\/news\/from-chemo-sessions-to-a-score-of-96-6-in-cbse-class-10-aarav-vats-story-is-bigger-than-marks\/articleshow\/130441487.cms\">Source link <\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Aarav Vats scored 96.6% in the CBSE Class 10 exam while battling cancer A board-exam result usually arrives wrapped in the familiar noise of percentages, cut-offs, school-wise tallies and the annual frenzy over who scored what. Aarav Vats\u2019 marksheet carries all of that, of course. It says he scored 96.6% in the 2026 CBSE Class [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":7242,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[264],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-7241","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-education"},"amp_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7241","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7241"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7241\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/7242"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7241"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=7241"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/banitoday.com\/hi\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7241"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}