Pre-Medical
Biology stream for Intermediate students preparing for MDCAT and medical admissions.
View Subjects →Download Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education Mardan class 11 past papers for 2026. Select your group below to browse subject-wise annual and supply papers — all free PDF.
Biology stream for Intermediate students preparing for MDCAT and medical admissions.
View Subjects →Mathematics stream for Intermediate students preparing for engineering entrance exams.
View Subjects →Computer Science stream with Mathematics — for Intermediate students targeting IT and software careers.
View Subjects →Commerce stream for Intermediate students — Accounting, Business and Economics.
View Subjects →Faculty of Arts for Intermediate students — Education, Civics, History, Economics and Sociology.
View Subjects →General Science stream for Intermediate students who want science subjects without heavy Mathematics.
View Subjects →Technical and vocational subjects — trades, medical technology, and applied sciences.
View Subjects →BISE Mardan class 11 (Intermediate Part I (HSSC Part I)) exams are conducted annually between March and June, with supplementary exams in August–October. The examination covers compulsory and elective papers specific to your group — Pre-Medical, Pre-Engineering, ICS, Commerce, Arts, or Humanities.
Practicing with past papers is essential because BISE Mardan follows a consistent paper format defined by the pairing scheme. Questions from the same chapters repeat in similar formats across years. By working through 3–5 years of papers, you learn exactly how marks are distributed and which question types your examiners prefer.
BISE Mardan class 11 papers cover Pre-Medical, Pre-Engineering, ICS, Commerce, Arts, and Humanities groups. Each group has different elective subjects alongside compulsory ones.
The paper pattern (pairing scheme) stays broadly consistent within a board, but specific questions change every year. We recommend practicing with the last 5 years of BISE Mardan class 11 papers to see all question variations and topic weightings.
Solve papers under exam conditions — no textbooks, timed to the actual paper duration. Review wrong answers against chapter notes. Pay attention to which chapters appear most frequently, then use the pairing scheme to prioritise high-weightage chapters in your revision.