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School Education: Challenges and Way Forward | UPSC GS-2 Notes

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School Education: Challenges and Way Forward

School education is the foundation of human development, democratic citizenship and social justice. While India has expanded access to schooling, the real challenge is to ensure quality, equity and meaningful learning for every child.

Challenges

  • Systemic & Structural Challenges 
    • Fragmented Schooling Structure: The “pyramidal” design of the system with many primary schools but a sharp decline at higher levels, leading to transition inefficiencies 
    • Institutional Fragmentation: The prevalence of standalone grade-specific schools (e.g., primary-only) rather than composite schools (Grades 1-12), which increases the risk of dropout during transitions 
    • Sub-scale/Under-enrolled Schools: Over one-third of schools have fewer than 50 students, leading to resource underutilization and administrative inefficiency
    • Single-Teacher Schools: A persistent issue where one teacher manages multiple grades and all administrative duties, severely limiting grade-specific engagement 
    • Contractualization of Teaching: Increasing reliance on contractual appointments, which creates professional precarity and affects teacher motivation 
      • Many states rely on contractual/para-teachers (Shiksha Mitras) — underqualified, lower pay 
    • Teacher Vacancies & Attrition: Significant shortfalls in the teaching workforce, with approximately 10 lakh vacant positions nationally 
    • Teacher absenteeism: ~25% in government schools 
    • Administrative Overload: Teachers and Cluster Resource Persons (CRPs) are often burdened with non-teaching duties (surveys, election work), reducing “Time-on-Task” 
  • Academic & Quality Challenges 
    • Learning Poverty: The inability of children to read and understand a simple text by age 10
      • Many children complete primary classes without acquiring age-appropriate reading, writing and numeracy skills. This creates a weak base for later learning. 
    • Rote-based Assessment: A system focused on factual recall for certification rather than “assessment for learning”.
      • The system often rewards memorisation rather than conceptual clarity, creativity, problem-solving and critical thinking. 
    • Syllabus-driven Pedagogy: Pressure to finish textbooks at the cost of foundational mastery.
    • FLN Deficit: Gaps in Foundational Literacy and Numeracy, where nearly 50% of Grade 5 children cannot read a Grade 2 text.
      • Foundational literacy and numeracy are the basis of all future learning. Without these, children struggle in higher classes and eventually lose interest in schooling. 
    • Weak Inference & Interpretation: Students may recognize patterns but struggle with real-world application of skills.
    • Non-contextual Curriculum: Textbooks that are detached from the lived experiences of rural or tribal students.
    • Academic Attrition: A sharp increase in dropout rates at the secondary level compared to primary 
  • Access & Enrolment 
    • As of 2024-25, GER in secondary and higher secondary grades was 79% and 58%, respectively — Significant Drop Off
    • Despite near-universal primary enrolment, dropout rises sharply at secondary level — especially girls, SC/ST, migrants
      • Dropout at Secondary Level: Dropout increases at the secondary stage due to poverty, household responsibilities, child marriage, migration, lack of nearby schools, and exam pressure.
      • This affects girls, SCs, STs, minorities, migrant children and children with disabilities more severely.
    • Out-of-School Children still ~ +10 lakh; concentrated in urban slums, conflict zones, tribal belts
  • Infrastructure & Technological Gaps 
    • Some schools still lack adequate classrooms, toilets, drinking water, libraries, laboratories, ramps, internet and safe transport. 
      • Digital Divide: Disparities in access to devices, internet connectivity, and digital fluency between rural and urban areas.
      • Infrastructure Deficit: Lack of basic amenities like functional electricity , drinking water, and boundary walls.
      • Gender-sensitive Sanitation: Inadequate menstrual hygiene management (MHM) and separate functional toilets for girls, deterring regular attendance.
      • STEM Lab Deficit: Nearly 50% of government secondary schools lack functional science laboratories, limiting inquiry-based learning
  • Quality Gap Between Government and Private Schools
    • Many parents shift children to private schools due to perceptions of better discipline, English-medium instruction and teacher accountability. This weakens trust in public education.
  • Weak Early Childhood Education
    • Anganwadi and pre-primary education are not always well-integrated with formal schooling. This affects school readiness.
  • Equity & Inclusion Barriers 
    • Socio-Economically Disadvantaged Groups (SEDGs): Children from SC, ST, and minority backgrounds face compounded barriers of poverty and low home learning support.
      • Discrimination in classrooms — midday meal segregation, seating by caste 
      • RTE 25% EWS quota in private schools — reimbursement delays by states; uneven implementation 
      • Children from migrant families, tribal areas, urban poor households, children with disabilities and children from conflict-affected areas often face irregular attendance and poor learning support. 
    • Gender: Girls face barriers such as household work, safety concerns, lack of toilets, early marriage and social norms restricting mobility. 
      • But girls’ dropout increases at secondary — early marriage, safety, menstrual hygiene gaps, distance 
    • Migration-linked Exclusion: Mobile populations face disrupted schooling due to a lack of interstate transfer protocols and flexible admission.
    • Barrier-free Access for children with special needs (CwSN) : Significant gaps in disability-inclusive infrastructure (ramps, accessible toilets) and early screening for learning disabilities
  • Vocational & Skill Education Hurdles 
    • Academic-Vocational Divide: Hard separation between streams, with vocational tracks often stigmatized as “inferior”.
    • Lack of Industry Linkage: Vocational training is often detached from local market demands and emerging sectors.
    • Vertical Mobility: The perception of vocational education as a “dead-end” due to limited pathways into higher education
  • Private School Expansion 
    • Private unaided (recognised) schools account for 31.9% of enrolment nationwide. 
    • Fee regulation vacuum in most states; no uniform regulatory authority
      • Students enrolled in private or non-government schools across India end up paying nearly nine times more in school fees when compared with those enrolled in government schools. 
    • Low-Cost Private Schools (LCPS) in poor areas — largely unrecognised, no RTE compliance
  • Language Barrier
    • Children often enter school in a language different from their home language or mother tongue. This affects comprehension and participation, especially among tribal and multilingual communities.

Way Forward

  • Governance & Accountability 
    • Strengthen SMCs (School Management Committees): Capacity building of parent members; mandatory training on School Development Plan (SDP) preparation, RTE provisions, budget monitoring 
    • School Report Cards: Transparent public disclosure of learning outcomes, infrastructure, teacher attendance — enabling community accountability
    • Composite/Cluster Schools: Merge low-enrolment single-teacher schools into viable clusters — better resources, specialised teachers
    • Cooperative Federalism: Resolve Centre-State funding gaps in Samagra Shiksha
  • Foundational Learning (FLN) 
    • Accelerate NIPUN Bharat implementation — Structured Pedagogical Approaches (SPA), structured workbooks, classroom-level child tracking
    • Vidya Pravesh scaling — smooth ECCE-to-Grade 1 transition for all children
      • Vidya Pravesh is a three-month play-based school preparation module for Grade I. It has been developed as per the recommendations of the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020. 
    • Mother tongue-based multilingual education to reduce language barrier in early grades
  • Teacher Reforms 
    • Mission-mode recruitment to fill ~10 lakh vacancies; transparent merit-based appointment
    • Phase out contractual/para-teacher dependence; regularise or replace with qualified teachers
    • Implement 4-year ITEP (Integrated Teacher Education Programme) by 2030 — teaching practice embedded from Year 1
      • ITEP is a 4 Year dual-major holistic undergraduate degree offering B.A. B.Ed./ B. Sc. B. Ed. and B.Com. B.Ed. This course will prepare teachers for the 4 stages of the new school structure i.e. Foundational, Preparatory, Middle and Secondary (5+3+3+4). 
    • Continuous Professional Development (CPD) via DIKSHA — subject-specific, ongoing, certified modules
    • Strengthen Central Teacher Eligibility Test/Teacher Eligibility Test (CTET/TET)implementation uniformly across states
  • Quality & Assessment Reform 
    • Implement Holistic Progress Card (NEP 2020) — 360° assessment of cognitive, social, emotional development 
    • Reduce textbook-centrism — project-based learning, inquiry-based approaches 
    • Exams should test understanding, application and problem-solving instead of rote memorisation.
  • Equity & Inclusion  
    • Special Education Zones (SEZs) for tribal, backward, minority, and conflict-affected areas — as proposed in NEP 2020 
    • Gender Inclusive Fund (NEP 2020)— targeted interventions for girls’ secondary retention (hostels, transport, sanitary facilities) 
    • Expanding the PM POSHAN Scheme to include breakfast and extending coverage up to Class 12 —  Will address hunger-learning link
    • Sensitisation training for teachers on caste, gender, disability inclusion — address classroom discrimination 
  • Secondary Education Focus 
    • Vocational integration from Grade 6 (NEP mandate) — reduce dropout by linking education to livelihood
    • Flexible board exams (twice/year, modular) — reduce exam pressure-driven dropout
    • Career counselling cells in every secondary school — especially in rural areas
    • Expand National Means-cum-Merit Scholarship Scheme (NMMSS)  and raise scholarship amounts to retain meritorious EWS students 
  • Technology & Digital Inclusion 
    • Bridge digital divide — community device access points, offline-capable DIKSHA content for low-connectivity areas
    • AI literacy integration in secondary curriculum — NEP 2020 vision
    • Leverage PM eVIDYA (SWAYAM Prabha, radio, podcasts) for last-mile reach beyond internet
    • Personalised adaptive learning tools to identify and address individual learning gaps early
  • Private School Regulation 
    • Establish State Fee Regulatory Authorities in all states — cap arbitrary fee hikes
    • Enforce RTE 25% EWS quota implementation in private schools; timely reimbursement by states
    • Bring Low-Cost Private Schools (LCPS) under recognition and RTE compliance framework
  • Early Childhood Care & Education (ECCE) 
    • Upgrade Anganwadi infrastructure + train Anganwadi workers in structured play-based curriculum
    • Implement NCF-FS 2022 (National Curriculum Framework for Foundational Stage) across all states
    • Formalise pre-primary as part of school system — not just Anganwadi-dependent

School education must move from mere enrollment to effective learning. Strengthening foundational literacy, teacher quality, inclusion and public school infrastructure is essential for building an equitable and capable India.

Sample UPSC Mains Questions

10 Marks (150 Words)

1. Discuss the major challenges confronting school education in India despite near-universal enrolment at the primary level.

2. Examine the significance of Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) in improving learning outcomes in India.

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