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Decline in enrollment of School Student

Decline in enrollment of School Student

Decline in enrollment of School Student | UPSC Compass

Why in News?
  • Ministry of Education (MoE) data shows a fall of nearly 25 lakh students (aged 3–11) in enrolment (2024–25 vs. 2023–24).
  • Class 1–12 enrolment dropped by 11 lakh, hitting an all-time low since 2018–19.
What is the Issue?
  • Enrolment of 3–11 age group declined from 12.09 crore to 11.84 crore (a fall of 24.93 lakh).
  • Class 1–12 enrolment: 24.8 crore (2023–24) → 24.69 crore (2024–25).
  • Decline seen across government, aided, private, and other schools.
  • Historical trend:
    • 26.3 crore (2012–13)
    • 26 crore (2021–22)
    • 25.18 crore (2022–23)
    • 24.8 crore (2023–24)
    • 24.69 crore (2024–25)
  • Data comparability issue post-2022–23 due to methodology change.
Causes of Decline
  • Demographic shift:
    • Falling birth rates → fewer children of school-going age.
    • TFR: 1.91 (NFHS-5, 2021) vs. Replacement level: 2.1.
    • Only UP, Bihar, Meghalaya above replacement level.
  • Private pre-primary preference: Many children enrolled in standalone private institutions outside UDISE+ database.
  • Data gaps: GER and enrolment ratios still rely on 2011 Census, outdated.
Positive Outcomes
  • Increased enrolment:
    • Middle school (Class 6–8): +6 lakh.
    • Secondary school (Class 9–12): +8 lakh.
  • Improved GER:
    • Middle: 89.5% → 90.3%.
    • Secondary: 66.5% → 68.5%.
  • Dropout rates reduced:
    • Preparatory: 3.7% → 2.3%.
    • Middle: 5.2% → 3.5%.
    • Secondary: 10.9% → 8.2%.
  • Better teacher-student ratio:
    • Foundational: 1:10.
    • Preparatory: 1:13.
    • Middle: 1:17.
    • Secondary: 1:21.
Challenges
  • Demographic challenge: Shrinking young population reduces natural enrolment base.
  • Unequal access: Rural, tribal, and marginalised communities may face higher exclusion.
  • Data reliability: Current figures depend on outdated 2011 Census, making GER and projections inaccurate.
  • Private vs. public divide: Growth of private pre-primary schools not fully captured in UDISE+.
  • Quality concerns: Despite better ratios, teacher training, infrastructure gaps, and learning outcomes remain weak.
  • Regional disparities: States with higher fertility may struggle with overcrowded schools, while others face underutilisation.
Way Forward
  • Update data sources: Integrate 2026 Census data for accurate enrolment projections.
  • Strengthen early education: Expand quality anganwadis and pre-primary integration with NEP 2020 framework.
  • Target vulnerable groups: Focus on rural, tribal, and disadvantaged children through special enrolment drives.
  • Public-private synergy: Recognise standalone private pre-schools within the official database.
  • Improve quality: Invest in teacher training, digital tools, and infrastructure to retain students.
  • Demographic planning:
    • States with high fertility → expand schools.
    • States with low fertility → improve quality to sustain enrolment.
  • Monitor dropouts: Strengthen counselling, mid-day meals, scholarships, and vocational linkages to sustain retention.
Quick Facts: UDISE+ Report
  • Full form: Unified District Information System for Education Plus.
  • Prepared by: Department of School Education & Literacy (DoSE&L).
  • Released by: Ministry of Education (MoE).
  • Features:
    • Unique UDISE+ code for every recognised school.
    • Unique Educational ID (EID) for each student.
    • Voluntary Child Aadhaar collection.
    • Captures 60+ fields per student.
  • Aim: One Nation One Database.