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School enrolment in 3-11 age group down by 25 lakh

Basics: What is UDISE+?

  • Unified District Information System for Education Plus (UDISE+): Annual survey by the Ministry of Education.
  • Covers pre-primary to Class 12 in govt., aided, private, and other schools.
  • Provides data on enrolment, dropouts, Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER), infrastructure, teachers, etc.
  • Latest data: 2024-25, compared to 2023-24.

Relevance : GS 2(Education , Social Issues)

Key Findings of UDISE+ 2024-25

  • Sharp fall in young student enrolment (ages 3–11; Anganwadi, pre-school, Classes 1–5):
    • 2023-24: 12.09 crore
    • 2024-25: 11.84 crore
    • Decline24.93 lakh students
  • Overall enrolment (Classes 1–12):
    • 2023-24: 24.8 crore
    • 2024-25: 24.69 crore
    • Drop11 lakh students → lowest since 2018-19.
  • Historical trend:
    • 2012-13: 26.3 crore
    • 2021-22: ~26 crore
    • 2022-23: 25.18 crore
    • 2023-24: 24.8 crore
    • 2024-25: 24.69 crore
    • Net fall in a decade: ~1.6 crore students (~6%).

Causes of Decline in Enrolment

  • Demographic transition:
    • Falling birth rates → shrinking school-age population.
    • India’s TFR = 1.91 (2021) < replacement level (2.1).
    • Except UP, Bihar, Meghalaya, all states below replacement fertility.
  • Shift to standalone pre-primary private institutions → some children outside UDISE+ school count.
  • Methodological changes in 2022-23 and 2023-24 → not fully comparable to older datasets.
  • Urbanization & migration: Possible undercounting of mobile/migrant children.

Positive Indicators Amid Decline

  • Rising GER (Gross Enrolment Ratio):
    • Middle level: 89.5% → 90.3% (2023-24 to 2024-25).
    • Secondary level: 66.5% → 68.5%.
    • Suggests higher share of eligible children are actually enrolled, even if population base shrinks.
  • Dropout rates improving:
    • Preparatory stage: 3.7% → 2.3%.
    • Middle school: 5.2% → 3.5%.
    • Secondary: 10.9% → 8.2%.
    • Indicates better retention, fewer children leaving school midway.
  • Higher enrolment in upper classes:
    • Classes 6–8: +6 lakh students (6.31 → 6.36 crore).
    • Classes 9–12: +8 lakh students (6.39 → 6.48 crore).
    • Suggests progress in transition from primary to secondary education.

Implications of the Decline

  • Demographic dividend challenge: Shrinking base of young students → smaller workforce in future.
  • Education system planning: Govt. must align teacher recruitment, infrastructure, and budgets with falling school-age population.
  • Policy focus shift:
    • From universal access → to quality of learning outcomes.
    • With fewer children, per-child investment can be higher.
  • Regional disparities: States like UP & Bihar (still high fertility) may see continued high demand for schools, while southern & western states face declining enrolment.
  • Long-term social impact: Lower child population → ageing society sooner, with implications for pensions, health care, and dependency ratios.

Way Forward

  • Use of upcoming 2026 Census: To update school-age population base and refine GER/dropout estimates.
  • Policy realignment:
    • Rationalizing school infrastructure in low-population areas.
    • Investing more in teacher training, digital learning, foundational literacy.
  • Focus on early childhood education: Integrate Anganwadis and standalone pre-schools into formal system (NEP 2020 mandate).
  • Address regional imbalance:
    • Northern states → focus on access (school availability).
    • Southern states → focus on retention & higher-order skills.

August 2025
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