Parents abandoning government schools? Enrolment falls below 50% in India, says NITI Aayog
Enrollment in government schools across India has fallen from 71 per cent in 2005 to 49.24 per cent in 2024-25, according to a latest report released by NITI Aayog on the country’s school education system.
As government school enrolment declined, private schools expanded steadily over the years. The report says private institutions now make up 44.01 per cent of all secondary schools in India. According to the findings, many parents are increasingly choosing private schools because they believe these institutions offer better English-medium education, stronger discipline and improved employment opportunities for children.
However, the report says these expectations are not always reflected in actual classroom learning and notes that a large number of students in low-fee private schools continue to struggle with basic reading and mathematics skills.
“India's school education system has seen a notable shift toward private institutions, particularly at the secondary level. This change reflects parental aspirations for better outcomes, but the private sector's rapid growth also raises concerns around quality, equity, and regulation,” the report says.
The report also highlighs that 35 per cent of Grade 5 students studying in low-fee private schools are unable to read a Grade 2-level text. 60 per cent of these students cannot solve a basic division problem, raising questions about the quality of education being delivered despite rising enrolment.
Along with learning gaps, there are serious infrastructure issues in many private schools. Several low-fee institutions reportedly do not meet standards laid down under the Right to Education Act and continue to function without proper toilets, playgrounds or access to clean drinking water.
The report also said teacher recruitment in many such schools remains informal. In several cases, underqualified or untrained teachers are hired on low salaries with little job security or professional support. According to the report, this directly affects teaching quality and student performance in classrooms.
Beyond private schools, the report also highlights wider problems in India’s teaching system. India currently has nearly 1.01 crore teachers working across around 14 lakh schools. While the pupil-teacher ratio has improved over time, rural and underserved areas continue to face teacher shortages and high attrition.
One of the biggest concerns flagged is the number of single-teacher schools operating in remote parts of the country. More than one lakh schools in India are functioning with only one teacher, accounting for over 7 per cent of all schools nationwide.
Such schools leave very little room for meaningful learning improvements because one teacher is forced to handle multiple classes and subjects at the same time.
The report also points to issues such as weak staffing systems, poor teacher deployment, heavy administrative workload, inadequate teacher training and lack of subject expertise as continuing challenges within the education system.
Check the results here: Maharashtra Board SSC Result 2026 and WBBSE Madhyamik Result 2026.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
However, the report says these expectations are not always reflected in actual classroom learning and notes that a large number of students in low-fee private schools continue to struggle with basic reading and mathematics skills.
“India's school education system has seen a notable shift toward private institutions, particularly at the secondary level. This change reflects parental aspirations for better outcomes, but the private sector's rapid growth also raises concerns around quality, equity, and regulation,” the report says.
.
Learning gaps in pvt schools
The report also highlighs that 35 per cent of Grade 5 students studying in low-fee private schools are unable to read a Grade 2-level text. 60 per cent of these students cannot solve a basic division problem, raising questions about the quality of education being delivered despite rising enrolment.
Along with learning gaps, there are serious infrastructure issues in many private schools. Several low-fee institutions reportedly do not meet standards laid down under the Right to Education Act and continue to function without proper toilets, playgrounds or access to clean drinking water.
.
Teacher shortage in rural areas
Beyond private schools, the report also highlights wider problems in India’s teaching system. India currently has nearly 1.01 crore teachers working across around 14 lakh schools. While the pupil-teacher ratio has improved over time, rural and underserved areas continue to face teacher shortages and high attrition.
One of the biggest concerns flagged is the number of single-teacher schools operating in remote parts of the country. More than one lakh schools in India are functioning with only one teacher, accounting for over 7 per cent of all schools nationwide.
Such schools leave very little room for meaningful learning improvements because one teacher is forced to handle multiple classes and subjects at the same time.
The report also points to issues such as weak staffing systems, poor teacher deployment, heavy administrative workload, inadequate teacher training and lack of subject expertise as continuing challenges within the education system.
Check the results here: Maharashtra Board SSC Result 2026 and WBBSE Madhyamik Result 2026.
Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!
Popular from Education
- DHSE Kerala plus one improvement result 2026 released at results.hse.kerala.gov.in: Direct link to download scorecards here
- Learn Agentic AI with IITM Pravartak - Lead in the era of autonomous intelligence with next gen insights
- CUET UG 2026: NTA reopens city allocation window for unaccommodated candidates; check details here
- 10 free Google AI courses enable beginners to build skills in modern machine learning tools – check details here
- AP ECET 2026 result out today, rank cards to be released at cets.apsche.ap.gov.in, counselling to begin in June
end of article
Trending Stories
- UP Board Class 10th, 12th result 2026 expected soon says DigiLocker: Check expected date and steps to download scorecards
- Karnataka SSLC Class 10th result 2026 expected to be released in early May, DigiLocker notice says "soon:" Check complete details here
- NEHU Result 2026 declared: How to check your scorecard; complete details here
- IPMAT admit card 2026 released for IIM Indore and Rohtak: Check steps to download hall tickets here
- Assam HS Class 12th result 2026 likely to be released soon, says DigiLocker notice: Here are steps to download scorecards
- “Do not go with a lot of targets in your mind,” says Rohit Gupta, CAO at PhysicsWallah: Mindset shift NEET aspirants need before exam day
- JKBOPEE CET admit card 2026 released at jkbopee.gov.in: Direct link to download hall tickets here
Featured in education
- Maharashtra Board SSC Result 2026 Live Updates: Over 16 lakh students await Class 10 scorecards as MSBSHSE result expected by this date
- CBSE Class 12 Result 2026 Live Updates: Scorecards expected soon as students await official announcement; girls recorded higher pass percentage in previous years
- NTA NCHM JEE 2026 answer key, response sheet released at exams.nta.nic.in: Check direct link, steps to raise objections here
- TBSE Class 10th 12th Result 2026 Live Updates: Tripura Board Madhyamik and HS results likely tomorrow at 12 PM; check official website, how to check and download marksheets
- Maharashtra SSC Class 10 result 2026 releasing tomorrow at 1 pm; check how to download marksheets
- UP Police SI result 2026 released at uppbpb.gov.in: Direct link to download list of shortlisted candidates for PST, PET
Photostories
- Morning affirmation at 5 AM: A quiet reset before the chaos begins
- Rashtrapati Bhavan treated the Vietnamese President with Punjabi and Haryanvi meal: This is what was served on the menu
- How to make Gujarati Kadhi for summer dinner at home
- Things you are not allowed to do in your garden in the US
- Simple kitchen habits that may attract more lizards indoors
- 5 beautiful scented plants to add to your garden today
- Met Gala 2026: Weirdest red carpet looks that stole the spotlight this year
- Inside Goa’s 5 most beautiful crores-worth homes redefining coastal real estate
- Things you are not allowed to do in your garden in the UK
- Strengths of being an introvert: 5 unique traits of people who prefer to be alone over socialising
Up Next
Start a Conversation
Post comment