School Dropout Rate Latest News
- The Union Ministry of Education has released two key reports on school education, the UDISE+ 2025-26 report and the Performance Grading Index (PGI) 2.0 for 2025-26, showing a decline in dropout rates, improved teacher strength, and continued challenges in learning retention.
About UDISE+ and PGI
- The Unified District Information System for Education Plus (UDISE+) is the government of India’s official digital database for the education sector.
- Maintained by the Ministry of Education, it collates real-time statistics on:
- School infrastructure
- Student enrolment
- Teacher metrics
- Facilities and amenities
- Learning environment
- The database is populated through voluntary uploading of data by schools with active UDISE+ codes.
- The Performance Grading Index (PGI) 2.0 assesses states and Union Territories across six domains:
- Learning Outcomes
- Access
- Infrastructure and Facilities
- Equity
- Governance Process
- Teacher Education and Training
- The PGI uses a 10-tier ranking system to grade states based on their performance in these domains.
Key Findings from UDISE+ 2025-26
- Decline in Dropout Rates
- The academic year 2025-26 witnessed a notable reduction in dropout rates across preparatory and secondary levels compared to previous years:
- Preparatory level: Dropout rate declined from 2.3% in 2024-25 to 1.8% in 2025-26.
- Secondary level: Dropout rate declined from 8.2% in 2024-25 to 7.0% in 2025-26.
- However, the highest dropout rates at the secondary level were recorded in Ladakh, Gujarat, Chhattisgarh, and Karnataka.
- The report attributes the improvement to:
- An increased number of schools offering secondary education
- Enhanced accessibility
- Targeted interventions
- More supportive and responsive school environments
- Improvement in Student Retention
-
- Student retention has shown a positive trend at higher levels:
- Middle level: Retention increased from 82.8% (2024-25) to 83.7% (2025-26).
- Secondary level: Retention increased significantly from 47.2% (2024-25) to 51.9% (2025-26).
- However, a marginal decline was observed at the foundational and preparatory levels in 2025-26, following three consecutive years of improvement.
- Concerning Retention Reality
- Despite improvements, only about half of Class I students make it to Class XII, highlighting the persistent challenge of student attrition at higher levels of schooling.
- Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER)
- The GER at the secondary level improved considerably:
- From 68.5% in 2024-25 to 71.7% in 2025-26.
- This reflects greater accessibility and continued enrolment at higher levels.
- Teacher Strength Crosses One Crore
- For the first time in any academic year, the total number of school teachers crossed 1.02 crore during 2025-26, an increase of 8.3% compared to 2022-23.
- Women continue to account for the majority of the workforce at 54.9%.
- Rising teacher numbers are seen as critical for improving student-teacher ratios and ensuring quality education.
- Pupil-Teacher Ratios (PTR)
- PTRs have continued to improve, comfortably surpassing the NEP target of 30:1:
- Foundational stage: 10
- Preparatory: 12
- Middle: 17
- Secondary: 21
- School Rationalisation
- Zero-enrolment schools fell by 29% to 5,663.
- Single-teacher schools declined by 3% to 100,843.
- Girls’ Enrolment
- Girls accounted for 48.4% of total enrolment in 2025-26, marginally up from 48.3% in the previous year.
- Digital Access and Infrastructure
- Significant improvements were reported in digital access:
- Computer access in schools increased from 64.7% to 69.9%.
- Internet connectivity improved from 63.5% to 67.4%.
- Basic amenities showed near-universal availability:
- Safe drinking water: 99.5%
- Girls’ toilets: 98.5%
- Boys’ toilets: 97.2%
- Grid electricity: 95%
- However, playground availability declined from 83% to 81.9%.
- Inclusion
- Schools with disability-accessible ramps and handrails increased from 54.9% to 58.2%.
- Enrolment Composition
- Minority communities account for over 20% of total enrolment.
- Among minority students: Muslims 79.4%, Christians 10.1%, Sikhs 7.1%, Buddhists 2.0%, Jains 1.3%, Parsis 0.1%.
- Social category breakdown: OBC 44.9%, General 27.5%, SC 17.7%, ST 10%.
Performance Grading Index 2.0 Findings
- State-Wise Performance
- The PGI 2025-26 revealed that no state or Union Territory achieved any of the top three grades (71%-100%) in the 10-tier ranking system.
- Top Performers
- Chandigarh: The only UT to reach the fourth-highest grade, ‘Uttam-3’.
- ‘Prachesta-1’ category (51%-60%): Delhi, Dadra & Nagar Haveli and Daman & Diu, Kerala, and Punjab.
- Middle Performers
- ‘Prachesta-2’ category (41%-50%): Himachal Pradesh, Goa, Maharashtra, Odisha, and Lakshadweep.
- ‘Prachesta-3’ (31%-40%) and ‘Akanshi-1’ (21%-30%): Most states fall in these categories, with 13 states in each grade.
- Aspirational Category
- The ‘Akanshi’ category (lower end of rankings) includes:
- Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Jammu & Kashmir
- Northeastern states: Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Mizoram, Meghalaya
- Domain-Wise Leaders
- Learning Outcomes: Punjab tops, followed by Kerala.
- Access: Kerala leads along with Puducherry.
- Teacher Education & Training: Kerala and Lakshadweep share the top position.
- Equity: Tamil Nadu leads.
- Decliners
- States showing a decline in PGI scores compared with 2024-25:
- Madhya Pradesh, Manipur, Odisha, and Uttarakhand
- Inter-State Gaps
- Highest score: Chandigarh at 766.0
- Lowest score: Meghalaya at 525.7
- Gap: 31.4% between the top and bottom performers
- Encouragingly, the gap has narrowed from 51% in 2017-18, indicating some progress in reducing inter-state disparities in school education quality.
Significance and Concerns
- Positive Trends
- Falling dropout rates signal improved retention and school responsiveness.
- Rising teacher strength and improving PTR indicate better educational conditions.
- Digital access improvements reflect the growing integration of technology in schools.
- Near-universal basic amenities show progress in school infrastructure.
- Persisting Challenges
- Only half of Class I students reach Class XII, reflecting continued attrition at higher levels.
- No state has achieved the top three PGI grades, indicating significant room for improvement.
- Marginal decline in retention at foundational and preparatory levels needs attention.
- Wide inter-state disparities in performance, especially in aspirational states.
- Aspirational category states, particularly in the northeast and Hindi-belt, require focused intervention.
- Structural Concerns
- Playground availability declining raises concerns about physical education.
- Learning outcomes remain a challenge, especially in aspirational states.
- Gender parity improvements remain marginal.
- Regional disparities in teacher availability and school infrastructure persist.
Last updated on July, 2026
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