Pandemic led to districts slipping in quality ranks in school education, says Union Education Ministry report

New report from Ministry of Education is expected to help State education departments identify gaps at the district level and improve their performance

Updated - July 10, 2023 02:05 am IST

Published - July 09, 2023 08:37 pm IST - New Delhi

With the reopening of schools after COVID-19 relaxation, students were given sanitiser and thermal scanner, in Salem. File

With the reopening of schools after COVID-19 relaxation, students were given sanitiser and thermal scanner, in Salem. File | Photo Credit: E. Lakshmi Narayanan

The pandemic led to a decline in educational performance of many districts in the country, reveals a report from the Ministry of Education (MoE).

The MoE released the Performance Grading Index for Districts (PGI-D) on July 9 as a combined report for 2020-21 and 2021-22 which assesses the performance of school education system at the district level.

Much like the PGI for States released earlier, this report too has 10 grades under which districts are categorised, with Daksh being the highest grade (above 90%), followed by Utkarsh (81%-90%); Ati-Uttam (71%-80%); Uttam (61%-70%); Prachesta-1 (51%-60%); Prachesta-2 (41%-50%); Prachesta-3 (31%-40%); Akanshi-1 (21% to 30%); and Akanshi-2 (11% to 20%). The lowest performance grade is Akanshi-3, for districts that score less than 10%.

While none of the districts were able to earn the top two grades — Daksh and Utkarsh — in the latest report, 121 districts were graded as Ati-Uttam for 2020-21, though this number fell by more than half in 2021-22, with just 51 districts making the grade. Further attesting to the pandemic effect, while 2020-21 had 86 districts under Prachesta-2 (sixth-highest grade), this number rose to 117 in 2021-22. 

Among districts graded as ‘Ati-Uttam’ for 2020-22 were Krishna and Guntur in Andhra Pradesh; Chandigarh; Dadra Nagar Haveli; several districts in Delhi, Karnataka, and Kerala; Jagatsinghpur, Cuttack, Bharat, Ganjam, Puri, and Khurdha in Odisha; Siddipet in Telangana; Valsad, Junagadh and Sabar Kantha in Gujarat, etc.

In 2021-22, Chandigarh retained its Ati-Uttam status, so did some districts in Delhi and Gujarat. In Maharashtra, Satara, Kolhapur, Nashik and Mumbai achieved this status as did Kolkata.

Tamil Nadu has several districts in the fourth-best grade (Uttam) and three categorised under Prachesta-1 (Ramanathapuram, Pudukkottai and Theni). Uttar Pradesh has several districts under Uttam and Prachesta-1, and four under Prachesta-2. Most of the districts of Jammu and Kashmir fell under the Prachesta 1 and 2 grades.

Assam’s South Salmara-Mankachar district was the only district under Akanshi-1 for 2021-22 (antepenultimate grade) while the two grades at the bottom had no districts. 

The PGI-D report is expected to help State education departments identify gaps at the district level and improve their performance in a decentralised manner. There are indicator-wise PGI scores that show the areas where a district needs to improve.

The PGI-D structure has a total weightage of 600 points comprising 83 indicators under six categories - Outcomes; Effective Classroom Transaction; Infrastructure Facilities and Student’s Entitlements; School Safety and Child Protection; Digital Learning; and Governance Process. These categories are further divided into 12 domains - learning outcomes and quality; access outcome, teacher availability and professional development outcomes; learning management; learning enrichment activities; infrastructure; facilities; student entitlement; school safety and child protection; digital learning; funds convergence and utilisation; attendance monitoring systems; and school leadership development.

“The ultimate objective of PGI-D is to help the districts to priorities areas for intervention in school education and thus improve to reach the highest grade,” said an MoE spokesperson.

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