There has been a decline in dropout rate among schoolgirls in India. The information was shared when Congress Member of Parliament DK Suresh questioned about the dropout rates for school girls in Lok Sabha. In response to this Union Minister Annpurna Devi shared that that the dropout rate has been declining consistently.
Sharing the finding from the education ministry's database, Devi concluded that there has been a decrease in the dropout rates of school girls. She also stated the statistics that showed that school girls accounted for 1.2 percent at the primary level in 2019-20. Data also showed a decline in drop out rate to 15.1 percent from 17 percent in 2018-19 and 18.4 percent in 2017-18 at the secondary level
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Annpurna Devi has also brought to the Parliaments' notice that schools have been opened in every neighborhood. Students are being provided with free textbooks and uniforms up to Class 7. Additionally, gender-segregated toilets are being built in every school to promote education among girls. Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas have been sanctioned in Educationally Backward Blocks, as an effort to reduce gender gaps at all levels of schooling. “These schools are residential from classes 6 to 12 for girls belonging to disadvantaged groups,” stated Devi. Currently, there are reportedly 10, 5018 Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas across the country in which 665000 girls have been enrolled.
“Additionally, all States and UTs have been requested to proactively track girls as well as transgender children, who are not enrolled in schools or have dropped out of school without completing their school education and get them admitted in age-appropriate classes in schools,” Devi added in her reply.
While the government has presented positive findings, a previous UNICEF report released earlier this month had suggested an increase in the drop-out rates among girl students due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The poll cited in the report showed, that 38 percent of respondents knew of a girl who dropped out of school after or during the pandemic.