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ASER Report 2024 | Annual Status of Education Report 2024

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Education

Source: ASER report

Context: The Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2024 highlights a significant recovery in foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN) after COVID-19-induced learning losses.

What is ASER Report 2024?

• Conducted by Pratham NGO, assessing reading and arithmetic skills of students aged 3 to 16 years.

• Uses 2011 Census data, selecting 30 villages per district and 20 households per village for assessment.

• It covers rural schools specifically.

Focus on Foundational Literacy and Numeracy (FLN) and tracks learning outcomes in government and private schools.

Three groups – Assessment Categories: Pre-primary (3-5 years) Elementary (6-14 years) Older children (15-16 years).

• Pre-primary (3-5 years)

• Elementary (6-14 years)

• Older children (15-16 years).

First-Time Digital Literacy Evaluation: Assesses smartphone access, usage, and safety awareness among 14-16-year-olds.

Key Data Insights from ASER Report 2024:

Reading Skills Recovery: Class 3 students in government schools reading a Class 2 text improved from 16.3% (2022) to 23.4% (2024).

Arithmetic Skills Growth: Class 3 students able to do subtraction increased from 28.1% (2018) to 33.7% (2024).

State-Wise Progress: Gujarat, UP, Uttarakhand, Tamil Nadu, Sikkim, Mizoram showed 10%+ improvement in reading skills.

Smartphone Access Among Teens: 89% of 14-16-year-olds have access, 57% use it for education, and 76% for social media.

Government vs Private Schools: Government schools showed a larger learning gain, closing the gap with private schools.

Positives from ASER Report 2024:

Improvement in FLN Skills: Better literacy and numeracy post-COVID due to focused interventions (e.g., NIPUN Bharat Mission).

Government School Enrolment Stabilization: 66.8% of children enrolled in government schools, close to pre-pandemic levels.

Stronger Teacher Training: 78% of schools reported receiving FLN training and resources, aiding learning recovery.

Better Digital Literacy: 87% of students can find videos online, and 92.1% can share them, improving self-learning capacity.

State-Specific Gains: UP saw a 15% rise in Class 3 reading levels, while Bihar and Odisha improved by 8-10%.

Negatives from ASER Report 2024:

High Learning Gaps Persist: 76.6% of Class 3 students still cannot read Class 2 text, highlighting slow foundational recovery.

Arithmetic Weakness: 66.3% of Class 3 students and 70% of Class 5 students cannot perform simple arithmetic calculations.

Gender Gap in Digital Safety: Only 55.2% of girls knew how to make their online profile private, lower than boys.

Variability Across States: Himachal Pradesh and Bihar saw only 4-5% gains, compared to 10%+ in Gujarat and UP.

Post-Pandemic Drop in Government Enrolment: Enrolment in government schools fell from 72.9% (2022) to 66.8% (2024).

Way Forward | Solutions for Education Improvement::

Strengthen Foundational Literacy Programs: Expand NEP 2020 and NIPUN Bharat to bridge learning gaps by 2026-27.

Improve Teacher Training and Resources: Increase focus on pedagogy-based training to boost student engagement.

Enhance Digital Literacy and Safety: Introduce school-level training on cybersecurity awareness, especially for girls.

Focus on State-Specific Interventions: Low-performing states like J&K and Nagaland need customized learning recovery plans.

Expand Post-Primary Learning Support: Middle school and high school reforms required to sustain early learning gains.

Conclusion:

ASER 2024 highlights substantial recovery in reading and arithmetic post-COVID, but major learning gaps remain. Focused government interventions, improved teacher training, and state-specific policies are essential for sustained educational progress.

Insta Links:

Data-for-better-education-a-brighter-future-for-students

• How have digital initiatives in India contributed to the functioning of the education system in the country? Elaborate on your answer. (UPSC-2020)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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