New Delhi: The dropout rate at the secondary school level in India is more than 17%, while the dropout rate of the above-primary school (VIII) and the primary level of each is 1.8% and 1.5% respectively.
The dropout rate was significantly higher among boys at the middle level, while on the contrary in the junior class.
Also in accordance with the latest Integrated District Information System for Education Plus (UDISE + 2019-20) reported nearly 30% of students not transition from secondary secondary levels to the top.
With more than 15 lakh schools, nearly 97 lakh teachers, and more than 26.5 crore students from pre-pratama to a higher secondary level, the Indian school education system is one of the largest in the world.
There were more than 3.8 crore students registered at a secondary level where 44.3% were at a government school, a little more than 20% was with schools assisted by the government and nearly 35% with private schools without assistance.
The report revealed that there were 19 states / UTS where the dropout rate at the secondary level (Class IX and X) was higher than all Indian interest rates (17.3%), with countries such as Tripura, Sikkim, Nagaland, Meghalaya , Madhya Pradesh, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh have more than 25% of the rate of dropout.
There are four countries that record more than 30% of dropout rates.
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According to Udise + 2019-20, “the proportion of students from cohorts registered at a certain level in certain school years that are no longer registered in the following school class.”
Whereas the majority of the state of the Northeast and the Eastern region has a high school dropout, even urban countries such as Delhi also have a dropout rate of more than 20%.
Along with Punjab (which has a low dropout rate of 1.5%), the state / UTS with less than 10% dropout is chandigarh (9.5%), Kerala (8%), Manipur (9.6%), Tamil Nadu (9.6%)) and Uttarakhand (9.8%).
Relative, this is also the state / UTS with the highest promotional level at the secondary level, with Punjab, Manipur, and Kerala has a promotion rate of more than 90%.
The overall drop-out level is 2% less than a boy.
Punjab registered zero dropout rates for girls, while Assam has recorded the highest dropout rate (35.2) at the secondary level is one of several states where the rate is more than a boy.
There are six states / UTS where the dropout rate for boys is more than 30%.
For the state such as Goa, a boy dropout rate (21.2%) almost 10% higher than in girls (11.8%).
In accordance with the transition rate, which is a percentage of student cohorts (or school) registered in the first grade of certain levels of education in certain years of school which is expected to reach the last level of level, 71.6% of middle-level students reach the upper secondary level, while the transition rate from The primer to secondary was 91.4%.
Here is also a percentage of women who transition to higher education levels than boys.