Serious education reforms are being pushed in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, but they reflect the scale of decay in the province’s schools. The government has chosen to replace the outdated annual examination system up to grade 8 with a two-semester model. Officials argue that this will reduce the burden on students, prevent months-long learning gaps and lighten schoolbags with smaller books. Yet, education experts note that the measure stems not from foresight but from necessity as majority of students are failing their middle school examinations, exposing the depth of the crisis.

More significantly, the government is considering outsourcing and privatising thousands of public schools. This drastic shift is itself an admission that the existing system has failed miserably – plagued by ghost teachers and crumbling infrastructure. But the proposal has provoked strong resistance from teachers, who see it as a direct threat to their livelihoods. Their opposition is not without reason. A rushed privatisation drive, undertaken without safeguards or accountability, risks worsening inequality and eroding the promise of free, universal education.

Yet, it is also true that entrenched inefficiencies and absenteeism within the teaching cadre have helped bring the system to this point of collapse. K-P’s education crisis cannot be solved by cosmetic changes to examination system or by passing responsibility to private operators. The province must invest in its public schools and ensure teacher accountability, all the while equipping classrooms with adequate facilities. Without such structural reforms, neither privatisation schemes nor new exam models will make a meaningful difference.

Education is a constitutional responsibility of the state, not a burden to be shifted. If K-P continues to rely on half-measures and short-term fixes, it will fail yet another generation of its children.

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