165 of 214 government schools in Mandya district posted 100% SSLC results in 2026, lifting the district’s public-school pass rate to 96.9%. Here’s how it happened.
Mandya’s Government Schools Just Rewrote the Rural Education Story
165 out of 214 government schools in Mandya district posted a 100% pass rate in the 2026 SSLC exams, pushing the district’s overall government-school score to 96.9% — a leap from 66.8% just a year earlier. For a state education system long shadowed by assumptions about “low-quality” public schooling, the numbers out of Mandya are hard to argue with.
For years, the going assumption among many Karnataka parents was simple: private schools mean better outcomes, and government schools are a fallback. Mandya district’s 2026 SSLC results are quietly upending that idea — and offering a template other rural districts may want to study closely.
The Numbers That Are Turning Heads
Of the 214 government schools operating in Mandya district, 165 recorded a full 100% result in this year’s SSLC (Class 10) board examinations. That performance carried the district’s overall government-school pass percentage to 96.9%, a sharp rise from 66.8% the previous year.
That’s not an incremental improvement — it’s a near 30-point jump in a single academic cycle, in a segment of the education system that has historically lagged behind private institutions in both perception and results.
Meet the Student Leading the Pack
Individual achievement is part of the story too. Shilpashree C.M., a student at the Karnataka Public School in K.R. Pet, scored 608 marks, making her the top-ranked government school student in the entire district. Her result has become something of a local touchstone — proof, as many in the district are now saying, that talent good enough to compete at the highest level doesn’t need a private-school address to flourish.
Why This Is a Sign of Change, Not Just a Scoreline
Education officials and observers in the district are framing this less as a one-off exam result and more as evidence of a system-wide shift. Several factors are being credited:
- Stronger teaching, backed by structured support for teachers
- Better infrastructure across government school campuses
- Improved learning quality, with a renewed focus on outcomes rather than attendance alone
The result, according to local accounts, is a rural public increasingly willing to place its trust — and its children — back in government classrooms after years of drifting toward private alternatives.
Investing in Teachers: The Quiet Engine Behind the Numbers
Behind the headline results is a less visible but arguably more important shift: how teachers themselves are being trained.
Government schools in the district have been rolling out continuous, specialised training programs for teachers, built around three pillars:
- Technology-based teaching methods that bring digital tools into everyday instruction
- Modern learning methodologies designed to move classrooms beyond rote learning
- AI-assisted learning tools, now being piloted in select schools
The premise is straightforward: good teachers are the foundation of good outcomes, and equipping them with better methods — and better technology — compounds results across an entire school, not just for a handful of top-scoring students.
What This Means for Rural India
Mandya’s turnaround arrives at a moment when questions about the future of government schooling in rural India are especially live — declining enrolment in some districts, competition from low-cost private schools, and persistent gaps in infrastructure and teacher availability.
What makes this result notable isn’t just the scoreline; it’s the signal it sends to parents weighing where to send their children next year, and to policymakers looking for a working model rather than a talking point. If 165 schools in one district can post perfect results, and a public-school student can top the district charts, the case for renewed investment in government education just got a lot easier to make.







