Bridging India’s Numeracy Gap

Source:  TH

Subject:   Education

Context: A recent opinion piece highlights India’s widening numeracy gap, despite improvements under the NIPUN Bharat Mission.

About Bridging India’s Numeracy Gap:

What is the Numeracy Gap?

  • The persistent difference between children’s literacy skills (reading) and numeracy skills (math skills like division, place value, operations) at the foundational level.
  • ASER 2024: 48.7% of Class 5 students can read fluently, but only 30.7% can solve basic division → ~18% gap.

Trends in India’s Literacy–Numeracy Divide:

  1. ASER 2024 shows 48.7% of Class 5 students can read a Class 2 text, but only 30.7% can solve a basic division problem — an 18-percentage point gap.
  2. ASER 2024 finds more than 50% of Class 8 students cannot perform basic division, showing stagnation and cumulative learning gaps.
  3. Post-pandemic surveys (ASER 2022, 2023, 2024) confirm slower recovery in numeracy compared to literacy, especially among rural and low-income students.
  4. States like Kerala, Himachal Pradesh, and Punjab show high reading proficiency but continued weaknesses in fractions, decimals, and multi-digit division.
  5. NCERT’s NAS (2021, 2023) reports national math proficiency below 45%, significantly lower than countries participating in TIMSS and PISA, reflecting systemic challenges.

Reasons for India Lagging in Numeracy:

  • Hierarchical nature of Mathematics: Math builds layer by layer; when early concepts like place value or number sense are unclear, students cannot grasp later topics like decimals, fractions or division, causing learning gaps to widen rapidly.
  • Syllabus-driven, pace-based teaching: Teachers often follow the textbook calendar rather than students’ learning levels, pushing the class ahead even when most learners haven’t mastered the basics — leading to cumulative deficits.
  • Lack of structured remedial support: Most schools lack systematic catch-up programmes or differentiated instruction, so children who fall behind in early grades continue to lag throughout upper primary.
  • Real-life disconnect in math learning: Studies (J-PAL) show children who score well in school tests struggle to apply math in practical settings and vice-versa, highlighting poor transfer of knowledge between classroom and real-life contexts.
  • Teacher capacity and pedagogy gaps: Many teachers have limited exposure to activity-based, conceptual numeracy teaching, resulting in rote-led instruction that fails to build deep mathematical understanding.
  • COVID-19 learning disruptions: School closures disproportionately affected rural and low-income students, sharply widening pre-existing foundational math gaps and delaying mastery of Class 1–5 competencies.

Impact of Poor Numeracy:

  • High failure rates in Maths and Science: Weak foundational numeracy makes algebra, physics, geometry and problem-solving difficult, leading to significantly higher failure rates in these subjects in Class 10 board exams.
  • Early adolescent dropout: As concepts become more abstract in Classes 6–9, children with foundational gaps cannot follow classroom teaching, pushing many to exit school before reaching the board exam stage.
  • Reduced access to higher education (especially STEM): Students who cannot clear Maths in Class 10 or 12 lose eligibility for science streams, technical diplomas, engineering and competitive exams that require quantitative ability.
  • Lower employability and financial literacy: Poor numeracy affects everyday skills such as budgeting, measurement, digital payments, and logical reasoning — limiting success in both formal employment and informal livelihoods.
  • Long-term economic and productivity loss: A workforce with weak numeracy reduces national productivity, innovation capacity and readiness for a skill-based economy, threatening India’s demographic dividend.

Initiatives Taken:

  • NIPUN Bharat Mission (2021): National programme for Foundational Literacy & Numeracy for Classes 1–3.
  • Teaching at the Right Level (TaRL): Level-based instruction model adopted by several States.
  • PARAKH Rashtirya Survekshan: Nationwide assessment to track foundational learning.
  • State-level programmes:
    • Karnataka: Kalika Chetarike
    • Uttar Pradesh: Mission Prerna
    • Dadra & Nagar Haveli & Daman & Diu: Extended FLN to upper primary, improving outcomes
  • Activity-based learning kits, math manipulatives, digital FLN tools, teacher training modules.

Way Ahead:

  • Extend FLN support up to Class 8: Because nearly half of middle-grade students still cannot do basic division, extending foundational interventions beyond Class 3 ensures continuity and prevents learning gaps from widening further in upper primary.
  • Introduce FLN+ skills: Strengthening these higher-order numeracy skills is essential since they form the backbone of board-exam math and significantly influence future readiness in science, commerce, and vocational pathways.
  • Shift to learning-level–based instruction: Teaching should match students’ actual competency levels—not rigid grade syllabi—so that slow learners receive the scaffolding needed to catch up instead of being left behind year after year.
  • Strengthen remedial learning, peer learning, and math labs: Dedicated remedial periods, peer tutoring groups, and hands-on math labs can help rebuild foundational concepts through practice, concrete objects, and personalised support.
  • Integrate real-life mathematical contexts: Embedding concepts like budgeting, measurement, discounts, and market arithmetic makes math relevant and enables children to transfer classroom learning to real-world situations effectively.
  • Improve teacher training in conceptual and activity-based pedagogy: Teachers need continuous professional development to use manipulatives, visual tools, games, and child-centric methods that build conceptual understanding rather than rote procedural skills.

Conclusion:

India’s numeracy gap threatens long-term learning, employability, and economic mobility. Strengthening FLN beyond early grades and adopting learner-centric teaching is essential. A coordinated national push on numeracy—parallel to literacy—is now critical for inclusive educational and economic progress.