Leading from the Centre

1 min read

The federal government’s ambitious target to enrol 25,000 out-of-school children in Islamabad within three months will hopefully serve as an example for the rest of the country as we persevere to raise nationwide enrollment rates, which are currently among the lowest in the world. The success of the initiative would echo across the country, which currently has about 20 million out-of-school children.

While the enrollment target may appear ambitious, Islamabad enjoys several advantages over the provinces, including concentration of administrative resources, direct oversight and proximity to policymaking bodies. It is also worth noting that Islamabad alone houses 89,127 out-of-school children — a manageable number that makes the target seem much more achievable with reasonably concerted effort.

More likely, the barometer for success should not be the 25,000 target, but how close they can get to the 89,000-plus figure. After all, much of the criticism of the devolution of education post-18th Amendment has been on the Centre’s ability to do a better job administering the subject. Failure to get it right in Islamabad would not do much to endorse that perspective.

On paper, the “No Child Left Behind” campaign creates a comprehensive “Carpet Coverage Plan” that is rolled out to every union council, combining formal and informal education pathways. But the plan is less comprehensive in terms of improving standards — enrollment alone does not address concerns about quality, which is extremely inconsistent across the city’s schools.

For example, establishing community schools near “hotspots” of low enrollment will make it easier for children to get to school, but it remains unclear whether that education will prepare them for productive futures. If the plan succeeds in significantly reducing the number of out-of-school children, it is critical that the government not rest on its laurels but immediately begin working to dramatically improve the quality of education, setting an example for the provinces.

Editorial Published in Express Tribune on March 23rd, 2026.

Previous Story

School Reduced to Rubble in Bannu Blast

Next Story

Five Booked for Abduction, Gang Rape of Girl

Latest from Blog

Risky Experiment

The SBP’s recent decision to allow teenagers as young as 13 to open and operate bank accounts entirely on their own is meant to create an opportunity for children to gain financial literacy early and through hands-on experience. The new child account category is a fully functional digital wallet with…

Premature Babies Face Rising Risk of Preventable Blindness: Report

RAWALPINDI: Premature babies in Pakistan are losing their sight at rates far above global averages as a treatable eye condition, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), continues to go undetected across large parts of the country, according to data compiled by Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital. The Al-Shifa Trust report stated that ROP…

Chaos Persists as Schools, Students Struggle to Secure Matric Admit Cards in Karachi

KARACHI: A day after the Board of Secondary Education Karachi (BSEK) postponed the matriculation exams for three days, the administrations of hundreds of schools, mostly privately run, are still scrambling to obtain admit cards for their thousands of students so they can learn about their examination centres. The matriculation exams, originally scheduled…

Death Toll Rises to 11 in Balochistan as Rain Lashes Much of Country

• Five of the victims die in Qila Abdullah, Kakar Khurasan • Flooding in Kabul River, urban centres likely • Widespread rain forecast across Punjab QUETTA / PESHAWAR / LAHORE: The death toll in rain-related incid­e­nts has reached 11, while over a do­­z­e­­n people have been injured in diff­e­­rent areas of Balochistan,…

Mpox Cases Rise in Sindh, Other Provinces

ISLAMABAD: A joint investigation into a suspected Mpox outbreak in Sindh’s Khairpur district has been launched by a high-level team of epidemiologists, laboratory scientists, and infection prevention experts. This comes as federal authorities express concern provincial government remains in denial despite laboratory confirmations and a growing number of cases among…
Go toTop